Page 13: 135 results for Can

  • Getting Started with the Simple Key

    ...plants can I identify? The Go Botany Simple Key helps you identify thousands of native and naturalized plant species in New England. You can also identify subspecies and varieties. Many of these plant...

  • Genus: Cleistesiopsis (Spreading Pogonia)

    ...American Cleistesiopsis from species remaining in Cleistes. Vegetative plants usually have just one or two lanceolate leaves and and flowering stems also have a floral bract. These orchids produce on...

  • Genus: Cyrtopodium (Cowhorn Orchid)

    ...length can be three or four feet and they are usually branched with many flowers. The flowers are showy on most species and commonly yellow with reddish spots. Flowers also often have very colorful ...

  • Genus: Dendrophylax (Leafless Orchids)

    ...that can be as long as 8 inches. Sphinx moths are known to pollinate flowers of species within the genus. Family: Orchidaceae. This Genus's Species:

  • Genus: Epipactis (Helleborine)

    ...they can be found in moist or dry forests and swamps. Family: Orchidaceae. This Genus's Species:

  • Genus: Malaxis (Adder's Mouth)

    ...flowers can be either resupinate or non-resupinate, and some are even known as "hyper-resupinate": the flowers rotates completely around (360 degrees) during the course of their development....

  • Genus: Pseudorchis (Small White Orchid)

    ...Scandinavia and northern Russia and is one of the few orchid taxa that extends into polar latitudes. Pseudorchis albida is also known to occur on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean in eastern Canada...

  • Genus: Tipularia (Cranefly Orchid)

    ...discolor can be distinguished by the presence of spots on its leaves and nectar spurs on the flowers. Family: Orchidaceae. This Genus's Species:

  • Corallorhiza maculata ()

    ...of Canada and the United States with the exception of the northernmost Canadian provinces and some southern U.S. states. Like other members of its genus, this orchid is myco-heterotrophic: it primaril...

  • Platanthera dilatata ()

    ...northern Canada and the United States, with populations throughout western and central regions, as well as around the Great Lakes and in the northeast. It produces 2-5 leaves along its tall stem and a...