Page 10: 104 results for 90 S
-
Triphora yucatanensis ()
...yucatanensis Ames - . Facts About: Accepted Synonyms: Pogonia yucatanensis, Triphora rickettii Triphora yucatanensis, commonly known as Rickett's Noddingcaps, is one of three orchids i...
-
Genus: Hammarbya (Bog Adder's Mouth)
...is protected in parts of Ireland and Britain, and is considered endangered in portions of its range, including Minnesota, and Wales. Previously classified in the genus Malaxis, H. paludosa was move...
-
Genus: Arethusa (Dragon's Mouth)
...Arethusa. Dragon's Mouth. Arethusa is a monotypic genus of terrestrial orchids containing only 1 species, Arethusa bulbosa, which is found in eastern and central United States and Canada. It pr...
-
Goodyera repens ()
...petals and dorsal sepal. Like others of this genus, its stem and sepals are covered in thin hairs. This orchid's small size distinguishes it from Goodyera tesselata and Goodyera oblongifolia. Go...
-
Malaxis monophyllos ()
...This orchid usually grows in wet areas such as bogs or swamps where its small size and green coloration make it virtually indistinguishable from the surrounding vegetation. Malaxis monophyllos is gl...
-
About Go Orchids
...Established as a collaborative effort by the Smithsonian Institution, and the United States Botanic Garden. NAOCC is based at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center and includes units at the Na...
-
Genus: Malaxis (Adder's Mouth)
...Mouth. Malaxis is a genus of terrestrial, occasionally semi-epiphytic, orchids which contains several hundred species widely distributed across the globe, especially in tropical and subtropical regio...
-
Corallorhiza maculata ()
...northernmost Canadian provinces and some southern U.S. states. Like other members of its genus, this orchid is myco-heterotrophic: it primarily obtains nutrients not from photosynthesis but through my...
-
Cypripedium parviflorum ()
...yellowish sepals and petals twist outwards in spirals. It produces up to five stem leaves; both the stem and leaves are covered in thin hairs. It grows in dry to mesic forests, woodlands, fens, prairi...
-
Platanthera orbiculata ()
...mesic to moist forests and woodlands, either coniferous or deciduous, and occasionally in shaded bogs. When not in flower, it may be distinguished from Platanthera hookeri by latter's absence of ...