Vascular Plants of North Carolina
Account for Southern Rein Orchid - Platanthera flava var. flava   (L.) Lindl. (TSN 196393)
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Section 5 » Order Orchidales » Family Orchidaceae
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Author(L.) Lindl. (TSN 196393)
DistributionIn 2023, Weakley considered P. herbiola and P. flava as once again varieties of the same species -- P. flava (broad sense), as most references have long done. This is the more eastern and southern (Coastal Plain and Piedmont) variety. It ranges over the western two-thirds of the Coastal Plain and much of the Piedmont, but it is spottily distributed over this large range. It seems to be absent from the eastern Coastal Plain (east of Northampton, Beaufort, Craven, and Carteret counties).

"NJ, IN, IL, MO, and OK, south to c. peninsular FL and e. TX" (Weakley 2023).
AbundanceUncommon in the Piedmont, including the Fall-line zone. Rare in the Coastal Plain. Where found, it can occur in dense stands of up to 50 or more plants.
HabitatThis is a Platanthera of wet shaded habitats, being most often found in brownwater floodplain pools and other wet ground in lowland hardwood forests and bottomlands. It grows in a few similar habitats to P. clavellata, though that species has a wider range of moist habitats and does not grow in as dense stands as can P. flava var. flava.
PhenologyIt can bloom any time from March to September (according to RAB), but is usually in bloom from about May to July. It fruits shortly after blooming.
IdentificationFor differences between this variety and var. herbiola, refer to that latter account. This Platanthera taxon looks quite a bit different from others in the genus in the Coastal Plain and Piedmont. It grows to 1-2 feet tall and has a few narrow and erect leaves coming off the lower part of the stem. The inflorescence is a narrow raceme (and almost looks like a spike) instead of a more open raceme. The several dozen flowers tend to match the stem color, being pale greenish or pale yellow-green, curved to face downward; each flower is barely 1/4-inch across and contains a leaf-like bract beneath it. At first glance, it does not look like an orchid, even when in bloom, and one must often be within a foot of it to see the orchid flower structure. The most obvious aspect of the taxon is its proclivity of growing in fairly dense stands, often one plant just a few inches from another, with a population often covering 5-10 feet in diameter with many plants.
Taxonomic CommentsSee above.

Other Common Name(s)Northern Tubercled Bog Orchid, Tubercled Orchid, Pale-green Orchid, and Rein Orchid.
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