RHH's photos with the keyword: achlorophyllous

Corallorhiza maculata var. occidentalis fma. immac…

RHH
21 May 2014 24 19 860
This is a rare color form of a very common native orchid, another Coralroot, the Western Spotted Coralroot. Like all the other Coralroots, it has no leaves or chlorophyll and lives off decaying material in the soil via a relationship with a fungus. The ordinary form of the plant is shown in the inset. This is the "albino" form, lacking the spotting and darker color. It is Corallorhiza (Coralroot) maculata (spotted) var. occidentalis (western) fma. immaculata (unspotted). We have only ever found this once.

Western Coralroot

RHH
04 Aug 2013 7 12 623
The Western Coralroot, Corallorhiza mertensiana, is well named since it is found only in the far western United States and Canada and because its "roots" do look like a mass of coral when dug up. It is mycotrophic, living off decaying matter in the soil through a relationship with a fungus and is leafless and without chlorophyll. It is always a delight to find since it comes in an endless variety of colors, as the photos below show. The color form shown above is more or less typical, but many other color forms are shown below at the link I've posted. nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/09/color-forms-of-western-coralroot.html

Corallorhiza maculata var. occidentalis

RHH
23 May 2012 1 302
This is the Western Spotted Coralroot, distinguished from the ordinary Spotted Coralroot by the shape of the lip. All the Coralroots are leafless and without chlorophyll, deriving their nourishment via a fungus from decaying plant material in the soil. As usual we are out orchid hunting at every opportunity and this was photographed during an afternoon walk in Sehome Hill Arboretum in Bellingham, next door to Western Washington University. We found three orchids in the Arboretum that day, including several Fairy Slippers and some Striped Coralroots. nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/05/t...

Gnome Plant

RHH
28 Sep 2012 1 1 374
The Gnome Plant, Hermitomes congestum, is a very rare plant, so rare that it is not even listed in the wildflower books I have for this area, but strangely is not even on any lists of rare or endangered plants for the state of Washington. It is without chlorophyll or leaves and lives off decaying material in the soil. This example was photographed along the Poodle Dog Pass trail in the North Cascades, where we found three or four plants. This is in flower and is just pushing up through the litter on the forest floor, which also gives some idea of its small size. It does grow a little taller, so that the flowers are perched atop a short stem, but the flowers are open almost as soon as it appears from the ground. ronaldhanko-orchidhunter.blogspot.com/2012/09/poodle-dog-...

Western Spotted Coralroot

RHH
23 Jan 2013 391
Found and photographed this in Deception Pass State Park last spring on a school camping trip. It reminds me of spring and of how eager I am to be out hiking again, but it is not a perfect picture. I was struggling with low light, a strong breeze and lenses that were fogging when I took the picture. The Western Spotted Coralroot is Corallorhiza maculata var. occidentalis, and is distinguished from the more common form by the rounded lip. It is leafless and without chlorophyll and obtains its nutrients from rotting material in the soil via a symbiotic relation with a fungus.

Corallorhiza mertensiana fma. pallida

RHH
05 Feb 2013 344
The is the Western Coralroot, but a very pale form. We found these at Lake Elizabeth several years ago, but discovered this past summer that someone had destroyed the site to make a campsite. Only a few stems were left back among the trees. The Coralroots are leafless and without chlorophyll and depend for nourishment on a fungus (they are mycotrophic). This species is very variable in color as the link below shows. The species is found only in thee far west but is very common throughout our area. Many different color forms can be seen here: nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/09/c...

Corallorhiza striata

RHH
19 Feb 2013 287
This photo was taken earlier in the year In Larrabee State Park, but not at Clayton Beach. Near the main road through the park, Chuckanut Drive, there is a walking and biking trail, the Interurban Trail, that follows the road for many miles. This photo was taken along that trail at a spot where we go to see these orchids every year. Corallorhiza striata has the largest and showiest flowers of any of our native Coralroots. It blooms in the spring and is usually found growing in rather sheltered and shady areas. In this particular location it can be found in some large clumps if they survive the dogs and bikes and hikers who use the trail, but usually they do and people who use the trail seem quite careful to use it responsibly. All the Coralroots are leafless and without chlorophyll. They live in a symbiotic relation with a fungus and through the fungus obtain their nourishment from decaying material in the soil. Washington has five species of Coralroots, maculata, mertensiana, striata, trifida and wisteriana, plus several important varieties of these species. nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/05/s...

Striped Coralroot

RHH
20 Feb 2013 2 296
This is the same native orchid species I posted a few days ago, but a close-up of the flowers. The photo was taken on a rainy day in Larrabee State Park along the Interurban Trail. The Coralroots are mycotrophic plants, without leaves or chlorophyll and depending on a relationship with a fungus for nourishment. This is the showiest of our five species of Coralroots. nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/05/s...

Western Spotted Coralroot

RHH
27 Feb 2013 366
Another of the native orchids that grows at Goose Rock, this one photographed along the trail to the top. There were a lot of these, but most of them just a stem or two. This large clump was one of the best examples we've seen. ronaldhanko-orchidhunter.blogspot.com/2012/06/whidbey-isl...

Pinesap

RHH
22 Mar 2013 1 1 297
Pinesap plants are without chlorophyll, leafless, and live off decaying material in the soil. They are usually found on rather dark forest floors where little else is growing. These were photographed along a forest service road in the Cascades near Greenwater, Washington. ronaldhanko-orchidhunter.blogspot.com/2012/08/near-greenw...