Orchids
Orchids (Orchidaceae family) are among the largest and most diverse of the flowering plant (Angiospermae) families, with over 800 described genera and 25,000 species.
Some sources give 30,000 species, but the exact number is unknown since
classification differs greatly in the academic world. Revisions of
different genera occur on a monthly basis and this will increase with
the growing use of genetic research and biochemistry. There are another
100,000+ hybrids and cultivars produced by horticulturalists, created since the introduction of tropical species in the 19th century. The Kew World Checklist of Orchids includes about 24,000 accepted species. About 800 new species are added each year. Orchids, through their interactions with pollinators and their symbiosis with mycorrhizae fungi, are considered by some, along with the grasses, to be examples of the most complex floral evolution known.
Orchids get their name from the Greek orchis, meaning "testicle", from the appearance of subterranean tuberoids of the genus Orchis. The word "orchis" was first used by Theophrastos (372/371 – 287/286 BC), in his book "De historia plantarum" (The natural history of plants). He was a student of Aristotle and is considered the father of botany and ecology.
All orchid species are protected for the purposes of international commerce under CITES
as potentially threatened or endangered in their natural habitat, with
most species listed under Appendix II. A number of species and genera
are afforded protection under Appendix I, including all of Paphiopedilum and all of Phragmipedium. Many other species are protected by both international and national legislation, while hybrids are specifically exempted.
General description
These monocotyledonous plants are cosmopolitan in distribution, occurring in every habitat, except Antarctica and deserts. The great majority are to be found in the tropics, mostly Asia, South America and Central America. They are found above the Arctic Circle, in southern Patagonia and even on Macquarie Island, close to Antarctica.
The following list gives a rough overview of their distribution:
- Eurasia: 40–60 genera
- North America: 20–30 genera
- tropical America: 300–350 genera
- tropical Africa: 125–150 genera
- tropical Asia: 250–300 genera
- Oceania: 50–70 genera
Orchids can be grouped according to the way they retrieve nutrients:
- A majority of species are perennial epiphytes; they are found in tropical moist broadleaf forests or mountains and subtropics. These are anchored on other plants, mostly trees, sometimes shrubs. Note that they are not parasites.
- A few are lithophytes,
similar to epiphytes but growing naturally on rocks or on very rocky
soil. They derive their nutrients from the atmosphere, rain water,
litter, humus, and even their own dead tissue.
- Others are terrestrial plants.
They grow in the soil or in the loose substrate atop the ground and
obtain their nutrients from the soil or the substrate. This group
includes nearly all temperate orchids.
- Some lack chlorophyll and are epiparasites, also referred to as "myco-heterotrophs" (formerly incorrectly called saprophytes). These achlorophyllous orchids have an ectomycorrhizal relationship, i.e. they are completely dependent on soil fungi feeding on decaying plant matter (usually fallen leaves) to provide them with nutrients. Typical examples include the Bird's-nest Orchid (Neottia nidus-avis) and Spotted Coral-root (Corallorhiza maculata).
All orchids have these five basic features:
- The presence of a column
- The flower is bilaterally symmetric
- The pollen are glued together into the pollinia, a mass of waxy pollen on filaments.
- The seeds are microscopically small, lacking endosperm (food reserves) in the overal majority of the species. There are notable exceptions, such as Disa cardinalis, whose seeds may grow to a length of 1.1 mm. Seeds of Vanilla
may weigh 20 times or more that of other orchids, so therefore are used
in the food industry as the extremely popular "vanilla".
- The seeds can, under natural circumstances, only germinate in symbiosis with specialized fungi. Under artificial circumstances, however, germination is possible "in vitro" on sterile substrates of agar
in specialized laboratories. Germinating seeds in agar, usually done in
flasks, is an advanced technique, requiring sterility at all costs. It
takes anywhere from one–up to five to ten years for an orchid seedling
to mature. An alternative artificial germination, however, is done by
cultivating the fungus and sowing the seeds on them. This is called
in-vitro symbiotic culture and is used most commonly for terrestrial
orchids.
