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Pink Lady's Slipper

Pink Lady's Slipper

Cypripedium acaule

The Pink Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium acaule) is one of the most iconic wild orchids of eastern North America, bearing a single magnificent magenta-pink pouch-shaped flower that resembles a delicate shoe or moccasin. Also called the Moccasin Flower, this striking woodland orchid has captivated botanists for centuries — yet remains nearly impossible to cultivate because its microscopic seeds require a specific soil fungus to germinate, making every wild colony a miniature ecological marvel that took decades to establish.

• The genus name Cypripedium means "Aphrodite's sandal" in Greek, from Kypris (Aphrodite) and pedilon (sandal)
• A single plant can live for over 20 years but may take up to 16 years to flower from seed
• The inflated pouch traps bees, forcing them to crawl past pollen masses to escape, effecting pollination
• One of the most photographed and recognized wildflowers in eastern North America
• Protected by law in most states and provinces — illegal to pick, dig, or transplant

Native to eastern North America.

• Ranges from Newfoundland and Quebec westward to Minnesota, southward to Alabama and Georgia
• Most abundant in New England, the Appalachian Mountains, and the Great Lakes region
• Also occurs in the Canadian Maritime provinces
• Found at elevations from sea level to 1,200 m
• Typically grows in acidic, nutrient-poor soils of coniferous and mixed woodlands
• First described by Aiton in 1789
• The genus Cypripedium contains approximately 50 species distributed across the Northern Hemisphere
A perennial herbaceous orchid, 15 to 45 cm tall, growing from a short rhizome.

Leaves:
• 2 basal leaves, opposite, elliptic to lanceolate, 10 to 25 cm long and 4 to 10 cm wide
• Deep green, prominently parallel-veined, hairless
• Usually clasping the stem at the base

Stem:
• Single, erect, green, covered with short glandular hairs near the top
• Bears a solitary terminal flower

Flower:
• Single, large, 5 to 10 cm across
• The lip (pouch) is inflated, magenta to deep pink, 3 to 6 cm long
• Two lateral petals and a dorsal sepal are greenish-yellow to brown, spirally twisted
• Sepals and petals lanceolate, 3 to 7 cm long
• Blooms May through July

Roots:
• Fibrous, entwined with mycorrhizal fungi essential for nutrient uptake
An obligate mycoheterotroph dependent on symbiotic soil fungi throughout its life cycle.

• Requires specific mycorrhizal fungi (primarily Rhizoctonia spp.) to germinate — the dust-like seeds contain no endosperm or food reserves
• Found in acidic, well-drained soils under coniferous and mixed canopies of pine, oak, birch, and hemlock
• Bees enter the pouch expecting nectar but find none, exiting through the rear opening dusted with pollen
• Often grows alongside trailing arbutus (Epigaea repens), starflower (Lysimachia borealis), and partridgeberry
• May remain dormant underground for years before emerging above ground
• Young plants spend 3 to 5 years as subterranean mycoheterotrophs before producing their first leaf
Extremely difficult to cultivate; generally not recommended for garden planting.

• Requires specific mycorrhizal fungi in the soil — without them the plant cannot survive
• Transplanting from the wild almost always fails and damages fragile wild populations
• If attempting cultivation: plant in dappled shade under pines in very acidic soil (pH 4.0–5.5)
• Soil should be loose, well-drained, rich in organic matter from conifer needle duff
• Do not fertilize — the fungal symbiosis provides all necessary nutrients
• Water during dry periods but never allow waterlogging
• Best enjoyed in its natural habitat — photograph, do not pick
• Purchase only from certified nursery-propagated sources

Wusstest du schon?

The Pink Lady's Slipper produces some of the smallest seeds of any flowering plant — each seed is barely visible to the naked eye, consisting of just a tiny embryo with no food supply whatsoever. These seeds can germinate only if they happen to land precisely where a Rhizoctonia fungus is present in the soil. The fungus penetrates the seed coat and provides all nutrition while the young orchid develops underground for up to 16 years before producing its first leaf. This extreme specialization means wild populations can take decades to recover from disturbance, and transplanting almost never succeeds because the essential fungal partner is absent from garden soils.

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