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Wikipedia

Orchid

Orchids are plants that belong to the family Orchidaceae (/ˌɔːrkɪˈdsˌ, -siˌ/),[2] a diverse and widespread group of flowering plants with blooms that are often colourful and fragrant.

Orchid
Temporal range: 80–0 Ma Late Cretaceous – Recent
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Juss.[1]
Type genus
Orchis
Subfamilies
Distribution range of family Orchidaceae

Along with the Asteraceae, the Orchidaceae is one of the two largest families of flowering plants. There about 28,000 currently accepted species, distributed in about 763 genera.[3][4] The determination of which family is larger is still under debate because verified data on the members of such enormous families are continually in flux. Regardless, the number of orchid species is nearly equal to the number of bony fishes, more than twice the number of bird species, and about four times the number of mammal species.

The family encompasses about 6–11% of all species of seed plants.[5] The largest genera are Bulbophyllum (2,000 species), Epidendrum (1,500 species), Dendrobium (1,400 species) and Pleurothallis (1,000 species). It also includes Vanilla (the genus of the vanilla plant), the type genus Orchis, and many commonly cultivated plants such as Phalaenopsis and Cattleya. Moreover, since the introduction of tropical species into cultivation in the 19th century, horticulturists have produced more than 100,000 hybrids and cultivars.

Description

 
A Phalaenopsis flower

Orchids are easily distinguished from other plants, as they share some very evident derived characteristics or synapomorphies. Among these are: bilateral symmetry of the flower (zygomorphism), many resupinate flowers, a nearly always highly modified petal (labellum), fused stamens and carpels, and extremely small seeds.

Stem and roots

 
Germinating seeds of the temperate orchid Anacamptis coriophora

All orchids are perennial herbs that lack any permanent woody structure. They can grow according to two patterns:

  • Monopodial: The stem grows from a single bud, leaves are added from the apex each year, and the stem grows longer accordingly. The stem of orchids with a monopodial growth can reach several metres in length, as in Vanda and Vanilla.
  • Sympodial: Sympodial orchids have a front (the newest growth) and a back (the oldest growth).[6] The plant produces a series of adjacent shoots, which grow to a certain size, bloom and then stop growing and are replaced. Sympodial orchids grow horizontally, rather than vertically, following the surface of their support. The growth continues by development of new leads, with their own leaves and roots, sprouting from or next to those of the previous year, as in Cattleya. While a new lead is developing, the rhizome may start its growth again from a so-called 'eye', an undeveloped bud, thereby branching. Sympodial orchids may have visible pseudobulbs joined by a rhizome, which creeps along the top or just beneath the soil.
 
Neotinea lactea, collected in Sardinia; the small size, compared to a one-Euro coin, and the two globose tuberoids typical of the Neotinea genus are highlighted

Terrestrial orchids may be rhizomatous or form corms or tubers. The root caps of terrestrial orchids are smooth and white.

Some sympodial terrestrial orchids, such as Orchis and Ophrys, have two subterranean tuberous roots. One is used as a food reserve for wintry periods, and provides for the development of the other one, from which visible growth develops.

In warm and constantly humid climates, many terrestrial orchids do not need pseudobulbs.

Epiphytic orchids, those that grow upon a support, have modified aerial roots that can sometimes be a few meters long. In the older parts of the roots, a modified spongy epidermis, called a velamen, has the function of absorbing humidity. It is made of dead cells and can have a silvery-grey, white or brown appearance. In some orchids, the velamen includes spongy and fibrous bodies near the passage cells, called tilosomes.

The cells of the root epidermis grow at a right angle to the axis of the root to allow them to get a firm grasp on their support. Nutrients for epiphytic orchids mainly come from mineral dust, organic detritus, animal droppings and other substances collecting among on their supporting surfaces.

 
Pseudobulb of Prosthechea fragrans

The base of the stem of sympodial epiphytes, or in some species essentially the entire stem, may be thickened to form a pseudobulb that contains nutrients and water for drier periods.

The pseudobulb has a smooth surface with lengthwise grooves, and can have different shapes, often conical or oblong. Its size is very variable; in some small species of Bulbophyllum, it is no longer than two millimeters, while in the largest orchid in the world, Grammatophyllum speciosum (giant orchid), it can reach three meters. Some Dendrobium species have long, canelike pseudobulbs with short, rounded leaves over the whole length; some other orchids have hidden or extremely small pseudobulbs, completely included inside the leaves.

With ageing the pseudobulb sheds its leaves and becomes dormant. At this stage it is often called a backbulb. Backbulbs still hold nutrition for the plant, but then a pseudobulb usually takes over, exploiting the last reserves accumulated in the backbulb, which eventually dies off, too. A pseudobulb typically lives for about five years. Orchids without noticeable pseudobulbs are also said to have growths, an individual component of a sympodial plant.

Leaves

Like most monocots, orchids generally have simple leaves with parallel veins, although some Vanilloideae have reticulate venation. Leaves may be ovate, lanceolate, or orbiculate, and very variable in size on the individual plant. Their characteristics are often diagnostic. They are normally alternate on the stem, often folded lengthwise along the centre ("plicate"), and have no stipules. Orchid leaves often have siliceous bodies called stegmata in the vascular bundle sheaths (not present in the Orchidoideae) and are fibrous.

The structure of the leaves corresponds to the specific habitat of the plant. Species that typically bask in sunlight, or grow on sites which can be occasionally very dry, have thick, leathery leaves and the laminae are covered by a waxy cuticle to retain their necessary water supply. Shade-loving species, on the other hand, have long, thin leaves.

The leaves of most orchids are perennial, that is, they live for several years, while others, especially those with plicate leaves as in Catasetum, shed them annually and develop new leaves together with new pseudobulbs.

The leaves of some orchids are considered ornamental. The leaves of Macodes sanderiana, a semiterrestrial or rock-hugging ("lithophyte") orchid, show a sparkling silver and gold veining on a light green background. The cordate leaves of Psychopsis limminghei are light brownish-green with maroon-puce markings, created by flower pigments. The attractive mottle of the leaves of lady's slippers from tropical and subtropical Asia (Paphiopedilum), is caused by uneven distribution of chlorophyll. Also, Phalaenopsis schilleriana is a pastel pink orchid with leaves spotted dark green and light green. The jewel orchid (Ludisia discolor) is grown more for its colorful leaves than its white flowers.

Some orchids, such as Dendrophylax lindenii (ghost orchid), Aphyllorchis and Taeniophyllum depend on their green roots for photosynthesis and lack normally developed leaves, as do all of the heterotrophic species.

Orchids of the genus Corallorhiza (coralroot orchids) lack leaves altogether and instead wrap their roots around the roots of mature trees and use specialized fungi to harvest sugars.[7]

Flowers

Orchid flowers have three sepals, three petals and a three-chambered ovary. The three sepals and two of the petals are often similar to each other but one petal is usually highly modified, forming a "lip" or labellum. In most orchid genera, as the flower develops, it undergoes a twisting through 180°, called resupination, so that the labellum lies below the column. The labellum functions to attract insects, and in resupinate flowers, also acts as a landing stage, or sometimes a trap.[8][9][10][11]

 
Labelled image of Caladenia alpina
 
Labelled image of Diuris carinata

The reproductive parts of an orchid flower are unique in that the stamens and style are joined to form a single structure, the column.[10][11][12] Instead of being released singly, thousands of pollen grains are contained in one or two bundles called pollinia that are attached to a sticky disc near the top of the column. Just below the pollinia is a second, larger sticky plate called the stigma.[8][9][10][11]

Reproduction

Pollination

The complex mechanisms that orchids have evolved to achieve cross-pollination were investigated by Charles Darwin and described in Fertilisation of Orchids (1862). Orchids have developed highly specialized pollination systems, thus the chances of being pollinated are often scarce, so orchid flowers usually remain receptive for very long periods, rendering unpollinated flowers long-lasting in cultivation. Most orchids deliver pollen in a single mass. Each time pollination succeeds, thousands of ovules can be fertilized.