Leaves
This small orchid demonstrates a typical zygomorphic flower with three petal-like sepals (top, lower right, lower left), two normal petals on either side of the dorsal (upper) sepal, and the labellum, a modified lower petal in three parts surrounding and below the shiny column.
Orchids have simple leaves with parallel veins.
Their shape is highly variable between species; ovate, lanceolate, or
orbiculate. Their size and shape can be an aid in identifying the
orchid, since it reflects the taxonomic position. The leaves can be
enormous or minute, or they can even be lacking (as in the Ghost Orchid (Dendrophylax lindenii), a mycoheterotrophic species, and Aphyllorchis and Taeniophyllum, which depend on their roots, which contain chlorophyll for photosynthesis).
The structure of the leaves corresponds to the specific habitat of
the orchid. Species that typically bask in sunlight, or grow on sites
which can be occasionally very dry, have thick, leathery leaves. The laminas are covered by a waxy cuticle.
These retain their necessary water supply. Shade species, on the other
hand, have tall, thin leaves. They cannot tolerate a drop in
atmospheric humidity or exposure to direct sunlight. Between these two
extremes, there is a whole range of intermediate forms.
The leaves of most orchids live on, attached to their pseudobulbs,
for several years. Some species, especially those with plicate leaves,
shed their aged leaves annually, through an articulation between the
lamina and the petiole sheath, and develop new leaves together with new pseudobulbs (as in the genus Catasetum).
The leaves of some species can be most beautiful. The leaves of the Macodes sanderiana, a semiterrestrial or lithophyte, show a sparkling silver and gold veining on a light green background. The cordate leaves of Psychopsiella limminghei are light brownish green with maroon-puce markings, created by flower pigments. The attractive mottle of the leaves of Lady's Slippers from temperate zones (Paphiopedilum) is caused by uneven distribution of chlorophyll. Also Phalaenopsis schilleriana is a lovely 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 fairly inconspicuous white flowers.
Stem
The stem of an orchid determines the habit of the species. Each type of stem can grow in one of these two ways:
- monopodial
("one-footed") growth. The new shoots grow upwards from a single stem,
originating in the end bud of the old shoots. It then produces leaves
and flowers along this stem. The stem of these orchids can reach a
length of several meters (as in the genera Vanda and Vanilla).
- sympodial
("many-footed") growth. The plant produces a series of adjacent shoots
which grow to a certain size, bloom, and then stop growing, to be
replaced by the next growth. Plants of this type grow laterally 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 the genus Cattleya).
While this lead is developing, the rhizome may start its growth again,
this time from an 'eye', or undeveloped bud, thereby causing the
rhizome to branch.
Plant thallus and roots
All orchids are perennial herbs, lacking any permanent woody structure.
- Some orchids are terrestrial, growing rooted in the soil. Terrestrial orchids may be rhizomatous, forming corms or tubers.
These act as storage organs for food and water. The root caps of
terrestrials are smooth and white. Terrestrials are mostly found in
colder climates.
- A great many orchids are epiphytes, which do not require soil and use trees for support. They occur in warmer regions. Epiphytic orchids have modified aerial roots and, in the older parts of the root, an epidermis modified into a spongy, water-absorbing velamen,
which can have a silvery-gray, white or brown appearance. The cells of
the root epidermis grow at a right angle to the axis of the root. This
allows them to get a firm grasp on their support. These roots can
sometimes be a few meters long, in order to take up as much moisture as
possible. Nutrients mainly come from animal droppings on their
supporting tree that are washed down when it rains. The aerial roots of
epiphytes that lack leaves have an additional function. They contain
chlorophyll and take up carbon dioxide.
- A few species, especially in Australia and Tasmania, are lithophytes., i.e. they grow on rocks.
The base of the stem of sympodial epiphytes, or in some species
essentially the entire stem, may be thickened to form what is called a pseudobulb.
These contain nutrients and water for drier periods. Pseudobulbs have a
smooth surface with lengthwise grooves. They typically stay alive for
five or six years. They look on the inside more like a corm than the
embryonal stage of leaf sheaths. They have different sizes and shapes.
