Dictionary Definition
orchid n : any of numerous plants of the orchid
family usually having flowers of unusual shapes and beautiful
colors [syn: orchidaceous
plant]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- (US) /ˈɔrkɪd/
Noun
Translations
plant
- Chinese: (lánhuā)
- Dutch: orchidee
- Finnish: orkidea, kämmekkä
- French: orchidée
- German: Orchidee
- Hebrew: סחלב (sachlav)
- Indonesian: anggrek / bunga anggrek
- Italian: orchidea
- Japanese: 蘭 (らん, ran) / 蘭の花 (らんのはな, ran-no-hana)
- Lithuanian: orchidėja
- Portuguese: orquídea
- Romanian: orhidee
- Russian: орхидея /orχid'éja/
- Serbian: orhideja , kaćun
- Slovene: orhideja
- Spanish: orquídea
colour
Adjective
- (colour) having a light purple colour.
Translations
colour
- Dutch: lichtpaars
- Spanish: orquídea
Derived terms
See also
Extensive Definition
Orchidaceae, also called the Orchid family, is
the largest family
of the flowering plants (Angiospermae).
Its name is derived from the genus Orchis.
The Royal
Botanical Gardens of Kew list 880 genera and nearly 22,000 accepted
species, but the exact
number is unknown (perhaps as many as 25,000) because of taxonomic disputes. The number
of orchid species equals about four times the number of mammal species, or more than
twice the number of bird
species. It also encompasses about 6–11% of all seed plants.
About 800 new orchid species are added each year. The largest
genera are Bulbophyllum
(2,000 species), Epidendrum
(1,500 species), Dendrobium
(1,400 species) and Pleurothallis
(1,000 species). The family also includes the Vanilla (the genus
of the vanilla
plant), Orchis (type genus)
and many commonly cultivated plants like some Phalaenopsis
or Cattleya.
Moreover, since the introduction of tropical
species in the 19th century, horticulturists have more
than 100,000 hybrids
and cultivars.
Distribution
Orchidaceae are cosmopolitan, occurring in almost every habitat apart from deserts and glaciers. The great majority are to be found in the tropics, mostly Asia, South America and Central America. They are found above the Arctic Circle, in southern Patagonia and even on Macquarie Island, close to Antarctica.The following list gives a rough overview of
their distribution:
- tropical America: 300 to 350 genera
- tropical Asia: 250 to 300 genera
- tropical Africa: 125 to 150 genera
- Oceania: 50 to 70 genera
- Europe and temperate Asia: 40 to 60 genera
- North America: 20 to 30 genera
Taxonomy
This family is totally recognised, and the APG II
system of 2003 places it in the order Asparagales.
The taxonomy of this family is in constant flux,
as new studies continue to identify more classificatory
elements.
Five subfamilies are now recognised. The cladogram has been made
according to the APG
system:
Ecology
A majority of orchids are perennial
epiphytes, which grow
anchored to trees or
shrubs in the tropics and subtropics. Other
species are lithophytes, growing on rocks
or very rocky soil, or are terrestrial. Nearly all temperate orchids are
terrestrial.
Some orchids, like Neottia and
Corallorhiza,
lack chlorophyll and
are unable to photosynthesise. Instead, these species obtain energy
and nutrients by parasitising soil fungi
through the formation of orchid
mycorrhizas. The fungi involved include those that form
ectomycorrhizas
with trees and other woody plants, parasites such as Armillaria, and
saprotrophs. These
orchids are known as myco-heterotrophs,
but were formerly (incorrectly) described as saprophytes due to the
belief that they gained their nutrition by breaking down organic
matter. While only a few species are achlorophyllous holoparasites,
all orchids are myco-heterotrophic during germination and seedling
growth and even photosynthetic adult plants may continue to obtain
carbon from their mycorrhizal fungi.
Description
Orchids are easily distinguished, as they share
some very evident apomorphies. Among these:
bilaterally symmetric (zygomorphic) and resupinate, a petal (labellum) is always highly
modified, stamens and
carpels are fused, and
the seeds are extremely
small.