Pollinators are often visually attracted by the shape and colours of the labellum. However, some Bulbophyllum species attract male fruit flies (Bactrocera and Zeugodacus spp.) solely via a floral chemical which simultaneously acts as a floral reward (e.g. methyl eugenol, raspberry ketone, or zingerone) to perform pollination.[13] The flowers may produce attractive odours. Although absent in most species, nectar may be produced in a spur of the labellum (8 in the illustration above), or on the point of the sepals, or in the septa of the ovary, the most typical position amongst the Asparagales.

 
Phalaenopsis pollinia (orange) attached to a toothpick with its sticky viscidium

In orchids that produce pollinia, pollination happens as some variant of the following sequence: when the pollinator enters into the flower, it touches a viscidium, which promptly sticks to its body, generally on the head or abdomen. While leaving the flower, it pulls the pollinium out of the anther, as it is connected to the viscidium by the caudicle or stipe. The caudicle then bends and the pollinium is moved forwards and downwards. When the pollinator enters another flower of the same species, the pollinium has taken such position that it will stick to the stigma of the second flower, just below the rostellum, pollinating it. In horticulture, artificial orchid pollination is achieved by removing the pollinia with a small instrument such as a toothpick from the pollen parent and transferring them to the seed parent.

 
Ophrys apifera is about to self-pollinate

Some orchids mainly or totally rely on self-pollination, especially in colder regions where pollinators are particularly rare. The caudicles may dry up if the flower has not been visited by any pollinator, and the pollinia then fall directly on the stigma. Otherwise, the anther may rotate and then enter the stigma cavity of the flower (as in Holcoglossum amesianum).

The slipper orchid Paphiopedilum parishii reproduces by self-fertilization. This occurs when the anther changes from a solid to a liquid state and directly contacts the stigma surface without the aid of any pollinating agent or floral assembly.[14]

The labellum of the Cypripedioideae is poke bonnet-shaped, and has the function of trapping visiting insects. The only exit leads to the anthers that deposit pollen on the visitor.

In some extremely specialized orchids, such as the Eurasian genus Ophrys, the labellum is adapted to have a colour, shape, and odour which attracts male insects via mimicry of a receptive female. Pollination happens as the insect attempts to mate with flowers.

Many neotropical orchids are pollinated by male orchid bees, which visit the flowers to gather volatile chemicals they require to synthesize pheromonal attractants. Males of such species as Euglossa imperialis or Eulaema meriana have been observed to leave their territories periodically to forage for aromatic compounds, such as cineole, to synthesize pheromone for attracting and mating with females.[15][16] Each type of orchid places the pollinia on a different body part of a different species of bee, so as to enforce proper cross-pollination.

A rare achlorophyllous saprophytic orchid growing entirely underground in Australia, Rhizanthella slateri, is never exposed to light, and depends on ants and other terrestrial insects to pollinate it.

Catasetum, a genus discussed briefly by Darwin, actually launches its viscid pollinia with explosive force when an insect touches a seta, knocking the pollinator off the flower.

After pollination, the sepals and petals fade and wilt, but they usually remain attached to the ovary.

In 2011, Bulbophyllum nocturnum was discovered to flower nocturnally.[17]

Asexual reproduction

Some species, such as in the genera Phalaenopsis, Dendrobium, and Vanda, produce offshoots or plantlets formed from one of the nodes along the stem, through the accumulation of growth hormones at that point. These shoots are known as keiki.[18]

Fruits and seeds

 
Cross-sections of orchid capsules showing the longitudinal slits

The ovary typically develops into a capsule that is dehiscent by three or six longitudinal slits, while remaining closed at both ends.

The seeds are generally almost microscopic and very numerous, in some species over a million per capsule. After ripening, they blow off like dust particles or spores. Most orchid species lack endosperm in their seed and must enter symbiotic relationships with various mycorrhizal basidiomyceteous fungi that provide them the necessary nutrients to germinate, so almost all orchid species are mycoheterotrophic during germination and reliant upon fungi to complete their lifecycles. Only a handful of orchid species have seed that can germinate without mycorrhiza, namely the species within the genus Disa with hydrochorous seeds.[19][20]

 
Disa uniflora seedling on a sphagnum leaf, on a thumbtack

As the chance for a seed to meet a suitable fungus is very small, only a minute fraction of all the seeds released grow into adult plants. In cultivation, germination typically takes weeks.

Horticultural techniques have been devised for germinating orchid seeds on an artificial nutrient medium, eliminating the requirement of the fungus for germination and greatly aiding the propagation of ornamental orchids. The usual medium for the sowing of orchids in artificial conditions is agar gel combined with a carbohydrate energy source. The carbohydrate source can be combinations of discrete sugars or can be derived from other sources such as banana, pineapple, peach, or even tomato puree or coconut water. After the preparation of the agar medium, it is poured into test tubes or jars which are then autoclaved (or cooked in a pressure cooker) to sterilize the medium. After cooking, the medium begins to gel as it cools.

Taxonomy

The taxonomy of this family is in constant flux, as new studies continue to clarify the relationships between species and groups of species, allowing more taxa at several ranks to be recognized. The Orchidaceae is currently placed in the order Asparagales by the APG III system of 2009.[1]

Five subfamilies are recognised. The cladogram below was made according to the APG system of 1998. It represents the view that most botanists had held up to that time. It was supported by morphological studies, but never received strong support in molecular phylogenetic studies.

Apostasioideae: 2 genera and 16 species, south-eastern Asia

Cypripedioideae: 5 genera and 130 species, from the temperate regions of the world, as well as tropical America and tropical Asia

 Monandrae 

Vanilloideae: 15 genera and 180 species, humid tropical and subtropical regions, eastern North America

Epidendroideae: more than 500 genera and more or less 20,000 species, cosmopolitan

Orchidoideae: 208 genera and 3,630 species, cosmopolitan

In 2015, a phylogenetic study[21] showed strong statistical support for the following topology of the orchid tree, using 9 kb of plastid and nuclear DNA from 7 genes, a topology that was confirmed by a phylogenomic study in the same year.[22]

Evolution

A study in the scientific journal Nature has hypothesised that the origin of orchids goes back much longer than originally expected.[23] An extinct species of stingless bee, Proplebeia dominicana, was found trapped in Miocene amber from about 15-20 million years ago. The bee was carrying pollen of a previously unknown orchid taxon, Meliorchis caribea, on its wings. This find is the first evidence of fossilised orchids to date[23] and shows insects were active pollinators of orchids then. This extinct orchid, M. caribea, has been placed within the extant tribe Cranichideae, subtribe Goodyerinae (subfamily Orchidoideae). An even older orchid species, Succinanthera baltica, was described from the Eocene Baltic amber by Poinar & Rasmussen (2017).[24]

Genetic sequencing indicates orchids may have arisen earlier, 76 to 84 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous.[25] According to Mark W. Chase et al. (2001), the overall biogeography and phylogenetic patterns of Orchidaceae show they are even older and may go back roughly 100 million years.[26]

Using the molecular clock method, it was possible to determine the age of the major branches of the orchid family. This also confirmed that the subfamily Vanilloideae is a branch at the basal dichotomy of the monandrous orchids, and must have evolved very early in the evolution of the family. Since this subfamily occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions, from tropical America to tropical Asia, New Guinea and West Africa, and the continents began to split about 100 million years ago, significant biotic exchange must have occurred after this split (since the age of Vanilla is estimated at 60 to 70 million years).

