Great Plains ladies’-tresses (Spiranthes magnicamporum) flowers. Bottom center: a Great Plains ladies’-tresses plant in full bloom. Note how the flowers spiral up along the stem. Bottom left: a closer view of the blooms, one in lateral view, one in three-quarters view. Note that the flower to the right of the stem is cupped by a green bract that narrows to a sharp point that arches over the base of the flower. Bottom right: a single Great Plains ladies’-tresses bloom at the base of the inflorescence. The two petals are the roof and floor of the bloom; the lower petal has a touch of pale yellow inside the protruding, fringe-like lip. The narrow structures on each side of the bloom are the two white sepals. Top right: a frontal view of a bloom. The two lateral sepals can be clearly seen; the translucent, frilled lower lip is also clear. Top left: a lateral of a bloom. Note the yellow tinge on the more basal portion of the lower petal and the bract in the lower right cupping the base of the adjacent bloom. In both upper images, note the glandular hairs protruding from the surface of the upper petal and both sepals.
Great Plains ladies’-tresses flowers are arranged in three rows spiraling up around the stem. The petals and sepals are both white with a tinge of yellow on the lower lip (lower petal). The two petals are top and bottom of the bloom, with the lower, ruffled petal extending out and down; the two sepals are narrower than the petals and flank the side of the bloom, sometimes arching higher than the petals. Typically, there is a single stamen; the style is fused to the surface of the lower petal deep in the flower. The base of the flower is nestled between oval green bracts which cup the ovary and taper to a sharp point above the flower. Great Plains ladies’-tresses are probably pollinated by bumblebees, but information is sparse. If you get down on your hands and knees (or, better, lie down beside the plant) and put your nose up against the blooms, it is really true that they smell like vanilla(!). A closely related species, nodding ladies’-tresses (Spiranthes cernua) was once considered to be the same species as Great Plains ladies tresses, but the former still has its basal leaves on blooming and no scent while the latter never has the basal leaves when blooming and the flowers smell like vanilla.
Great Plains ladies’-tresses (Spiranthes magnicamporum) stem and leaves. The basal leaves wither before the plant blooms. The left and right images show the region of the stem below the flowers. The stem leaves sheath the stem; the tip of the upper, free portion of the leaf tends to overlap the base of the leaf higher on the stem. The image in the center shows the top of the stem, just below the flowers. The stem leaves transition to bracts with a long, sharp tip that cups the base of each flower.
Great Plains ladies’-tresses (aka, prairie ladies’-tresses) is a native orchid that produces a single erect stalk up to about 20″ tall. The basal leaves are long and slender (5.5″ long and 1/2″ wide), but only three or four are produced and those wither about two weeks before the plant begins to flower. The stem leaves closely parallel to and sheath the stem, with the tip of one overlapping the base of the bract above; only 4-6 stem leaves are produced.
A Great Plains ladies’-tresses (Spiranthes magnicamporum) plant in full bloom at 63rd St. Beach.
Great Plains ladies’-tresses (aka, prairie ladies’-tresses) is a native orchid that produces a single erect stalk up to about 20″ tall. The basal leaves are long and slender (5.5″ long and 1/2″ wide), but only three or four are produced and those wither about two weeks before the plant begins to flower. The stem leaves closely parallel to and sheath the stem, with the tip of one overlapping the base of the bract above; only 4-6 stem leaves are produced. The flowers are arranged in three rows spiraling up around the stem. The petals and sepals are both white with a tinge of yellow on the lower lip (lower petal). The two petals are top and bottom of the bloom, with the lower, ruffled petal extending out and down; the two sepals are narrower than the petals and flank the side of the bloom, sometimes arching higher than the petals. Typically, there is a single stamen; the style is fused to the surface of the lower petal deep in the flower. The base of the flower is nestled between oval green bracts which cup the ovary and taper to a sharp point above the flower. Great Plains ladies’-tresses are probably pollinated by bumblebees, but information is sparse. If you get down on your hands and knees (or, better, lie down beside the plant) and put your nose up against the blooms, it is really true that they smell like vanilla(!). A closely related species, nodding ladies’-tresses (Spiranthes cernua) was once considered to be the same species as Great Plains ladies tresses, but the former still has its basal leaves on blooming and no scent while the latter never has the basal leaves when blooming and the flowers smell like vanilla.
