ORCHID GLOSSARY


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Alba White form of a flower.

AM Award of Merit.

AOS American Orchid Society.

Backbulb An old, often leafless, sympodial pseudobulb that is still alive and can be used for propagating a new plant.

Bifoliate Having two leaves on a single pseudobulb.

Bud
Common term for a flower before it begins enlarging, although it is also applied to a tiny new growth or leaf.

Capsule
The seedpod of an orchid, often containing thousands, even millions, of seeds.

CBR
Certificate of Botanical Recognition. An AOS award given only once to an orchid species when it is first displayed in bloom,

CCM Certificate of Cultural Merit. An AOS award presented to the grower of a well

Central growing point On a monopodial orchid, this is where the upright vegetative growth will begin.

CHM Certificate of Horticultural Merit. An AOS award given to a species of outstanding interest to growers.

CITES Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. The multinational agreement that lists which plant and animal species are considered endangered and the rules by which their trade is governed.

Cleistogamous Term used to describe a flower that self

Clone All the various vegetative manifestations (divisions, meristern propagations, and so forth) of a single orchid plant grown originally from a single seed; designated by single quotes around its name.

Column The fused sexual organ of an orchid flower, found atop the lip.

Community pot Many tiny seedlings planted together in a single container before they are individually repotted.

Compot Common - term meaning "community pot."

Cool temperature - For orchids, a minimum winter nighttime temperature of 45'F, with daytime temperatures 15

Cross - The progeny that result from transferring pollen from one plant to the flower of another; the act itself.

Crown - The central part of the rosette of leaves in a monopodial orchid such as Pbalaenopsis, from which new growth arises upward.

Cultivar - In orchids, a specific plant grown from a single seed; designated by single quotes around its name.

Deciduous - The term used to describe the loss of leaves or other growths upon maturity or at the end of a growing season, with regrowth after a dormant rest.

Diploid - Having a normal number of two sets of chromosomes; also known as 2N.

Division - Making new plants from old by cutting the rhizome of a sympodial orchid into pieces containing pseudobulbs and rhizome or by cutting off the top half of a stem of a vinelike orchid.

Dormancy - A rest period during which no vegetative growth occurs, often following a growth period and/or the loss of leaves or other growths; may require cooler temperatures and less water.

Dorsal sepal - In orchids, the uppermost "petal" of a flower.

Epiphytic - Term used to describe any plant that grows above the ground and attaches to something else for support; nutrients are not taken from the supporting host but are derived instead from rain, air, and available debris.

Equitant - In orchids, having all the leaves arranged flat in one plane; specifically refers to a type of Oncidium.

FCC - Highest flower

Flask - A clear container used for the laboratory germination of orchid seeds or for growing other laboratory micropropagated orchid seedlings.

Floriferous - Term used to describe a plant that flowers freely.

Flower spike - A common term for any of the various types of the more properly termed flower inflorescence, whether bearing a solitary bloom atop a single stalk or in racemes or panicles of many flowers.

Footcandle - A measure of light useful in determining intensity of light for growing orchids; the illumination produced by a candle at a distance of one foot.

Genus - A group of orchids that are classified together because of similar traits and an assumed common ancestry; there are some 860 naturally occurring orchid genera and an additional 550 manmade intergeneric ones.

Grex - Term used to refer to the group of progeny of a specific cross.

Growths - Any new shoots that emerge, whether they be pseudobulb, rhizome, leaf, stem, inflorescence, or root.

HCC - Highly Commended Certificate. Lowest of the three flower

High light - For orchids, the brightest category of light

Hybrid - The resulting progeny from the union of two different species (known as a primary hybrid), or of a species and a hybrid, or of two hybrids (known as a complex hybrid).

Inflorescence - The flowering portion of the orchid, in whatever of the various general arrangements, such as raceme, panicle, or solitary scape; often loosely referred to as the "spike."

Intergeneric - Between two or more genera, usually referring to the hybridization that occurs therein.

Intermediate temperature - For orchids, a minimum winter nighttime temperature of 55'F, with daytime temperatures 15

JC (Judges' Commendation) - Award given by the American Orchid Society for special plant and/or flower characteristics.

JOGA - Japanese Orchid Growers Association. Term often found on orchid nametags, since this group also bestows awards (GM, or Gold Medal; SM, or Silver Metal; BM, or Bronze Metal).

Keiki - A plantlet that develops from an orchid's flower inflorescence or cane.

Labellum
- The third petal of an orchid flower, modified by evolution into a lip often used as an attractive landing platform for pollinators.

Lateral sepal - Term used to refer to the two lowermost sepals that extend to the sides, versus the topmost dorsal sepal.

Lip - The orchid labellum.

Lithophytic - Term used to describe any plant that grows attached to a rock; a subset of epiphytic life.

Low light - For orchids, the lowest category of light

Medium - The potting material or mix of materials that is being used inside an orchid pot; the medium may be organic or inorganic.

Medium light - For orchids, the middle category of light

Mericlone - A generally exact copy of an original orchid plant made via the laboratory technique of meristem propagation; since it is a specific cultivar, it is designated by single quotes around its name.

Meristern - Technically, the actively dividing cell tissue taken from root tips and from the tips of new growths or floral shoots; sometimes loosely used to refer to the mericlone plant that is produced from the laboratory propagation of meristern tissue.