Leaves
Like most monocots, orchids generally have simple leaves with parallel veins, although some Vanilloideae have a reticulate venation. They may be ovate, lanceolate, or orbiculate and very variable in size. Their characteristics are often diagnostic. They are normally alternate on the stem, often plicate, and have no stipules. Orchids leaves often have siliceous bodies called stegmata in the vascular bundle sheaths (not present in the Orchidoideae) and are fibrous.The structure of the leaves corresponds to the
specific habitat of the plant. Species that typically bask in
sunlight, or grow on sites which can be occasionally very dry, have
thick, leathery leaves and the laminas are covered by a waxy
cuticle to
retain their necessary water supply. Shade species, on the other
hand, have long, thin leaves.
The leaves of most orchids are perennial, that is
they live for several years, while others, especially those with
plicate leaves, shed them annually and develop new leaves together
with new pseudobulbs, as in Catasetum.
The leaves of some orchids are considered
ornamental. The leaves of the Macodes sanderiana, a semiterrestrial
or lithophyte, show a sparkling silver and gold veining on a light
green background. The cordate leaves of Psychopsiella limminghei
are light brownish green with maroon-puce markings, created by
flower pigments. The attractive mottle of the leaves of Lady's
Slippers from temperate zones (Paphiopedilum)
is caused by uneven distribution of chlorophyll. Also Phalaenopsis
schilleriana is a lovely pastel pink orchid with leaves spotted
dark green and light green. The Jewel Orchid (Ludisia discolor) is
grown more for its colorful leaves than its fairly inconspicuous
white flowers.
Some orchids, as Polyrrhiza lindenii (Ghost
Orchid), Aphyllorchis
and Taeniophyllum
depend on their green roots for photosynthesis and lack
normally developed leaves, as do all of the heterotrophic
species.
Stem and roots
All orchids are perennial herbs and lack any permanent woody structure. Orchids can grow according to two patterns:- Monopodial: The stems grows from a single bud, leaves are added from the apex each year and the stem grows longer accordingly. The stem of orchids with a monopodial growth can reach several metres in length, as in Vanda and Vanilla.
- Sympodial: The plant produces a series of adjacent shoots which grow to a certain size, bloom and then stop growing, to be then replaced. Sympodial orchids grow laterally rather than vertically, following the surface of their support. The growth continues by development of new leads, with their own leaves and roots, sprouting from or next to those of the previous year, as in Cattleya. While a new lead is developing, the rhizome may start its growth again from a so-called 'eye', an undeveloped bud, thereby branching.
Terrestrial orchids may be rhizomatous or form corms or tubers. The root caps of
terrestrials are smooth and white.
Some sympodial terrestrials, such as Orchis and Ophrys, have two
subterranean tuberous
roots. One is used as a food reserve for wintry periods, and
provides for the development of the other one, from which visible
growth develops.
In warm and humid climates, many terrestrial
orchids do not need pseudobulbs.
Epiphytic orchids have modified aerial roots
that can sometimes be a few meters long. In the older parts of the
roots, a modified spongy epidermis
called velamen has the
function to absorbe humidity. It is made of dead cells and can have
a silvery-grey, white or brown appearance.
The cells of the root epidermis grow at a right
angle to the axis of the root to allow them to get a firm grasp on
their support. Nutrients mainly come from animal droppings on their
supporting tree.
The base of the stem of sympodial epiphytes, or
in some species essentially the entire stem, may be thickened to
form what is called a pseudobulb that contains
nutrients and water for drier periods.
The pseudobulb has a smooth surface with
lengthwise grooves and can have different shapes, often conical or
oblong. Its size is very variable; in Bulbophyllum
(black orchids) it is no longer than two millimeters, while in the
largest orchid in the world, Grammatophyllum
speciosum (giant orchid), it can reach three meters. Some
Dendrobium have
long, canelike pseudobulbs with short, rounded leaves over the
whole length, some other orchids have hidden or extremely small
pseudobulbs, completely included inside the leaves.
With ageing the pseudobulb sheds its leaves and
becomes dormant. At this stage it is often called a backbulb. A
pseudobulb then takes over, exploiting the last reserves
accumulated in the backbulb, which eventually dies off too. A
pseudobulb typically lives for about five years.
Flower
Orchidaceae are well known for the many structural variations in their flowers.Some orchids have single flowers but most have a
racemose
inflorescence, sometimes with a large number of flowers. The
flowering stem can be basal, that is produced from the base of the
tuber, like in Cymbidium,
apical, meaning it grows from the apex of the main stem, like in
Cattleya,
or axillary, from the leaf axil, as in Vanda.
