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Striped Coralroot (Corallorhiza striata var. striata)-1

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The striped coralroot is a very strikingly beautiful terrestrial orchid found in wooded habitats across most of Northern North America including most of the western states (except Arizona and Nevada) and almost all of Canada (except most of the Maritime Provinces (Nova Scotia, PEI, New Brunswick). This species is very easy to identify because of the very clear and visible stripes on the petals and sepals. This wild native orchid is known as a myco-heterotroph, meaning it doesn't need chlorophyll to produce it's own food, but instead gains nutrients from either a mutual symbiotic relationship with certain fungi in the soil or by just from parasitism: stealing the nutrients it needs from it's host fungi. These were part of a large colony found in a clump of conifers in rural Kittitas County in Washington State.

Copyright
©2018
Image Size
4473x6702 / 24.9MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
America, Angiosperms, Asparagales, Blewett Pass, C. striata, Corallorhiza, Corallorhiza striata, Corallorhiza striata var. striata, Epidendroideae, Kittitas County, Monocots, Neottia striata, Orchidaceae, PNW, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Plantae, USA, United States, Washington, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, color, coralroot, field, flora, floral, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, green, herb, hooded coralroot, macro, monocot, myco-heterotroph, myco-heterotrophy, myco-heterotropic, native, natural, nature, orchid, parasite, parasitic, perennial, plant, plants, red, saprophyte, stripe, striped, striped coral root, striped coralroot, stripes, summer, terrestrial, wild, wildflowers, Maxillarieae
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Maxillarieae
The striped coralroot is a very strikingly beautiful terrestrial orchid found in wooded habitats across most of Northern North America including most of the western states (except Arizona and Nevada) and almost all of Canada (except most of the Maritime Provinces (Nova Scotia, PEI, New Brunswick). This species is very easy to identify because of the very clear and visible stripes on the petals and sepals. This wild native orchid is known as a myco-heterotroph, meaning it doesn't need chlorophyll to produce it's own food, but instead gains nutrients from either a mutual symbiotic relationship with certain fungi in the soil or by just from parasitism: stealing the nutrients it needs from it's host fungi. These were part of a large colony found in a clump of conifers in rural Kittitas County in Washington State.