They can be conical or oblong. In the Black Orchids (Bulbophyllum), the pseudobulbs are no longer than 2 mm. The largest orchid in the world, the Giant Orchid (Grammatophyllum speciosum),
has pseudobulbs with lengths of 2–3 m. When the orchid has aged
and the pseudobulb has shed its leaves, the pseudobulb becomes dormant
and is called a backbulb. The next year's pseudobulb then takes
over, exploiting the last reserves of the backbulb. Eventually, the
backbulb also dies off, having given life to newer growths. At the end
of the pseudobulb typically appear one or two leaves, though there may
be up to a dozen or more. Some Dendrobium
have long, canelike pseudobulbs with short, rounded leaves over the
whole length. Some orchids have hidden or extremely small pseudobulbs
hidden completely inside leaves.
Some sympodial terrestrials, such as Orchis and Ophrys, have two subterranean tubers (more like tuberous roots) between the roots.
One is used as a food reserve for wintery periods, and provides for the
development of the other pseudobulb, from which visible growth develops.
In warm and humid climates, many terrestrial orchids do not need pseudobulbs.
Orchid flowers
Orchids are truly flowers of superlatives. Even a complete layman in
botany is awed by the beauty of orchids. No plant family has as many
different flowers as the orchid family.
There are many types of specializations within the Orchidaceae. Best known are the seemingly endless structural variations in the flowers that encourage pollination by particular species of insects, bats, or birds.
Most African orchids are white, while Asian orchids are often
multicolored. Some orchids only grow one flower on each stem, others
sometimes more than a hundred together on a single spike.
The typical orchid flower is zygomorphic, i.e. bilaterally symmetric. Notable exceptions are the genera Mormodes, Ludisia and Macodes.
The flowers grow on racemes or panicles. These can be :
- basal (i.e. produced from the base of the pseudobulb, as in Cymbidium)
- apical (i.e. produced from the apex of the orchid, as in Cattleya)
- or axillary (i.e. coming from a node between the leaf axil and the plant axis, as in Vanda).
The basic orchid flower is composed of three sepals in the outer whorl, and three petals in the inner whorl. The medial petal is usually modified and enlarged (then called the labellum or lip), forming a platform for pollinators near the center of the corolla. Together, except the lip, they are called tepals.
Sepals form the exterior of the bud. They are green in this stage,
but sometimes, if the orchid blossom is, for example, purple, the buds
can show a purple tint. When the flower opens, the sepals become
intensely colored. Sepals may mimick petals such as in some
phalaenopsis or be completely distinct. In many orchids, the sepals are
mutually different and generally resemble the petals. It is not always
easy to distinguish sepals and petals. The normal form can be found in Cattleya, with three sepals forming a triangle. But in Venus Slippers (Paphiopedilum) the lower two sepals are concrescent (fused together into a synsepal), while the lip has taken the form of a slipper. In Masdevallia all the sepals are fused into a calyx.
In an example like this the sepals are very prominent, especially in
lycaste orchids, the actual petals become diminished and inconspicuous.
The reproductive organs in the center (stamens and pistil) have adapted to become a cylindrical structure called the column or gynandrium. On top of the column lies the stigma, the vestiges of stamens and the pollinia, a mass of waxy pollen on filaments. These filaments can be a caudicle (as in Habenaria) or a stipe (as in Vanda). These filaments hold the pollinia to the viscidium (sticky pad). The pollen are held together by the alkaloid viscine.
This viscidium adheres to the body of a visiting insect. The type of
pollinia is useful in determining the genus. On top of the pollinia is
the anther cap, preventing self-pollination. At the upper edge of the stigma of single-anthered orchids, in front of the anther cap, is the rostellum, a slender beaklike extension.
Reproduction
It is in the variety and the refinement of their reproductive methods that orchids truly amaze. On many orchids, the lip (labellum)
serves as a landing pad for flying insects. The labellum is sometimes
adapted to have a color and shape which attracts particular male
insects via mimicry of a receptive female insect. Some orchids are
reliant solely on this deception for pollination. After pollination,
the epigynous ovary starts developing and produces a many-seeded capsule.
- The Lady's Slipper (Paphiopedilum) has a deep pocket that traps visiting insects, with just one exit. Passage through this exit leads to pollinia being deposited on the insect.
