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Isotria medeoloides

Isotria medeoloides
Isotria medeoloides2.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Vanilloideae
Tribe: Pogonieae
Genus: Isotria
Species: I. medeoloides
Binomial name
Isotria medeoloides
(Pursh) Raf.

Isotria medeoloides, commonly known as small whorled pogonia or little five leaves, is a terrestrial orchid found in temperate Eastern North America.

The orchid's range is from southern Maine south to Georgia and west to southern Ontario, Michigan, and Tennessee. A population was found in Missouri in 1897, but the plant is no longer believed extant there.

It has always been considered a rare species, often legendarily so. It has been called "the rarest orchid east of the Mississippi."

The plant's habitat includes hardwood and conifer-hardwood forests, where it is found in leaf litter along small "braided" intermittent streams. It native range includes the Appalachian Mountains and Great Lakes region.

Isotria medeoloides is a rhizomatous herb producing a waxy gray-green stem up to about 25 centimeters tall. The gray-green leaves are up to 8.5 centimeters long by 4 wide and are borne in a characteristic whorl.

The flower has green and green-streaked yellowish petals measuring between 1 and 2 centimeters long.

The plant is listed as a threatened species by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, having been downlisted from endangered status in 1994 as more populations were discovered and several were given protection. It is listed as an endangered species by most states or provinces within its range. There are about 104 populations known to exist, but most of these are small, containing fewer than 25 plants.


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