Page 12: 121 results for South west Virginia

  • Genus: Trichocentrum ( )

    ...to South America. Pseudobulbs are reduced and often unobserved due to the presence of obtuse, fleshy leaves. The flowers are large and showy and inflorescences range from a single to few flowered r...

  • Sacoila lanceolata ()

    ...and South America. The terminal raceme usually has 10-40 coral to brick red flowers covered with fine hairs. Some plants may be green-flowered and have been recognized as forma albidaviridis. This orc...

  • Genus: Beloglottis ( )

    ...the West Indies and central America. A single species extends northward into Florida. Plants range from hills to semi-deciduous forests and other woodlands, including the shady interiors of hardwood h...

  • Genus: Tipularia (Cranefly Orchid)

    ...far west as Texas. It produces a leaf in the fall which stays green throughout the winter; the leaf then senesces in the spring before the plant flowers, leafless, in the summer. Its leaf is green wit...

  • Pseudorchis albida ()

    ...the west Artic-north Atlantic, including eastern Canada, and is generally associated with limestone barrens. The yellow flowers have a mid lobe only slightly longer than the lateral lobes and a distin...

  • Genus: Campylocentrum ( )

    ...far south as Argentina. Growth forms vary from large masses with leafy stems to leafless plants with short stems and massive clusters of roots. Roots in all species are photosynthetic. The leaves, ...

  • Genus: Cyrtopodium (Cowhorn Orchid)

    ...and South America to Argentina. Pseudobulbs are ovate-fusiform in shape and variable in size among species but most are large and encased in leaves during their first year, hence the common name ciga...

  • Genus: Spathoglottis (Ground Orchid)

    ...to South East Asia, India, the Philippines and Australasia that are typically found growing on hillsides among grasses and low bushes. The plants resemble small palm trees with pleated leaves up to 30...

  • Genus: Bulbophyllum ( )

    ...in South East Asia but they occur in both the Old and New World tropics and subtropics. Individual plants in this genus can be small but they can form large mats by clonal propagation from rhizomes. ...

  • Genus: Calypso (Fairy Slipper)

    ...and south to California and New Mexico. A northern-most occurrence of Calypso in North America includes specimens at Grayling Fork of the Black River, 7 km NNE of Steamboat Mountain, Alaska. Distrib...