Leighton Photography & Imaging

  • Home
  • Website
  • About
  • Portfolio
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • How to Download
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
search results
Image 16 of 16
Prev
Less

Western Rattlesnake Plantain Orchid

Add to Cart
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Thanks to busy the bumblebees in the Rocky Mountain summertime, this western rattlesnake orchid's flowers have been fertilized and have gone to fruit. In later months, these will dry and crack open, releasing millions of microscopic spores ensuring the spread of another generation of these beautiful wild orchids among the forest floor. This one was found in a sunny patch of deep forest where a fallen tree has opened a bit of the overhead canopy, letting direct sunlight reach the forest floor in Glacier National Park in northern Montana.

Copyright
©2016
Image Size
3254x4881 / 9.6MB
Keywords
America, Angiosperms, Asparagales, Cranichideae, Epipactis decipiens, Flathead National Forest, G. oblongifolia, Glacier County, Glacier National Park, Goodyera, Goodyera decipiens, Goodyera menziesii, Goodyera oblongifolia, Goodyera oblongifolia f. reticulata, Goodyera oblongifolia var. reticulata, Goodyerinae, Monocots, Montana, Orchidaceae, Orchidoideae, Orchiodes decipiens, Peramium decipiens, Peramium menziesii, Plantae, Rocky Mountains, Spiranthes decipiens, USA, United States, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, color, field, flora, floral, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, giant rattlesnake plantain, green, green-leaved rattlesnake plantain, greenleaf rattlesnake plantain, herb, macro, monocot, national park, native, natural, nature, orchid, perennial, plant, plants, rattlesnake plantain, summer, terrestrial, vein, veined, west, western rattlesnake plantain, white, wild, wildflowers
Contained in galleries
Cranichideae
Thanks to busy the bumblebees in the Rocky Mountain summertime, this western rattlesnake orchid's flowers have been fertilized and have gone to fruit. In later months, these will dry and crack open, releasing millions of microscopic spores ensuring the spread of another generation of these beautiful wild orchids among the forest floor. This one was found in a sunny patch of deep forest where a fallen tree has opened a bit of the overhead canopy, letting direct sunlight reach the forest floor in Glacier National Park in northern Montana.