- A Eurasian genus Ophrys has flowers that look and smell so much like female bumble bees that male bees flying nearby are irresistibly drawn in, such as with the Bumblebee Orchid (Ophrys bombyliflora).
The viscidium, and thus pollinia, stick to the head or the abdomen of
the bumblebee. On visiting another orchid of the same species, the
bumblebee pollinates the sticky stigma with the pollinia. The filaments
of the pollinia have, during transport, taken such position that the
waxy pollen are able to stick in the second orchid to the stigma, just
below the rostellum. Such is the refinement of the reproduction. If the
filaments had not taken the new position on the bee, the pollinia could
not have pollinated the original orchid.
- An underground orchid in Australia, Rhizanthella slateri, never sees the light of day, but depends on ants and other terrestrial insects to pollinate it.
- Many Bulbophyllum species stink like rotting carcasses, and the flies they attract assist their reproduction.
- Catasetum saccatum, a species discussed briefly by Darwin actually launches its viscid pollen sacs with explosive force, when an insect touches a seta. He was ridiculed for this by the naturalist Thomas Huxley.
- Some Phalaenopsis species in Malaysia are known to use subtle weather cues to coordinate mass flowering.
- Some Phalaenopsis, Dendrobium and Vanda species produce keiki, offshoots or plantlets formed from one of the nodes along the stem, through the accumulation of growth hormones at that point.
The filaments of the pollinia of some orchids dry up if they haven’t
been visited by an insect. This way, the waxy pollen falls on the
stigma causing the orchid to self-fertilize.
Fruits and seeds
cross-section of an orchid capsule, showing 3 or 6 longitudinal slits
The orchid ovary is always inferior (located behind the flower), three-carpelate and one or three-partitioned, with parietal placentation (but axile in the Apostasioideae).
If pollination was successful, the sepals and petals fade and wilt but they remain attached to the ovary. The epigynous ovary typically develops into a capsule that is dehiscent by 3 or 6 longitudinal slits, while remaining closed at both ends. The ripening of a capsule can take 2–18 months. The microscopic seeds
are very numerous (over a million per capsule in most species). They
blow off after ripening like dust particles or spores, barely visible
to the human eye. Since they lack endosperm,
they must enter symbiotic relationship with mycorrhizal fungi to
germinate. These fungi provide the necessary nutrients to the seeds.
All species rely upon mycorrhizal associations with various fungi, mostly genus Rhizoctonia (class Basidiomycetes),
for at least part of their life cycle. Some achlorophyllous (lacking
chlorophyll) species are adapted to be entirely dependent upon these
fungi for nutrients. The relationship between fungi and the plant is
often called symbiotic,
but it is not at all clear what, if anything, the fungi derive from the
relationship. It has been referred to by some as "mycotrophic", meaning
that the plant is parasitic upon the fungus. At the very least, the
fungi decompose surrounding matter, freeing up water-soluble nutrients. Because most orchid seeds are extremely tiny with no food reserves (endosperm lacking), they will not germinate without such a symbiont to supply nutrients in the wild. Some fungi continue to live in the roots of the adult orchid. This enables an orchid such as Neottia nidus-avis
to function without chlorophyll. The chance for a seed to meet a
fitting fungus is very small. Of all the seeds released, only a minute
fraction grow into new orchids. This process can take years; in some
cases up to fifteen years.
Horticultural
techniques have been devised for germinating seeds on a
nutrient-containing gel, eliminating the requirement of the fungus for
germination, and greatly aiding the propagation of rare and endangered
species.
Orchids in commerce
One orchid genus, Vanilla, is commercially important, used as a foodstuff flavoring, the source of vanilla. The underground tubers of terrestrial orchids are ground up and used for cooking, such as in the hot beverage salep or the so-called "fox-testicle ice cream" salepi dondurma. The scent of orchids is frequently used by perfumists (using Gas-liquid chromatography)
to identify potential fragrance chemicals. With these exceptions,
orchids have virtually no commercial value other than for the enjoyment
of the flowers (see also Botanical orchids).
There are a great number of tropical and subtropical
orchids, and these are the most commonly known, as they are available
at nurseries and through orchid clubs across the world. There are also
quite a few orchids which grow in colder climates, although these are
less often seen 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).
