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07-26-2010, 11:16 PM
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Join Date: May 2009
Zone: 10a
Location: South Florida
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Very cool! Thanks for sharing.
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07-26-2010, 11:17 PM
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Join Date: May 2009
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Location: South Florida
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I've always wondered, and I guess this is a good place to ask: Do these temperate orchids live long? Obviously they recede during winter, but does the same individual plant live for say, 20 years or more, as some of the tropical epiphytic orchids do here in Florida? Thank you for your insights!
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07-26-2010, 11:38 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2007
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Ronald, this is great!
Justin, to answer your question, each of these terrestrials is a perennial, so there is quite a potential for longevity...it's just the above-ground part that dies off yearly back to a longer-lived underground root.
---Prem
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07-27-2010, 03:02 AM
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Justin and Prem,
Maybe Prem has some experience of this, but some of these native orchids behave rather strangely, especially the Coralroots. One year you'll find a lot of them and another year hardly any, nor do they always seem to be in exactly the same place where they appeared the year before.
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07-27-2010, 09:29 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Svit, Slovakia, Europe
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ronaldhanko
Justin and Prem,
Maybe Prem has some experience of this, but some of these native orchids behave rather strangely, especially the Coralroots. One year you'll find a lot of them and another year hardly any, nor do they always seem to be in exactly the same place where they appeared the year before.
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So they bloom, yust once in their lifetime, or yust once in several years... hm... Is it the same for all species in your area?
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07-27-2010, 09:32 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by xristie9
So they bloom, yust once in their lifetime, or yust once in several years... hm... Is it the same for all species in your area?
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No, that wasn't quite what I meant - I believe it's more that they can lie dormant and then rebloom.
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07-27-2010, 10:16 AM
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Ronald,
yes...coralroots seem to bloom sporadically (probably due to the fact that relying on a fungus exclusively to get all their nutrients is not a very efficient way to get nutrition). Hence, they must take several years to gather up strength for the next time they bloom.
Also, for some of the coralroots, they have fairly large underground roots, so one 'plant' may give rise to a number of flowering stems one year and a few the next, but they are all from one underground root.
---Prem
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07-27-2010, 11:21 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by prem
Ronald,
yes...coralroots seem to bloom sporadically (probably due to the fact that relying on a fungus exclusively to get all their nutrients is not a very efficient way to get nutrition). Hence, they must take several years to gather up strength for the next time they bloom.
Also, for some of the coralroots, they have fairly large underground roots, so one 'plant' may give rise to a number of flowering stems one year and a few the next, but they are all from one underground root.
---Prem
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That makes sense, Prem. Thanks for the info.
Ron
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