Genome duplication occurred prior to the divergence of this taxon.[27]

Genera

There are around 800 genera of orchids. The following are amongst the most notable genera of the orchid family:[citation needed]

Etymology

The type genus (i.e. the genus after which the family is named) is Orchis. The genus name comes from the Ancient Greek ὄρχις (órkhis), literally meaning "testicle", because of the shape of the twin tubers in some species of Orchis.[28][29][30] The term "orchid" was introduced in 1845 by John Lindley in School Botany,[31] as a shortened form of Orchidaceae.[32]

In Middle English, the name bollockwort was used for some orchids, based on "bollock" meaning testicle and "wort" meaning plant.[33]

Hybrids

Orchid species hybridize readily in cultivation, leading to a large number of hybrids with complex naming. Hybridization is possible across genera, and therefore many cultivated orchids are placed into nothogenera. For instance, the nothogenus × Brassocattleya is used for all hybrids of species from the genera Brassavola and Cattleya. Nothogenera based on at least three genera may have names based on a person's name with the suffix -ara, for instance × Colmanara = Miltonia × Odontoglossum × Oncidium. (The suffix is obligatory starting at four genera.[34])

Cultivated hybrids in the orchid family are also special in that they are named by using grex nomenclature, rather than nothospecies. For instance, hybrids between Brassavola nodosa and Brassavola acaulis are placed in the grex Brassavola Guiseppi.[35] The name of the grex ("Guiseppi" in this example) is written in a non-italic font without quotes.[36]

Abbreviations

As a unique feature of the orchid family, a system of abbreviations exists that applies to names of genera and nothogenera. The system is maintained by the Royal Horticultural Society.[37] These abbreviations consist of at least one character, but may be longer. As opposed to the usual one-letter abbreviations used for names of genera, orchid abbreviations uniquely determine the (notho)genus. They are widely used in cultivation. Examples are Phal for Phalaenopsis, V for Vanda and Cleis for Cleisostoma.

Distribution

Orchidaceae are cosmopolitan, occurring in almost every habitat apart from glaciers. The world's richest diversity of orchid genera and species is found in the tropics, but they are also found above the Arctic Circle, in southern Patagonia, and two species of Nematoceras on Macquarie Island at 54° south.

The following list gives a rough overview of their distribution:[citation needed]

  • Oceania: 50 to 70 genera
  • North America: 20 to 26 genera
  • tropical America: 212 to 250 genera
  • tropical Asia: 260 to 300 genera
  • tropical Africa: 230 to 270 genera
  • Europe and temperate Asia: 40 to 60 genera

Ecology

A majority of orchids are perennial epiphytes, which grow anchored to trees or shrubs in the tropics and subtropics. Species such as Angraecum sororium are lithophytes,[38] growing on rocks or very rocky soil. Other orchids (including the majority of temperate Orchidaceae) are terrestrial and can be found in habitat areas such as grasslands or forest.

Some orchids, such as Neottia and Corallorhiza, lack chlorophyll, so are unable to photosynthesise. Instead, these species obtain energy and nutrients by parasitising soil fungi through the formation of orchid mycorrhizae. The fungi involved include those that form ectomycorrhizas with trees and other woody plants, parasites such as Armillaria, and saprotrophs.[39] These orchids are known as myco-heterotrophs, but were formerly (incorrectly) described as saprophytes as it was believed they gained their nutrition by breaking down organic matter. While only a few species are achlorophyllous holoparasites, all orchids are myco-heterotrophic during germination and seedling growth, and even photosynthetic adult plants may continue to obtain carbon from their mycorrhizal fungi.[40] The symbiosis is typically maintained throughout the lifetime of the orchid because they depend on the fungus for nutrients, sugars and minerals.[41] However, some orchids have been found to switch fungal partners during extreme conditions.

Uses

 
As decoration in a flowerpot
 
A × Brassolaeliocattleya ("BLC") Paradise Jewel 'Flame' hybrid orchid. Blooms of the Cattleya alliance are often used in ladies' corsages.

Perfumery

The scent of orchids is frequently analysed by perfumers (using headspace technology and gas-liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry) to identify potential fragrance chemicals.[42]

Horticulture

The other important use of orchids is their cultivation for the enjoyment of the flowers. Most cultivated orchids are tropical or subtropical, but quite a few that grow in colder climates can be found on the market. Temperate species available at nurseries include Ophrys apifera (bee orchid), Gymnadenia conopsea (fragrant orchid), Anacamptis pyramidalis (pyramidal orchid) and Dactylorhiza fuchsii (common spotted orchid).

Orchids of all types have also often been sought by collectors of both species and hybrids. Many hundreds of societies and clubs worldwide have been established. These can be small, local clubs, or larger, national organisations such as the American Orchid Society. Both serve to encourage cultivation and collection of orchids, but some go further by concentrating on conservation or research.

The term "botanical orchid" loosely denotes those small-flowered, tropical orchids belonging to several genera that do not fit into the "florist" orchid category. A few of these genera contain enormous numbers of species. Some, such as Pleurothallis and Bulbophyllum, contain approximately 1700 and 2000 species, respectively, and are often extremely vegetatively diverse. The primary use of the term is among orchid hobbyists wishing to describe unusual species they grow, though it is also used to distinguish naturally occurring orchid species from horticulturally created hybrids.

New orchids are registered with the International Orchid Register, maintained by the Royal Horticultural Society.[43]

Food

 
Vanilla fruit drying

The dried seed pods of one orchid genus, Vanilla (especially Vanilla planifolia), are commercially important as a flavouring in baking, for perfume manufacture and aromatherapy.

The underground tubers of terrestrial orchids [mainly Orchis mascula (early purple orchid)] are ground to a powder and used for cooking, such as in the hot beverage salep or in the Turkish mastic ice cream dondurma. The name salep has been claimed to come from the Arabic expression ḥasyu al-tha‘lab, "fox testicles", but it appears more likely the name comes directly from the Arabic name saḥlab. The similarity in appearance to testes naturally accounts for salep being considered an aphrodisiac.

The dried leaves of Jumellea fragrans are used to flavour rum on Reunion Island.

Some saprophytic orchid species of the group Gastrodia produce potato-like tubers and were consumed as food by native peoples in Australia and can be successfully cultivated, notably Gastrodia sesamoides. Wild stands of these plants can still be found in the same areas as early Aboriginal settlements, such as Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park in Australia. Aboriginal peoples located the plants in habitat by observing where bandicoots had scratched in search of the tubers after detecting the plants underground by scent.[note 1]

Cultural symbolism

Orchids have many associations with symbolic values. For example, the orchid is the City Flower of Shaoxing, China. Cattleya mossiae is the national Venezuelan flower, while Cattleya trianae is the national flower of Colombia. Vanda Miss Joaquim is the national flower of Singapore, Guarianthe skinneri is the national flower of Costa Rica and Rhyncholaelia digbyana is the national flower of Honduras.[45] Prosthechea cochleata is the national flower of Belize, where it is known as the black orchid.[46] Lycaste skinneri has a white variety (alba) that is the national flower of Guatemala, commonly known as Monja Blanca (White Nun). Panama's national flower is the Holy Ghost orchid (Peristeria elata), or 'the flor del Espiritu Santo'. Rhynchostylis retusa is the state flower of the Indian state of Assam where it is known as Kopou Phul.[47]

Orchids native to the Mediterranean are depicted on the Ara Pacis in Rome, until now the only known instance of orchids in ancient art, and the earliest in European art.[note 2] A French writer and agronomist, Louis Liger, invented a classical myth in his book Le Jardinier Fleuriste et Historiographe published in 1704, attributing it to the ancient Greeks and Romans, in which Orchis the son of a nymph and a satyr rapes a priestess of Bacchus during one of his festivals the Bacchanalia and is then killed and transformed into an orchid flower as punishment by the gods, paralleling the various myths of youths dying and becoming flowers, like Adonis and Narcisuss; this myth however does not appear any earlier than Liger, and is not part of traditional Greek and Roman mythologies.[49]