Micropropagation - Making new orchids by any of the laboratory techniques, including meristem tissue propagation and sterile seed culture.

Monopodial - One of the two forms of orchid vegetative growth (the other is sympodial), wherein a single vegetative shoot grows continually upward, such as in the central rosette of Phalaenopsis and the more vinelike Vanda.

Multifloral - Having more than one flower per inflorescence.

Natural hybrid - A hybrid that occurs in the wild without the help of humans.

Node - A distinct joint or notch on an inflorescence, stem, or pseudobulb from which a flower stem, leaves, or roots can emerge; a term often used to refer to the place on a Phalaenopsis inflorescence above which a cut can be made to induce a secondary bloom.

Nomenclature - A system of naming; see "binomial nomenclature. "

Nonresupinate - In orchids, those plants whose flower lips are positioned uppermost relative to the inflorescence axis; the vast majority of orchid flowers are resupinate.

Orchids - Orchids are members of the Orchidaceae, a family in the monocotyledons which are major group of the Angiosperms of flowering plants. At the present state of our knowledge the orchid family comprises about 35,000 species and 60,000 registered hybrids. With far more diversity and specialized pollination methods than any other flowering plant.

Panicle -A type of flower inflorescence wherein the flowers are loosely arranged on a branching stem and open from the lowest or inner branches to the top.

Peloric - In orchids, a term used to describe an unusual and often beautiful (sometimes grotesque) condition where all three petals (instead of just one) attempt to fashion themselves into lip colors and/or shapes.

Petal In orchids, one of the three inner segments of the flower that are positioned between the three sepals; one of the petals is modified into a lip.

Pod - Term used to refer to the seedpod or capsule.

Pollinia - Waxy pollen clumps or grains usually found in the anthers of most orchids; often yellow, distinct, and found under the pollen cap of the column.

Pseudobulb The thickened stem of a sympodial orchid arising from a rhizome that has so evolved for water

Pseudobulbless Containing no pseudobulbs.

Raceme - A simple type of flower inflorescence that looks like a long stem with flowers arising along it.

Resupinate - In orchids, those plants whose flower lips are positioned lowermost relative to the inflorescence axis; the vast majority of orchid flowers are resupinate.

Rhizome - In orchids, a root

RHS - Royal Horticultural Society.

Scape - A simple flower inflorescence that is topped by a solitary flowex, such as in many Papbiopedilum.

Seed - Orchid seeds are by far the smallest in the flowering plant kingdom but to compensate for this, they are produced in vast quantities. For example, Dactylorhiza maculata each capsule contains about 6,200 seeds. Cymbidium has 1,500,000, Maxillaria about 1,700,000 and Cattleya up to 5 million seeds per capsule.

Seedling - An unbloomed young orchid.

Seedpod - The capsule bearing the seeds of an orchid.

Semialba - A white flower with a colored lip.

Serniterrestrial - Term used to refer to orchids that grow near or on the ground in extremely loose, open substrate.

Sepal- One of the three outer parts of an orchid flower, one of which is usually topmost and known as the dorsal, the other two lower sepals being known as the laterals.

Sib cross, sibling cross - Method of seed propagation of an orchid wherein the pollen of 'one orchid is placed on the stigma of another orchid that was originally grown in the same seedpod as the first orchid, therefore a cross pollination of siblings.

Sibling - An orchid that is related to another orchid by virtue of having been produced from the same seedpod.

Species - A group of living things that appear to have common ancestry so closely related that their characteristics definitely separate them all from any other group; a further division of a genus.

Specimen - Term usually used to refer to an orchid that has been allowed to grow to great size and floriferousness instead of being divided; also refers to the species that typifies a genus.

Spike
- Term often loosely used to refer to all flower inflorescences, but technically an unbranched flower stem with shortstalked or stalkless flowers.

Splash - petal An orchid flower that modifies its petals by duplicating the coloring found on the lip; a type of peloric condition.

Stalk A part of the plant that supports something else.

Stamen The male, pollen

Stem - The leaf

Stem prop - Loose term for "meristem propagation" or the plant that results from this technique.

Stigma - Sticky area of the pistil of a flower that r6ceives the pollen.

Sympodial -One of the two forms of orchid growth (the other is monopodial), wherein each new growth arises from the rhizome of a previous growth, and each new growth is completely capable of bearing an inflorescence.

Systemic -Term used to describe pesticides or fungicides that are taken up by plant leaves and growths and then work from within the plant.

Terete Type of orchid growth wherin the stem and/or leaves are circular in cross section.

Terrestrial - In orchids, growing in the ground or in the loose substrate atop the ground.

Tetraploid - Genetic aberration wherein the plant has twice as many chromosome sets as normal, often resulting in very vigorous, large plants and flowers.

Throat - The inner portion of a tubular orchid lip.

Tissue culture - Artificial propagation of plants via laboratory mericloning, also known as meristernming.

Unifoliate - Bearing one leaf per growth.

Vandaceous - Term used to describe any large monopodial orchid, particularly used for Vanda and its closely related orchids.

Variety - A subdivision of a species that groups plants with a distinct form that is passed along to the progeny.

Vegetative propagation - The creation of additional plants through division, encouragement of keiki formation, or any various meristernatic techniques, but not via seed.

Velamen - The thick layer of corklike, water

Warm temperature - For orchids, a minimum winter nighttime temperature of 60'F, with daytime temperatures 15