As an apomorphy of the clade, orchid flowers are
primitively zygomorphic (bilaterally
symmetrical), although in some genera like Mormodes, Ludisia, Macodes this kind
of symmetry may be difficut to notice.
The orchid flower, like most flowers of monocots has two whorls of
sterile elements. The outer whorl has three sepals and the inner whorl has
three petals. The sepals
are usually very similar to the petals (an thus called tepals, 1), but may be completely
distinct.
The upper medial petal, called the labellum or lip (6),, is always
modified and enlarged. The inferior ovary (7) or the pedicel is rotated 180 degrees,
so that the labellum, goes on the lower part of the flower, thus
becoming suitable to form a platform for pollinators. This
characteristic, called the resupination occurs primitively in the
family and is considered apomorphic (the torsion of the
ovary is very evident from the picture). Some orchids have
secondarily lost the resupination, like some Zygopetalum'.
The normal form of the sepals can be found in
Cattleya,
where they form a triangle. In Paphiopedilum
(Venus slippers) the lower two sepals are fused together into a
synsepal, while the lip
has taken the form of a slipper. In Masdevallia all
the sepals are fused.
Orchid flowers with abnormal numbers of petals or
lips are called peloric. Peloria is a
genetic trait, but its expression is environmentally influenced and
may appear random.
Orchid flowers primitively had three stamens, but this situation is
now limited to the genus Neuwiedia.
Apostasia
and the Cypripedioideae
have two stamens, the central one being sterile and reduced to a
staminode. All of the
other orchids, the clade called Monandria, retain only the central
stamen, the others being reduced to staminodes (4). The filaments
of the stamens are always
adnate (fused) to the
style to form cylindrical
structure called the gynostemium'' or column
(2). In the primitive Apostasioideae
this fusion is only partial, in the Vanilloideae
it is more deep, while in Orchidoideae
and Epidendroideae
it is total. The stigma (9) is very
asymmetrical as all of its lobes are bent towards the centre of the
flower and lay on the bottom of the column.
Pollen is released
as single grains, like in most other plants, in the Apostasioideae,
Cypripedioideae
and Vanilloideae.
In the other subfamilies, that comprise the great majority of
orchids, the anther (3), carries and two pollinia.
A pollinium is a waxy mass of pollen grains held
together by the glue-like alkaloid viscin, containing both
cellulosic stands and mucopolysaccharides. Each pollinium is
connected to a filament which can take the form of a caudicle, like in Dactylorhiza
or Habenaria or a
stipe,
like in Vanda. Caudicles or
stipes hold the pollinia to the viscidium, a sticky pad which
sticks the pollinia to the body of pollinators.
At the upper edge of the stigma of
single-anthered orchids, in front of the anther cap, there is the
rostellum (5), a slender extension involved in the complex
pollination mechanism.
As aforementioned, the ovary is
always inferior (located behind the flower). It is three-carpelate and one or, more
rarely, three-partitioned, with parietal placentation (axile in the
Apostasioideae).
Pollination
Orchids have developed highly specialized pollination systems and thus the chances of being pollinated are often scarce. This is why orchid flowers usually remain receptive for very long periods and why most orchids deliver pollen in a single mass; each time pollination succeeds thousands of ovules can be fertilized.Pollinators are often visually attracted by the
shape and colours of the labellum. The flowers may produce
attractive odours. Although absent in most species, nectar may be produced in a
spur (8)
of the labellum, on the point of the sepals or in the septa of the
ovary, the most typical position amongst the Asparagales.
In orchids that produce pollinia, pollination
happens as some variant of the following. When the pollinator
enters into the flower, it touches a viscidium, which promptly
sticks to its body, generally on the head or abdomen. While leaving
the flower, it pulls the pollinium out of the anther, as it is
connected to the viscidium by the caudicle or stipe. The caudicle
then bends and the pollinium is moved forwards and downwards. When
the pollinator enters another flower of the same species, the
pollinium has taken such position that it will stick to the stigma
of the second flower, just below the rostellum, pollinating it. The
possessors of orchids may be able to reproduce the process with a
pencil or similar device.