Conservation

Almost all orchids are included in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), meaning that international trade (including in their parts/derivatives) is regulated by the CITES permit system.[50] A smaller number of orchids such as Paphiopedilum sp. are listed in CITES Appendix I meaning that commercial international trade in wild-sourced specimens is prohibited and all other trade is strictly controlled.[50]

Assisted migration as conservation tool

In 2006 the Longtan Dam was constructed at the Hongshui River, near the Yachang Orchid Nature Reserve. In response to threats of inundation of wild orchids at lower altitudes (350-400 m above sea level), 1000 endangered orchid plants of 16 genera and 29 species were translocated to higher elevation (approximately 1000 m above sea level). After relocation the 5 year survival of low and wide elevation species did not significantly differ and the mortality due to transplant shock was at only 10%. From this it was concluded that assisted migration might be a viable conservation tool for orchid species endangered by climate change.[51]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Early western district (Vic.) settler gives account of local Aboriginal people gathering potato orchid tubers, digging where bandicoots had scratched.[44]
  2. ^ The symbolic (or even religious) meaning of the Ara Pacis orchids is not yet known.[48]

References

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  2. ^ Gove, Philip B., ed. (1961). Webster's Third New International Dictionary. G. & C. Merriam.
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  18. ^ Matthew Blanchard, Roberto Lopez, Erik Runkle, PhD, and Yin-Tung Wang, PhD "Growing the Best Phalaenopsis", WWW.AOS.ORG ORCHIDS APRIL 2007 June 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
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Bibliography

External links

  • Orchidaceae observations at iNaturalist
  • Orchidaceae at The Plant List
  • Orchidaceae at the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website
  • World checklist of Orchidaceae species from the Catalogue of Life, 29,572 species supplied by World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (R. Govaerts & al.)
  • Orchidaceae at the online Flora of North America
  • Orchidaceae at the online Flora of China
  • Orchidaceae at the online Flora of Zimbabwe
  • Orchidaceae at the online Flora of the Western Australian
  • Orchidaceae at the online Flora of New Zealand
  • The Global Orchid Information Network
  • Orchid Conservation Coalition

