nodding ladies’ tresses |
|
||||||
Spiranthes cernua |
|||||||
| Taxonomy | Family: |
Orchidaceae (orchid) |
|||||
Subfamily: |
Orchidoideae |
||||||
Tribe: |
Cranichideae |
||||||
Subtribe: |
Spiranthinae |
||||||
| Nativity | Native |
||||||
| Status |
|
||||||
| Habitat | Moist. Prairies, bogs, fields, ditches. Full sun. |
||||||
| Flowering | July to September |
||||||
| Flower Color | White to cream colored or ivory |
||||||
| Height | |
||||||
| Identification | This is a There are usually 2 or 3, sometimes 4 or 5, grass-like mostly basal leaves which may be withered or present when the plant is in bloom. They are light green, ascending to spreading, linear lance-shaped to linear inversely lance-shaped, The stems are erect, unbranched, and leafless except for 3 to 6 bracts below the inflorescence, The bracts are alternate, scale-like, sheathing, and hairless. The inflorescence is 2 or 3 intertwined, tightly spiraling, Each flower is subtended by a scale-like, egg-shaped to lance-shaped bract. The flowers are about |
||||||
| Similar Species |
Great Plains ladies’ tresses (Spiranthes magnicamporum) stems are leafless at flowering. The lateral 2 sepals are shaped like a pair of cow’s horns. The central portion of the lower lip is never constricted. The flowers are almond-scented. Hooded ladies’ tresses (Spiranthes romanzoffiana) |
||||||
| Range | ![]() |
Sources: 2, 3, 5, 7. | |||||
| Sightings |
|
||||||
| Comments |
|
||||||
| Images | |||||||
| Synonyms | Ibidium cernuum Spiranthes cernua var. incurva |
||||||
| Common Names |
nodding ladies’ tresses nodding ladies’-tresses nodding ladiestresses nodding lady’s tresses white nodding ladies’-tresses |
||||||

