| Triphora trianthophoros | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Clade: | Angiosperms |
| Clade: | Monocots |
| Order: | Asparagales |
| Family: | Orchidaceae |
| Subfamily: | Epidendroideae |
| Genus: | Triphora |
| Species: | T. trianthophoros |
| Binomial name | |
| Triphora trianthophoros | |
| | |
Triphora trianthophoros, the threebirds [1] or three birds orchid, or nodding pogonia, is a species of terrestrial orchid native to eastern North America.
Triphora trianthophoros is a small, terrestrial, semi-saprophytic orchid. [2] The showiest member of its genus, T. trianthophoros has 1-8 (often 3, thus the name) nodding flowers that are roughly 2 cm in size and sit atop stems 8–25 cm tall. Leaves are small (~1 cm X 1.5 cm) and typically dark green to purple. The orchid blooms from July through September, but is infamous for its elusive nature, with ephemeral flowers lasting for only several hours on a few days of the year. [3] It has further been reported that populations across a region synchronize blooming on specific days, making observation of flowering specimens even more difficult. [4] Several forms of T. trianthophoros exist, including forma albidoflava (Keenan) with white flowers, forma caerulea (P.M. Brown) with blue flowers, and forma rossii (P.M. Brown) with multi-colored flowers. [5] [6] [7]
Triphora trianthophoros is native to the eastern North America, ranging from as far south as Panama and north through Central America and the central and eastern United States into Ontario. [2] Despite its wide distribution, the species is rare throughout much of its range and has been given G3G4 (secured, but with cause for concern) conservation status by NatureServe. [8]
In the Carolinian zone of Southwestern Ontario, T. trianthophoros existed in two populations in the year 1950, and has only been rarely observed in one of them since 2008 [9] . It was listed as endangered in 2010 [10] under Canada's Species At Risk Act and Ontario's Endangered Species Act the following year. [9]
Triphora trianthophoros is predominantly found in mixed hardwood forests, however the species also appears in floodplain forests and the margins of bogs or swamps within its range. [10] It is shade-tolerant. [11] Co-located species often include partridgeberry, maple, and beech trees, and many soil mycorrhizal associations which are hypothesized to help supplement nutrients under the closed-canopy conditions. [2] [3] [10] [11] T. trianthophoros occurrences are frequently positively correlated with beech spp. occurrences, suggesting a potential plant+fungi+plant interaction of nutrient and photosynthate sharing between the plant species via mycorrhizae. [11]