orchid, color, color, other, uses, disambiguation, plants, that, belong, family, aceae, ɔːr, diverse, widespread, group, flowering, plants, with, blooms, that, often, colourful, fragrant, temporal, range, preꞒ, late, cretaceous, recentscientific, classificatio. For the color see Orchid color For other uses see Orchid disambiguation Orchids are plants that belong to the family Orchidaceae ˌ ɔːr k ɪ ˈ d eɪ s iː ˌ iː s i ˌ aɪ 2 a diverse and widespread group of flowering plants with blooms that are often colourful and fragrant OrchidTemporal range 80 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Late Cretaceous RecentScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MonocotsOrder AsparagalesFamily OrchidaceaeJuss 1 Type genusOrchisTourn ex L SubfamiliesApostasioideae Horaninov Cypripedioideae Kosteletzky Epidendroideae Kosteletzky Orchidoideae Eaton Vanilloideae SzlachetkoDistribution range of family OrchidaceaeAlong with the Asteraceae the Orchidaceae is one of the two largest families of flowering plants There about 28 000 currently accepted species distributed in about 763 genera 3 4 The determination of which family is larger is still under debate because verified data on the members of such enormous families are continually in flux Regardless the number of orchid species is nearly equal to the number of bony fishes more than twice the number of bird species and about four times the number of mammal species The family encompasses about 6 11 of all species of seed plants 5 The largest genera are Bulbophyllum 2 000 species Epidendrum 1 500 species Dendrobium 1 400 species and Pleurothallis 1 000 species It also includes Vanilla the genus of the vanilla plant the type genus Orchis and many commonly cultivated plants such as Phalaenopsis and Cattleya Moreover since the introduction of tropical species into cultivation in the 19th century horticulturists have produced more than 100 000 hybrids and cultivars Contents 1 Description 1 1 Stem and roots 1 2 Leaves 1 3 Flowers 2 Reproduction 2 1 Pollination 2 2 Asexual reproduction 2 3 Fruits and seeds 3 Taxonomy 3 1 Evolution 3 2 Genera 3 3 Etymology 3 4 Hybrids 3 5 Abbreviations 4 Distribution 5 Ecology 6 Uses 6 1 Perfumery 6 2 Horticulture 6 3 Food 7 Cultural symbolism 8 Conservation 8 1 Assisted migration as conservation tool 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksDescription Edit A Phalaenopsis flower Orchids are easily distinguished from other plants as they share some very evident derived characteristics or synapomorphies Among these are bilateral symmetry of the flower zygomorphism many resupinate flowers a nearly always highly modified petal labellum fused stamens and carpels and extremely small seeds Stem and roots Edit Germinating seeds of the temperate orchid Anacamptis coriophora All orchids are perennial herbs that lack any permanent woody structure They can grow according to two patterns Monopodial The stem grows from a single bud leaves are added from the apex each year and the stem grows longer accordingly The stem of orchids with a monopodial growth can reach several metres in length as in Vanda and Vanilla Sympodial Sympodial orchids have a front the newest growth and a back the oldest growth 6 The plant produces a series of adjacent shoots which grow to a certain size bloom and then stop growing and are replaced Sympodial orchids grow horizontally rather than vertically following the surface of their support The growth continues by development of new leads with their own leaves and roots sprouting from or next to those of the previous year as in Cattleya While a new lead is developing the rhizome may start its growth again from a so called eye an undeveloped bud thereby branching Sympodial orchids may have visible pseudobulbs joined by a rhizome which creeps along the top or just beneath the soil Neotinea lactea collected in Sardinia the small size compared to a one Euro coin and the two globose tuberoids typical of the Neotinea genus are highlighted Terrestrial orchids may be rhizomatous or form corms or tubers The root caps of terrestrial orchids are smooth and white Some sympodial terrestrial orchids such as Orchis and Ophrys have two subterranean tuberous roots One is used as a food reserve for wintry periods and provides for the development of the other one from which visible growth develops In warm and constantly humid climates many terrestrial orchids do not need pseudobulbs Epiphytic orchids those that grow upon a support have modified aerial roots that can sometimes be a few meters long In the older parts of the roots a modified spongy epidermis called a velamen has the function of absorbing humidity It is made of dead cells and can have a silvery grey white or brown appearance In some orchids the velamen includes spongy and fibrous bodies near the passage cells called tilosomes The cells of the root epidermis grow at a right angle to the axis of the root to allow them to get a firm grasp on their support Nutrients for epiphytic orchids mainly come from mineral dust organic detritus animal droppings and other substances collecting among on their supporting surfaces Pseudobulb of Prosthechea fragrans The base of the stem of sympodial epiphytes or in some species essentially the entire stem may be thickened to form a pseudobulb that contains nutrients and water for drier periods The pseudobulb has a smooth surface with lengthwise grooves and can have different shapes often conical or oblong Its size is very variable in some small species of Bulbophyllum it is no longer than two millimeters while in the largest orchid in the world Grammatophyllum speciosum giant orchid it can reach three meters Some Dendrobium species have long canelike pseudobulbs with short rounded leaves over the whole length some other orchids have hidden or extremely small pseudobulbs completely included inside the leaves With ageing the pseudobulb sheds its leaves and becomes dormant At this stage it is often called a backbulb Backbulbs still hold nutrition for the plant but then a pseudobulb usually takes over exploiting the last reserves accumulated in the backbulb which eventually dies off too A pseudobulb typically lives for about five years Orchids without noticeable pseudobulbs are also said to have growths an individual component of a sympodial plant Leaves Edit Like most monocots orchids generally have simple leaves with parallel veins although some Vanilloideae have reticulate venation Leaves may be ovate lanceolate or orbiculate and very variable in size on the individual plant Their characteristics are often diagnostic They are normally alternate on the stem often folded lengthwise along the centre plicate and have no stipules Orchid leaves often have siliceous bodies called stegmata in the vascular bundle sheaths not present in the Orchidoideae and are fibrous The structure of the leaves corresponds to the specific habitat of the plant Species that typically bask in sunlight or grow on sites which can be occasionally very dry have thick leathery leaves and the laminae are covered by a waxy cuticle to retain their necessary water supply Shade loving species on the other hand have long thin leaves The leaves of most orchids are perennial that is they live for several years while others especially those with plicate leaves as in Catasetum shed them annually and develop new leaves together with new pseudobulbs The leaves of some orchids are considered ornamental The leaves of Macodes sanderiana a semiterrestrial or rock hugging lithophyte orchid show a sparkling silver and gold veining on a light green background The cordate leaves of Psychopsis limminghei are light brownish green with maroon puce markings created by flower pigments The attractive mottle of the leaves of lady s slippers from tropical and subtropical Asia Paphiopedilum is caused by uneven distribution of chlorophyll Also Phalaenopsis schilleriana is a pastel pink orchid with leaves spotted dark green and light green The jewel orchid Ludisia discolor is grown more for its colorful leaves than its white flowers Some orchids such as Dendrophylax lindenii ghost orchid Aphyllorchis and Taeniophyllum depend on their green roots for photosynthesis and lack normally developed leaves as do all of the heterotrophic species Orchids of the genus Corallorhiza coralroot orchids lack leaves altogether and instead wrap their roots around the roots of mature trees and use specialized fungi to harvest sugars 7 Flowers Edit Orchid flowers have three sepals three petals and a three chambered ovary The three sepals and two of the petals are often similar to each other but one petal is usually highly modified forming a lip or labellum In most orchid genera as the flower develops it undergoes a twisting through 180 called resupination so that the labellum lies below the column The labellum functions to attract insects and in resupinate flowers also acts as a landing stage or sometimes a trap 8 9 10 11 Labelled image of Caladenia alpina Labelled image of Diuris carinata The reproductive parts of an orchid flower are unique in that the stamens and style are joined to form a single structure the column 10 11 12 Instead of being released singly thousands of pollen grains are contained in one or two bundles called pollinia that are attached to a sticky disc near the top of the column Just below the pollinia is a second larger sticky plate called the stigma 8 9 10 11 Reproduction EditPollination Edit Main article Pollination of orchids The complex mechanisms that orchids have evolved to achieve cross pollination were investigated by Charles Darwin and described in Fertilisation of Orchids 1862 Orchids have developed highly specialized pollination systems thus the chances of being pollinated are often scarce so orchid flowers usually remain receptive for very long periods rendering unpollinated flowers long lasting in cultivation Most orchids deliver pollen in a single mass Each time pollination succeeds thousands of ovules can be fertilized Pollinators are often visually attracted by the shape and colours of the labellum However some Bulbophyllum species attract male fruit flies Bactrocera and Zeugodacus spp solely via a floral chemical which simultaneously acts as a floral reward e g methyl eugenol raspberry ketone or zingerone