Some orchids mainly or totally rely on self-pollination,
especially in colder regions where pollinators are particularly
rare. The caudicles may dry up if the flower hasn't been visited by
any pollinator and the pollina then fall directly on the stigma.
Otherwise the anther may rotate and then enter the stigma cavity of
the flower (as in Holcoglossum
amesianum).
The labellum of the Cypripedioideae
is poke-shaped and has the function to trap visiting insects. The
only exit leads to the anthers that deposit pollen on the
visitor.
In some extremely specialized orchids, like the
Eurasian genus Ophrys, the labellum
is adapted to have a colour, shape and odour which attracts male
insects via mimicry of a
receptive female. Pollination happens as the insect attempts to
mate with flowers.
Many neotropical orchids are pollinated by male
orchid bees, which
visit the flowers to gather volatile chemicals they require to
synthesize pheromonal
attractants. Each type of orchid places the pollinia on a different
body part of a different species of bee, so as to enforce proper
cross-pollination.
An underground orchid in Australia, Rhizanthella
slateri, never sees the light of day and depends on ants and other terrestrial insects
to pollinate it.
Catasetum, a
genus discussed briefly by Darwin
actually launches its viscid pollinia with explosive force when an
insect touches a seta.
After pollination the sepals and petals fade and
wilt, but they usually remain attached to the ovary.
Asexual reproduction
Some species, as some Phalaenopsis, Dendrobium and Vanda, produce offshoots or plantlets formed from one of the nodes along the stem, through the accumulation of growth hormones at that point. These shoots are known as keiki.Fruits and seeds
The ovary typically develops into a capsule that is dehiscent by 3 or 6 longitudinal slits, while remaining closed at both ends. The ripening of a capsule can take 2 to 18 months.The seeds
are generally almost microscopic and very numerous, in some species
over a million per capsule. After ripening they blow off like dust
particles or spores. They lack endosperm and must enter
symbiotic relationship with various mycorrhizal
basidiomyceteous
fungi that provide them
the necessary nutrients to germinate, so that all orchid species
are mycoheterotrophic during germination and reliant upon fungi to complete their
lifecycle.
As the chance for a seed to meet a fitting fungus
is very small, only a minute fraction of all the seeds released
grow into an adult plant. Germination can take up to fifteen
years.
Horticultural
techniques have been devised for germinating seeds on a
nutrient-containing gel, eliminating the requirement of the fungus
for germination, greatly aiding the propagation of ornamental
orchids.
Evolution
A study in the scientific journal Nature has shown that the origin of orchids goes back much longer than originally expected. An extinct species of stingless bee, Proplebeia dominicana, was found trapped in Miocene amber about 15-20 million years ago. The bee was carrying pollen of a previously unknown orchid taxon, Meliorchis caribea, on its wings.This indicates that orchids may have an ancient
origin and have arisen 76 to 84 million years ago during the
Late
Cretaceous. In other words, they may have co-existed with
dinosaurs. It shows
also that at that time insects were active pollinators of orchids.
Using the molecular
clock method, it was possible to determine the age of the major
branches of the orchid family. This also confirmed that the
subfamily Vanilloideae
is a branch at the basal dichotomy of the monandrous orchids, and must
have evolved very early in the evolution of the family. Since this
genus occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions, from
tropical America to tropical Asia, New Guinea and West Africa, and
the continents began to split about 100 million years ago,
significant biotic exchange must have occurred after this split
(since the age of Vanilla is estimated at 60 to 70 million
years).
This find is the first proof of fossilised
orchids to date.
The extinct orchid M. caribea has been placed
within the extant tribe Cranichideae,
subtribe Goodyerinae
(subfamily Orchidoideae).
Uses
see Vanilla One orchid genus, Vanilla, is commercially important, used as a foodstuff flavouring. The underground tubers of terrestrial orchids (mainly Orchis mascula) are ground to a powder and used for cooking, such as in the hot beverage salep or the so-called "fox-testicle ice cream" salepi dondurma.The scent of orchids is frequently
analysed by perfumists (using
Gas-liquid
chromatography) to identify potential fragrance
chemicals.
