Harman Patil (Editor)

Orchis militaris

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Orchidaceae

Genus
  
Orchis

Higher classification
  
Orchis

Order
  
Asparagales

Subfamily
  
Orchidoideae

Scientific name
  
Orchis militaris

Rank
  
Species

Orchis militaris Orchis militaris Wikipedia

Similar
  
Orchis, Orchids, Orchis mascula, Neotinea ustulata, Orchis purpurea

Orchis militaris 1 mp4


Orchis militaris, the military orchid, is a species of orchid native to Europe. It is the type species of the genus Orchis.

Contents

Orchis militaris wwwpfaforgAdminPlantImagesOrchisMilitaris2jpg

Orchid pollination 12 forward bending of the caudicles of orchis militaris


Description

Orchis militaris FileOrchis militaris dolomitesJPG Wikimedia Commons

This plant grows to a height of 20 to 50 cm with a robust stem with rather drawn up oblong basal leaves. The inflorescence forms a purplish dense cone consisting of from 10 to 40 flowers. In each flower the sepals and side petals are gathered together to form a pointed "helmet" (whence it gets its name), a lilac colour outside and a veined purple colour inside. The central tongue finishes in two lobes separated by a tooth.

Flowering period

Depending on location, April to June.

Habitat

Orchis militaris Military orchid videos photos and facts Orchis militaris ARKive

Likes full light on a dry calcareous substrate. For example, unfertilized lawns, meadows, edges and light woods up to 2000m in altitude.

Distribution

Orchis militaris Military Orchid Orchis militaris Flowers NatureGate

It is well distributed around Europe, reaching as far north as southern Sweden, but rather rare in the Mediterranean areas.

Orchis militaris FileOrchismilitarisxOrchispurpurea8221jpg Wikimedia Commons

It is extremely rare in Britain and a protected species, occurring only at the Rex Graham nature reserve in Suffolk and the Buckinghamshire Chilterns.

Uses

Orchis militaris FileHelmKnabenkraut Orchis militarisjpg Wikimedia Commons

Orchis militaris contains the nutritious polysaccharide glucomannan, and is one of the original species of orchid whose ground-up roots are used to make the drink salep.

Chemistry

Orchinol is a phenanthrenoid that can be isolated from infected O. militaris.

References

Orchis militaris Wikipedia