Cypripedium |
Cypripedium kentuckiense |
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| cypripède, lady slipper, lady's-slipper, moccasin-flower, sabot de la vierge |
ivory lady's-slipper, Kentucky lady's slipper, purloined slipper, southern lady's slipper |
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| Habit | Herbs, perennial. | Plants erect, 35–97 cm. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Roots | closely to widely spaced along rhizome, slender, fleshy; rhizomes short to elongate. |
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| Stems | leafy or scapose. |
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| Leaves | alternate, in single radical pair, or subopposite near midpoint of stem, ascending to spreading, plicate, bases sheathing stem. |
3–6, rather evenly spaced along stem, alternate, spreading; blade broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate or ovate-elliptic, 13–24 × 4.3–15 cm. |
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| Inflorescences | terminal, solitary; flowers solitary or 2–several in lax racemose spike; bracts large, foliaceous. |
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| Flowers | resupinate, showy; sepals distinct or lateral sepals usually connate proximal to lip forming synsepal; petals entire; lip inflated, slipper- or sac-shaped, with adaxial orifice; pollinaria absent; loose granular pollen in 2 lateral anthers, dorsal anther a large subapical staminode; stigma free, 2–3-lobed. |
1–2; sepals greenish or yellowish, heavily spotted, striped, reticulately marked with dark reddish brown or madder; dorsal sepal broadly ovate to ovate and elliptic, 61–126 × 24–65 mm; lateral sepals connate; synsepal 55–103 × 12–40 mm; petals spreading-deflexed, same color as sepals, spirally twisted, linear, 84–156 × 7–15 mm; lip ivory to pale yellow, obovoid, (41–)53–65 mm; orifice basal, 27–37 mm; staminode broadly ovoid, ovoid-cordiform, or ovoid-deltoid. |
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| Fruits | capsules, ellipsoid to oblong-ellipsoid. |
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Cypripedium |
Cypripedium kentuckiense |
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| Phenology | Flowering Apr–Jun. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Habitat | Rich, mesic to dry, deciduous forests on well-drained alluvium and bases of slopes, mucky seeps | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Elevation | mostly 0–400 m [mostly 0–1300 ft] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Distribution |
Primarily temperate Eurasia and North America; ranging from arctic to subtropics in East Asia and Cordilleran North America and Central America |
AL; AR; GA; KY; LA; MS; OK; TN; TX; VA
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| Discussion | Species ca. 45 (12 in the flora). Etymology: Greek Kypris, Aphrodite, and Latin pes, foot, perhaps an orthographic error for Greek pedilon, slipper (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
The brief nomenclatural history of Cypripedium kentuckiense is remarkably confused. The plant was originally described, without Latin diagnosis, as C. daultonii Soukup; this nomen nudum came into general usage prior to Reed’s publication. Subsequently, an earlier name, C. furcatum Rafinesque, was proposed as conspecific, but Rafinesque’s description is not adequate for a positive determination. Cypripedium kentuckiense is very distinctive. In addition to the very large flowers and pale coloring of the lip, the form of the orifice is unique. In related species the orifice is a restricted opening in the adaxial surface of the lip; in C. kentuckiense the orifice replaces the basal portion of the adaxial surface, the sides of the lip terminating abruptly at the orifice without curving toward the horizontal. In herbarium specimens this detail is obscured, but the cavernous nature of the orifice is emphasized by the adaxial surface descending from the apical margin of the orifice toward the apex of the lip; the obovoid lip appears to hang from the margin of the orifice, and the lip is not particularly slipper-shaped. In contrast, in related species, the adaxial surface of the lip surrounds the orifice and extends forward toward the apex, forming a more convincing slipper. These distinctions hold virtually throughout the known populations of C. kentuckiense; only in two Arkansas populations is the lip form suggestive of related species. The Arkansas populations may reflect very limited introgression from C. parviflorum var. pubescens. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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| Key |
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| Name authority | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 951. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 408. (1754) | C. F. Reed: Phytologia 48: 426, fig. (1981) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Source | FNA vol. 26, p. 499. | FNA vol. 26, p. 506. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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