to perform pollination 13 The flowers may produce attractive odours Although absent in most species nectar may be produced in a spur of the labellum 8 in the illustration above or on the point of the sepals or in the septa of the ovary the most typical position amongst the Asparagales Phalaenopsis pollinia orange attached to a toothpick with its sticky viscidium In orchids that produce pollinia pollination happens as some variant of the following sequence when the pollinator enters into the flower it touches a viscidium which promptly sticks to its body generally on the head or abdomen While leaving the flower it pulls the pollinium out of the anther as it is connected to the viscidium by the caudicle or stipe The caudicle then bends and the pollinium is moved forwards and downwards When the pollinator enters another flower of the same species the pollinium has taken such position that it will stick to the stigma of the second flower just below the rostellum pollinating it In horticulture artificial orchid pollination is achieved by removing the pollinia with a small instrument such as a toothpick from the pollen parent and transferring them to the seed parent Ophrys apifera is about to self pollinate Some orchids mainly or totally rely on self pollination especially in colder regions where pollinators are particularly rare The caudicles may dry up if the flower has not been visited by any pollinator and the pollinia then fall directly on the stigma Otherwise the anther may rotate and then enter the stigma cavity of the flower as in Holcoglossum amesianum The slipper orchid Paphiopedilum parishii reproduces by self fertilization This occurs when the anther changes from a solid to a liquid state and directly contacts the stigma surface without the aid of any pollinating agent or floral assembly 14 The labellum of the Cypripedioideae is poke bonnet shaped and has the function of trapping visiting insects The only exit leads to the anthers that deposit pollen on the visitor In some extremely specialized orchids such as the Eurasian genus Ophrys the labellum is adapted to have a colour shape and odour which attracts male insects via mimicry of a receptive female Pollination happens as the insect attempts to mate with flowers Many neotropical orchids are pollinated by male orchid bees which visit the flowers to gather volatile chemicals they require to synthesize pheromonal attractants Males of such species as Euglossa imperialis or Eulaema meriana have been observed to leave their territories periodically to forage for aromatic compounds such as cineole to synthesize pheromone for attracting and mating with females 15 16 Each type of orchid places the pollinia on a different body part of a different species of bee so as to enforce proper cross pollination A rare achlorophyllous saprophytic orchid growing entirely underground in Australia Rhizanthella slateri is never exposed to light and depends on ants and other terrestrial insects to pollinate it Catasetum a genus discussed briefly by Darwin actually launches its viscid pollinia with explosive force when an insect touches a seta knocking the pollinator off the flower After pollination the sepals and petals fade and wilt but they usually remain attached to the ovary In 2011 Bulbophyllum nocturnum was discovered to flower nocturnally 17 Asexual reproduction Edit Some species such as in the genera Phalaenopsis Dendrobium and Vanda produce offshoots or plantlets formed from one of the nodes along the stem through the accumulation of growth hormones at that point These shoots are known as keiki 18 Fruits and seeds Edit Cross sections of orchid capsules showing the longitudinal slits The ovary typically develops into a capsule that is dehiscent by three or six longitudinal slits while remaining closed at both ends The seeds are generally almost microscopic and very numerous in some species over a million per capsule After ripening they blow off like dust particles or spores Most orchid species lack endosperm in their seed and must enter symbiotic relationships with various mycorrhizal basidiomyceteous fungi that provide them the necessary nutrients to germinate so almost all orchid species are mycoheterotrophic during germination and reliant upon fungi to complete their lifecycles Only a handful of orchid species have seed that can germinate without mycorrhiza namely the species within the genus Disa with hydrochorous seeds 19 20 Disa uniflora seedling on a sphagnum leaf on a thumbtack As the chance for a seed to meet a suitable fungus is very small only a minute fraction of all the seeds released grow into adult plants In cultivation germination typically takes weeks Horticultural techniques have been devised for germinating orchid seeds on an artificial nutrient medium eliminating the requirement of the fungus for germination and greatly aiding the propagation of ornamental orchids The usual medium for the sowing of orchids in artificial conditions is agar gel combined with a carbohydrate energy source The carbohydrate source can be combinations of discrete sugars or can be derived from other sources such as banana pineapple peach or even tomato puree or coconut water After the preparation of the agar medium it is poured into test tubes or jars which are then autoclaved or cooked in a pressure cooker to sterilize the medium After cooking the medium begins to gel as it cools Taxonomy EditMain article Taxonomy of the Orchid family The taxonomy of this family is in constant flux as new studies continue to clarify the relationships between species and groups of species allowing more taxa at several ranks to be recognized The Orchidaceae is currently placed in the order Asparagales by the APG III system of 2009 1 Five subfamilies are recognised The cladogram below was made according to the APG system of 1998 It represents the view that most botanists had held up to that time It was supported by morphological studies but never received strong support in molecular phylogenetic studies Apostasioideae 2 genera and 16 species south eastern AsiaCypripedioideae 5 genera and 130 species from the temperate regions of the world as well as tropical America and tropical Asia Monandrae Vanilloideae 15 genera and 180 species humid tropical and subtropical regions eastern North AmericaEpidendroideae more than 500 genera and more or less 20 000 species cosmopolitanOrchidoideae 208 genera and 3 630 species cosmopolitanIn 2015 a phylogenetic study 21 showed strong statistical support for the following topology of the orchid tree using 9 kb of plastid and nuclear DNA from 7 genes a topology that was confirmed by a phylogenomic study in the same year 22 ApostasioideaeVanilloideaeCypripedioideaeEpidendroideaeOrchidoideaeEvolution Edit A study in the scientific journal Nature has hypothesised that the origin of orchids goes back much longer than originally expected 23 An extinct species of stingless bee Proplebeia dominicana was found trapped in Miocene amber from about 15 20 million years ago The bee was carrying pollen of a previously unknown orchid taxon Meliorchis caribea on its wings This find is the first evidence of fossilised orchids to date 23 and shows insects were active pollinators of orchids then This extinct orchid M caribea has been placed within the extant tribe Cranichideae subtribe Goodyerinae subfamily Orchidoideae An even older orchid species Succinanthera baltica was described from the Eocene Baltic amber by Poinar amp Rasmussen 2017 24 Genetic sequencing indicates orchids may have arisen earlier 76 to 84 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous 25 According to Mark W Chase et al 2001 the overall biogeography and phylogenetic patterns of Orchidaceae show they are even older and may go back roughly 100 million years 26 Using the molecular clock method it was possible to determine the age of the major branches of the orchid family This also confirmed that the subfamily Vanilloideae is a branch at the basal dichotomy of the monandrous orchids and must have evolved very early in the evolution of the family Since this subfamily occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions from tropical America to tropical Asia New Guinea and West Africa and the continents began to split about 100 million years ago significant biotic exchange must have occurred after this split since the age of Vanilla is estimated at 60 to 70 million years Genome duplication occurred prior to the divergence of this taxon 27 Genera Edit Main article List of Orchidaceae genera There are around 800 genera of orchids The following are amongst the most notable genera of the orchid family citation needed Aa Abdominea Acampe Acanthophippium Aceratorchis Acianthus Acineta Acrorchis Ada Aerangis Aeranthes Aerides Aganisia Agrostophyllum Anacamptis Ancistrochilus Angraecum Anguloa Ansellia Aorchis Aplectrum Arachnis Arethusa Armodorum Ascoglossum Australorchis Auxopus Baptistonia Barkeria Bartholina Beloglottis Biermannia Bletilla Brassavola Brassia Bulbophyllum Calanthe Calypso Catasetum Cattleya Chiloschista Cirrhopetalum Cleisostoma Clowesia Coelogyne Coryanthes Cycnoches Cymbidium Cyrtopodium Cypripedium Dactylorhiza Dendrobium Disa Dracula Encyclia Epidendrum Epipactis Eria Eulophia Gastrochilus Gongora Goodyera Grammatophyllum Gymnadenia Habenaria Herschelia Ionopsis Laelia Lepanthes Liparis Ludisia Lycaste Masdevallia Maxillaria Meliorchis Mexipedium Miltonia Mormodes Odontoglossum Oeceoclades Oncidium Ophrys Orchis Paphiopedilum Papilionanthe Paraphalaenopsis Peristeria Phaius Phalaenopsis Pholidota Phragmipedium Platanthera Platystele Pleione Pleurothallis Pomatocalpa Promenaea Pterostylis Renanthera Restrepia Restrepiella Rhynchostylis Roezliella Saccolabium Sarcochilus Satyrium Seidenfadenia Selenipedium Serapias Sobralia Spiranthes Stanhopea Stelis Thrixspermum Tolumnia Trias Trichocentrum Trichoglottis Vanda Vanilla Yoania Zeuxine Zygopetalum Etymology Edit The type genus i e the genus after which the family is named is Orchis The genus name comes from the Ancient Greek ὄrxis orkhis literally meaning testicle because of the shape of the twin tubers in some species of Orchis 28 29 30 The term orchid was introduced in 1845 by John Lindley in School Botany 31 as a shortened form of Orchidaceae 32 In Middle English