The family of orchids is remarkably diverse. The plants found in "casual" culture, such as Phalaenopsis, Cattleya, Dendrobium, and so forth, represent a tiny fraction of the thousands of species of orchids. Also within the Orchidaceae are "leafless" orchids, which often appear as nothing more than masses of roots,
achlorophyllous orchids that are entirely reliant upon their
mycorrhizal symbiont for their nutrition, "jewel" orchids with foliage
that is as pretty as their flowers, and so many others that are capable
of affecting the most dedicated of growers very deeply. Ranging in size
from tiny moss-like Pleurothallis species to massive (7 m) Grammatophyllum species in New Guinea, their beauty and sophistication have captivated many.
The National Orchid Garden in the Singapore Botanic Gardens is considered by some to be among the finest collections of orchids in cultivation open to the public. In 2004, Taiwan established the Taiwan Orchid Plantation, a science-based industrial park, to develop its commercial orchid exports in the future. See also botanical orchids.
Orchids, like tulips,
have become a major market throughout the world. Buyers now bid
hundreds of dollars on new hybrids or improved ones. Because of their
apparent ease in hybridization, they are now becoming one of the most
popular cut-flowers on the market. Though orchid hybridization has been
happening for many years, only recently has new technology made it into
what it is. Thailand is the leading country in the orchid-buying world, with one of the only pure white orchids.
Taxonomy
The taxonomy of this family is in constant flux, as DNA studies give new information. An in-depth treatment of the taxonomy is given in Taxonomy of the Orchid family.
The following genera have been described (for a full list, see List of Orchidaceae genera with more than 800 genera and many pictures):
Aa; Abdominea; Acampe; Acanthephippium; Aceratorchis; Acianthus; Acineta; Acrorchis; Ada; Aerangis; Aeranthes; Aerides; Aganisia; Agrostophyllum; Amitostigma; Anacamptis; Ancistrochilus; Angraecum; Anguloa; Ansellia; Aorchis; Aplectrum; Arethusa; Armodorum; Ascocenda; Ascocentrum; Ascoglossum; Australorchis; Auxopus; Baptistonia; Barbrodia; Barkeria; Barlia; Bartholina; Beloglottis; Biermannia; Bletilla; Brassavola; Brassia; Bulbophyllum; Calypso; Catasetum; Cattleya; Cirrhopetalum; Cleisostoma; Clowesia; Coelogyne; Coryanthes; Cymbidium; Cyrtopodium; Cypripedium; Dactylorhiza; Dendrobium; Disa; Dracula; Encyclia; Epidendrum; Epipactis; Eria; Eulophia; Gongora; Goodyera; Grammatophyllum; Gymnadenia; Habenaria; Herschelia; Laelia; Lepanthes; Liparis; Lycaste; Masdevallia; Maxillaria; Mexipedium; Miltonia; Mormodes; Odontoglossum; Oncidium; Ophrys; Orchis; Paphiopedilum; Paraphalaenopsis; Peristeria; Phaius; Phalaenopsis; Pholidota; Phragmipedium; Platanthera; Pleione; Pleurothallis; Pterostylis; Renanthera; Renantherella; Restrepia; Restrepiella; Rhynchostylis; Saccolabium; Sarcochilus; Satyrium; Selenipedium; Serapias; Sophronitis; Spiranthes; Stanhopea; Stelis; Thrixspermum; Trias; Trichocentrum; Trichoglottis; Vanda; Vanilla; Zeuxine; Zygopetalum.
See also
References
- Batygina, T. B., Bragina, E. A., and Vasilyeva, E. 2003. The reproductive system and germination in orchids. Acta Biol. Cracov. ser. Bot. 45: 21-34.
- Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart
- Kreutz, C. A. J. 2004. Kompendium der Europaischen Orchideen. Catalogue of European Orchids. Kreutz Publishers, Landgraaf, Netherlands
- D. Lee Taylor and Thomas D. Bruns : Ectomycorrhizal mutualism by two nonphotosynthetic orchids; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA; Vol. 94, pp. 4510-4515, April 1997 (on line).
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Orchidaceae"
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