the name bollockwort was used for some orchids based on bollock meaning testicle and wort meaning plant 33 Hybrids Edit Orchid species hybridize readily in cultivation leading to a large number of hybrids with complex naming Hybridization is possible across genera and therefore many cultivated orchids are placed into nothogenera For instance the nothogenus Brassocattleya is used for all hybrids of species from the genera Brassavola and Cattleya Nothogenera based on at least three genera may have names based on a person s name with the suffix ara for instance Colmanara Miltonia Odontoglossum Oncidium The suffix is obligatory starting at four genera 34 Cultivated hybrids in the orchid family are also special in that they are named by using grex nomenclature rather than nothospecies For instance hybrids between Brassavola nodosa and Brassavola acaulis are placed in the grex Brassavola Guiseppi 35 The name of the grex Guiseppi in this example is written in a non italic font without quotes 36 Abbreviations Edit As a unique feature of the orchid family a system of abbreviations exists that applies to names of genera and nothogenera The system is maintained by the Royal Horticultural Society 37 These abbreviations consist of at least one character but may be longer As opposed to the usual one letter abbreviations used for names of genera orchid abbreviations uniquely determine the notho genus They are widely used in cultivation Examples are Phal for Phalaenopsis V for Vanda and Cleis for Cleisostoma Distribution EditOrchidaceae are cosmopolitan occurring in almost every habitat apart from glaciers The world s richest diversity of orchid genera and species is found in the tropics but they are also found above the Arctic Circle in southern Patagonia and two species of Nematoceras on Macquarie Island at 54 south The following list gives a rough overview of their distribution citation needed Oceania 50 to 70 genera North America 20 to 26 genera tropical America 212 to 250 genera tropical Asia 260 to 300 genera tropical Africa 230 to 270 genera Europe and temperate Asia 40 to 60 generaEcology EditA majority of orchids are perennial epiphytes which grow anchored to trees or shrubs in the tropics and subtropics Species such as Angraecum sororium are lithophytes 38 growing on rocks or very rocky soil Other orchids including the majority of temperate Orchidaceae are terrestrial and can be found in habitat areas such as grasslands or forest Some orchids such as Neottia and Corallorhiza lack chlorophyll so are unable to photosynthesise Instead these species obtain energy and nutrients by parasitising soil fungi through the formation of orchid mycorrhizae The fungi involved include those that form ectomycorrhizas with trees and other woody plants parasites such as Armillaria and saprotrophs 39 These orchids are known as myco heterotrophs but were formerly incorrectly described as saprophytes as it was believed they gained their nutrition by breaking down organic matter While only a few species are achlorophyllous holoparasites all orchids are myco heterotrophic during germination and seedling growth and even photosynthetic adult plants may continue to obtain carbon from their mycorrhizal fungi 40 The symbiosis is typically maintained throughout the lifetime of the orchid because they depend on the fungus for nutrients sugars and minerals 41 However some orchids have been found to switch fungal partners during extreme conditions Uses Edit As decoration in a flowerpot A Brassolaeliocattleya BLC Paradise Jewel Flame hybrid orchid Blooms of the Cattleya alliance are often used in ladies corsages Perfumery Edit The scent of orchids is frequently analysed by perfumers using headspace technology and gas liquid chromatography mass spectrometry to identify potential fragrance chemicals 42 Horticulture Edit The other important use of orchids is their cultivation for the enjoyment of the flowers Most cultivated orchids are tropical or subtropical but quite a few that grow in colder climates can be found on the market Temperate species available at nurseries include Ophrys apifera bee orchid Gymnadenia conopsea fragrant orchid Anacamptis pyramidalis pyramidal orchid and Dactylorhiza fuchsii common spotted orchid Orchids of all types have also often been sought by collectors of both species and hybrids Many hundreds of societies and clubs worldwide have been established These can be small local clubs or larger national organisations such as the American Orchid Society Both serve to encourage cultivation and collection of orchids but some go further by concentrating on conservation or research The term botanical orchid loosely denotes those small flowered tropical orchids belonging to several genera that do not fit into the florist orchid category A few of these genera contain enormous numbers of species Some such as Pleurothallis and Bulbophyllum contain approximately 1700 and 2000 species respectively and are often extremely vegetatively diverse The primary use of the term is among orchid hobbyists wishing to describe unusual species they grow though it is also used to distinguish naturally occurring orchid species from horticulturally created hybrids New orchids are registered with the International Orchid Register maintained by the Royal Horticultural Society 43 Food Edit Further information Vanilla Vanilla fruit drying The dried seed pods of one orchid genus Vanilla especially Vanilla planifolia are commercially important as a flavouring in baking for perfume manufacture and aromatherapy The underground tubers of terrestrial orchids mainly Orchis mascula early purple orchid are ground to a powder and used for cooking such as in the hot beverage salep or in the Turkish mastic ice cream dondurma The name salep has been claimed to come from the Arabic expression ḥasyu al tha lab fox testicles but it appears more likely the name comes directly from the Arabic name saḥlab The similarity in appearance to testes naturally accounts for salep being considered an aphrodisiac The dried leaves of Jumellea fragrans are used to flavour rum on Reunion Island Some saprophytic orchid species of the group Gastrodia produce potato like tubers and were consumed as food by native peoples in Australia and can be successfully cultivated notably Gastrodia sesamoides Wild stands of these plants can still be found in the same areas as early Aboriginal settlements such as Ku ring gai Chase National Park in Australia Aboriginal peoples located the plants in habitat by observing where bandicoots had scratched in search of the tubers after detecting the plants underground by scent note 1 Cultural symbolism EditOrchids have many associations with symbolic values For example the orchid is the City Flower of Shaoxing China Cattleya mossiae is the national Venezuelan flower while Cattleya trianae is the national flower of Colombia Vanda Miss Joaquim is the national flower of Singapore Guarianthe skinneri is the national flower of Costa Rica and Rhyncholaelia digbyana is the national flower of Honduras 45 Prosthechea cochleata is the national flower of Belize where it is known as the black orchid 46 Lycaste skinneri has a white variety alba that is the national flower of Guatemala commonly known as Monja Blanca White Nun Panama s national flower is the Holy Ghost orchid Peristeria elata or the flor del Espiritu Santo Rhynchostylis retusa is the state flower of the Indian state of Assam where it is known as Kopou Phul 47 Orchids native to the Mediterranean are depicted on the Ara Pacis in Rome until now the only known instance of orchids in ancient art and the earliest in European art note 2 A French writer and agronomist Louis Liger invented a classical myth in his book Le Jardinier Fleuriste et Historiographe published in 1704 attributing it to the ancient Greeks and Romans in which Orchis the son of a nymph and a satyr rapes a priestess of Bacchus during one of his festivals the Bacchanalia and is then killed and transformed into an orchid flower as punishment by the gods paralleling the various myths of youths dying and becoming flowers like Adonis and Narcisuss this myth however does not appear any earlier than Liger and is not part of traditional Greek and Roman mythologies 49 Some cultivars Cattleya Mrs Mahler Mem Fred Tompkins Cattleya Queen Sirikit Diamond Crown Cattleya Hawaiian Wedding Song Virgin Rhyncholaeliocattleya Chia Lin Cattleya Hawaiian Variable Prasan Cattlianthe Barbara Belle Cattleya Beaumesnil Parme Cattlianthe Chocolate Drop x Cattleya Pao de Acucar Cattleya mossiae Empress Frederick Hermine Cattleya Little Angel Cattleya Marjorie Hausermann York Miva Breeze Alize Rhyncholaeliocattleya Nobile s carnival Cattleya Pernel George Barnett Yankee Clipper Cattlianthe PortiaConservation EditAlmost all orchids are included in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species CITES meaning that international trade including in their parts derivatives is regulated by the CITES permit system 50 A smaller number of orchids such as Paphiopedilum sp are listed in CITES Appendix I meaning that commercial international trade in wild sourced specimens is prohibited and all other trade is strictly controlled 50 Assisted migration as conservation tool Edit In 2006 the Longtan Dam was constructed at the Hongshui River near the Yachang Orchid Nature Reserve In response to threats of inundation of wild orchids at lower altitudes 350 400 m above sea level 1000 endangered orchid plants of 16 genera and 29 species were translocated to higher elevation approximately 1000 m above sea level After relocation the 5 year survival of low and wide elevation species did not significantly differ and the mortality due to transplant shock was at only 10 From this it was concluded that assisted migration might be a viable conservation tool for orchid species endangered by climate change 51 See also EditAdaptation film based on The Orchid Thief Distribution of orchid species Orchid Conservation Coalition Orchid Pavilion Gathering Orchidelirium the Victorian era of flower madness in which collecting and discovering orchids reached extraordinary levels Orchids of the Philippines Orchids of Western Australia Shangsi Festival Black rot on orchids List of taxa named after human genitalsNotes Edit Early western district Vic settler gives account of local Aboriginal people gathering potato orchid tubers digging where bandicoots had scratched 44 The symbolic or even religious meaning of the Ara Pacis orchids is not yet known 48 References Edit a b Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 2009 An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants APG III Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161 2 105 121 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2009 00996 x Gove Philip B ed 1961 Webster s Third New International Dictionary G amp C Merriam Christenhusz M J M amp Byng J W 2016 The number of known plants species in the world and its annual increase Phytotaxa 261 3 201 217 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 261 3 1 WCSP World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Retrieved 2 April 2010 See External links below Yohan Pillon amp Mark W Chase 2007 Taxonomic exaggeration and its effects on orchid conservation Conservation Biology 21 1 263 265 doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 2006 00573 x PMID 17298532 S2CID 30157588 Nash N and Frownie S 2008 Complete guide to orchids Meredith Publishing Group p 12 Jenny King 10 June 2011 The coralroot orchid Orchids in Northern Washington State Silvercrown Mountain Outdoor School Archived from the original on 21 October 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2011 a b Hoffman Noel Brown Andrew August 2011 Orchids of South West Australia 3rd ed Gooseberry Hill Noel Hoffman p 13 ISBN 9780646562322 a b Brown Andrew Dixon Kingsley French Christopher Brockman Gary 2013 Field guide to the orchids of Western Australia the definitive guide to the native orchids of Western Australia Floreat W A Simon Nevill Publications pp 16 17 ISBN 9780980348149 a b c Structure of orchid flowers New Zealand Plant Conservation Network Retrieved 15 April 2022 a b c Zimmermann Pedro Anatomy of an Orchid Brasilian Orchid Organisation Retrieved 15 April 2022 Carr Gerald 30 October 2005 Flowering Plant Families Vascular Plant Family University of Hawaii Botany Department Retrieved 3 August 2022 Tan K H Nishida R 2000 Mutual reproductive benefits between a wild orchid Bulbophyllum patens and Bactrocera fruit flies via a floral synomone Journal of Chemical Ecology 26 2 533 546 doi 10 1023 A 1005477926244 S2CID 24971928 28 1161 1172 and 31 3 509 519 Chen LJ Liu KW Xiao XJ Tsai WC Hsiao YY Huang J Liu ZJ 2012 The anther steps onto the stigma for self fertilization in a slipper orchid PLOS ONE 7 5 e37478 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 737478C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0037478 PMC 3359306 PMID 22649529 Kimsey Lynn Siri 1980 The behaviour of male orchid bees Apidae Hymenoptera Insecta and the question of leks Animal Behaviour 28 4 996 1004 doi 10 1016 s0003 3472 80 80088 1 S2CID 53161684 Zimmermann Yvonne Roubik David W Eltz Thomas 19 July 2006 Species specific attraction to pheromonal analogues in orchid bees Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 60 6 833 843 doi 10 1007 s00265 006 0227 8 ISSN 0340 5443 S2CID 20819411 Tom Lawrie 23 November 2010 World s first night flowering orchid discovered Australian Geographic Archived from the original on 30 November 2011 Retrieved 26 May 2013 Matthew Blanchard Roberto Lopez Erik Runkle PhD and Yin Tung Wang PhD Growing the Best Phalaenopsis WWW AOS ORG ORCHIDS APRIL 2007 Archived June 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Thompson David Ian 2003 Conservation of select South African Disa Berg Species Orchidaceae through in vitro seed germination University of Natal Kurzweil H September 1993 Seed morphology in Southern African Orchidoideae Orchidaceae Plant Systematics and Evolution 185 3 4 229 247 doi 10 1007 BF00937660 S2CID 41321812 Guillaume Chomicki Luc P R Bidel Feng Ming Mario Coiro Xuan Zhang Yaofeng Wang Yves Baissac Christian Jay Allemand amp Susanne S Renner 2015 The velamen protects photosynthetic orchid roots against UV B damage and a large dated phylogeny implies multiple gains and losses of this function during the Cenozoic New Phytologist 205 3 1330 1341 doi 10 1111 nph 13106 PMID 25345817 Givnish Thomas J Spalink Daniel Ames Mercedes Lyon Stephanie P Hunter Steven J Zuluaga Alejandro Iles William J D Clements Mark A Arroyo Mary T K Leebens Mack James Endara Lorena Kriebel Ricardo Neubig Kurt M Whitten W Mark Williams Norris H Cameron Kenneth M 2015 Orchid phylogenomics and multiple drivers of their extraordinary diversification Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 282 1814 20151553 doi 10 1098 rspb 2015 1553 PMC 4571710 PMID 26311671 a b Santiago R Ramirez Barbara Gravendeel Rodrigo B Singer Charles R Marshall Naomi E Pierce 30 August 2007 Dating the origin of the Orchidaceae from a fossil orchid with its pollinator Nature 448 7157 1042 5 Bibcode 2007Natur 448 1042R doi 10 1038 nature06039 PMID 17728756 S2CID 4402181 George Poinar Jr Finn N Rasmussen 2017 Orchids from the past with a new species in Baltic amber Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 183 3 327 333 doi 10 1093 botlinnean bow018 An overview of the Phalaenopsis orchid genome by BAC sequence analysis pdf format Mark W Chase 2001 The origin and biogeography of Orchidaceae In A M Pridgeon P J Cribb M W Chase F Rasmussen eds Orchidoideae Part 1 Genera Orchidacearum Vol 2 Oxford University Press pp 1 5 ISBN 978 0 19 850710 9 Zhang Guo Qiang Liu Ke Wei Li Zhen Lohaus Rolf Hsiao Yu Yun Niu Shan Ce Wang Jie Yu Lin Yao Cheng Xu Qing Chen Li Jun Yoshida Kouki Fujiwara Sumire Wang Zhi Wen Zhang Yong Qiang Mitsuda Nobutaka Wang Meina Liu Guo Hui Pecoraro Lorenzo Huang Hui Xia Xiao Xin Ju Lin Min Wu Xin Yi Wu Wan Lin Chen You Yi Chang Song Bin Sakamoto Shingo Ohme Takagi Masaru Yagi Masafumi Zeng Si Jin et al 2017 The Apostasia genome and the evolution of orchids PDF Nature 549 7672 379 383 Bibcode 2017Natur 549 379Z doi 10 1038 nature23897 PMC 7416622 PMID 28902843 Joan Corominas 1980 Breve Diccionario Etimologico de la Lengua Castellana Ed Gredos p 328 ISBN 978 84 249 1332 8 Hyam R amp Pankhurst R J 1995 Plants and their names a concise dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 866189 4 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1940 ὄrxis A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Digital Library Online Etymology Dictionary orchid Grigson G 1973 A Dictionary of English Plant Names London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 0442 0 bollock n and adj Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 19 January 2018 International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants 9th edition 2016 Article H 6 and H 7 Brassavola Guiseppi Casa Luna 1968 BlueNanta International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants 9th edition 2016 Alphabetical List of Standard Abbreviations for Natural and Hybrid Generic Names PDF Melissa Whitman Michael Medler Jean Jacques Randriamanindry Elisabeth Rabakonandrianina 2011 Conservation of Madagascar s granite outcrop orchids influence of fire and moisture PDF Lankesteriana 11 1 55 67 doi 10 15517 lank v11i1 18315 Jonathan R Leake 2005 Plants parasitic on fungi unearthing the fungi in myco heterotrophs and debunking the saprophytic plant myth Mycologist 19 3 113 122 doi 10 1017 S0269915X05003046 Sathiyadash Kullaiyan Muthukumar Thangavelu Uma Eswaranpillai Pandey Radha Raman 1 September 2012 Mycorrhizal association and morphology in orchids Journal of Plant Interactions 7 3 238 247 doi 10 1080 17429145 2012 699105 ISSN 1742 9145 Pecoraro L Girlanda M Kull T Perini C Perotto S 1 December 2012 Molecular identification of root fungal associates in Orchis pauciflora Tenore Plant Biosystems 146 4 985 991 doi 10 1080 11263504 2011 634447 hdl 2318 93116 ISSN 1126 3504 S2CID 59939679 Gross K Sun M Schiestl F P 2016 Why Do Floral Perfumes Become Different Region Specific Selection on Floral Scent in a Terrestrial Orchid PLOS ONE 11 2 e0147975 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1147975G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0147975 PMC 4757410 PMID 26886766 RHS 2016 Zola Nellie Gott Beth 1992 Koorie Plants Koorie People Traditional Aboriginal Food Fibre and Healing Plants of Victoria Koorie Heritage Trust Incorporated p 38 ISBN 978 1 875606 10 8 Simbolos Patrios in Spanish Retrieved 22 June 2008 National Symbols Government of Belize Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 6 April 2008 List of Assam State Symbols State Animal State Flower State Tree assamyellowpage com 1 March 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2019 Lobelli Jarrett A 2012 The Emperor s orchids Archaeology 66 1 16 Archived from the original on 17 December 2012 Endersby Jim 7 November 2016 Orchid A Cultural History Chicago London University of Chicago Press pp 59 60 ISBN 978 0 226 37632 5 a b The CITES Appendices CITES archived from the original on 14 April 2012 retrieved 16 April 2012 Liu Hong Feng Chang Lin Chen Bao Shan Wang Zhong Sheng Xie Xiao Qing Deng Zheng Hai Wei Xin Lian Liu Shi Yong Zhang Zi Bin Luo Yi Bo June 2012 Overcoming extreme weather challenges Successful but variable assisted colonization of wild orchids in southwestern China Biological Conservation 150 1 68 75 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2012 02 018 ISSN 0006 3207 Bibliography EditRHS 2016 Search The International Orchid Register Royal Horticultural Society Retrieved 28 November 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orchidaceae Orchidaceae observations at iNaturalist Orchidaceae at The Plant List Orchidaceae at the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website World checklist of Orchidaceae species from the Catalogue of Life 29 572 species supplied by World Checklist of Selected Plant Families R Govaerts amp al Orchidaceae at the online Flora of North America Orchidaceae at the online Flora of China Orchidaceae at the online Flora of Zimbabwe Orchidaceae at the online Flora of the Western Australian Orchidaceae at the online Flora of New Zealand The Global Orchid Information Network Orchid Conservation Coalition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orchid amp oldid 1143694237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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