The other important use of orchids is their
cultivation for the enjoyment of the flowers. Most cultivated
orchids are tropical or
subtropical, but
quite a few which grow in colder climates can be found on the
market. Temperate species available at nurseries include Ophrys
apifera (bee orchid), Gymnadenia
conopsea (fragrant orchid), Anacamptis
pyramidalis (pyramidal orchid) and Dactylorhiza
fuchsii (common spotted orchid).
The term botanical orchid loosely denotes those
small flowered tropical orchids belonging to several genera (not
necessarily related to each other) that don't fit into the
"Florist" orchid category. A few of these genera contain enormous
numbers of species. Some, such as Pleurothallis
and Bulbophyllum,
contain approximately 1700 and 2000 species, respectively, and are
often extremely vegetatively diverse. The primary use of the term
is among orchid hobbyists wishing to describe unusual species they
grow, though it is also used to distinguish naturally occurring
orchid species from horticulturally created hybrids.
A few of the most common orchids found in
"casual" culture are:
Taiwan, the biggest
orchid exporter in the world, established the Taiwan Orchid Plantation, a
science-based industrial
park, in 2004, to explore novel
ways of growing and distributing orchids. The renowned Taiwanese International Orchid Show,
usually held in early March each year, is amongst the top three
orchid exhibitions in the world http://www.libertytimes.com.tw/2007/new/mar/10/today-life7.htm.
Taiwan is particularly famous for the production of Phalaenopsis,
and is a member of the International
Phalaenopsis Alliance (IPA). The Taiwan Orchid Growers
Association (TOGA), a NPO established in
2001, acts as
a bridge between the government and the local orchid producers and
distributors.
The National Orchid Garden in the Singapore
Botanic Gardens is considered by some to be among the finest
collections of orchids in cultivation open to the public.
Orchids, like tulips, have become a major market
throughout the world. Buyers now bid hundreds of dollars on new
hybrids or improved ones. Because of their apparent ease in
hybridization, they are now becoming one of the most popular
cut-flowers on the market.
Genera
The following are amongst the most notable genera in the very large orchid family. Aa; Abdominea; Acampe; Acanthephippium; Aceratorchis; Acianthus; Acineta; Acrorchis; Ada; Aerangis; Aeranthes; Aerides; Aganisia; Agrostophyllum; Amitostigma; Anacamptis; Ancistrochilus; Angraecum; Anguloa; Ansellia; Aorchis; Aplectrum; Arethusa; Armodorum; Ascocenda; Ascocentrum; Ascoglossum; Australorchis; Auxopus; Baptistonia; Barbrodia; Barkeria; Barlia; Bartholina; Beloglottis; Biermannia; Bletilla; Brassavola; Brassia; Bulbophyllum; Calypso; Catasetum; Cattleya; Cirrhopetalum; Cleisostoma; Clowesia; Coelogyne; Coryanthes; Cymbidium; Cyrtopodium; Cypripedium; Dactylorhiza; Dendrobium; Disa; Dracula; Encyclia; Epidendrum; Epipactis; Eria; Eulophia; Gongora; Goodyera; Grammatophyllum; Gymnadenia; Habenaria; Herschelia; Laelia; Lepanthes; Liparis; Ludisia; Lycaste; Masdevallia; Maxillaria; Meliorchis, Mexipedium; Miltonia; Mormodes; Odontoglossum; Oncidium; Ophrys; Orchis; Paphiopedilum; Paraphalaenopsis; Peristeria; Phaius; Phalaenopsis; Pholidota; Phragmipedium; Platanthera; Pleione; Pleurothallis; Promenaea; Pterostylis; Renanthera; Renantherella; Restrepia; Restrepiella; Rhynchostylis; Roezliella; Saccolabium; Sarcochilus; Satyrium; Selenipedium; Serapias; Sophronitis; Spiranthes; Stanhopea; Stelis; Thrixspermum; Trias; Trichocentrum; Trichoglottis; Vanda; Vanilla; Zeuxine; Zygopetalum.Image gallery
See also
- Moyobamba - the 'City of Orchids', which has some 3,500 species of orchid native to the area
- Nero Wolfe - fictional detective and orchidophile
- Orchid - a poem by Patrick Ryan Dunn Sullivan
Footnotes
References
- Arditti, J. 1992. Fundamentals of orchid biology. John Wiley and Sons, New York.
- Walter S. Judd, Christopher S. Campbell, Elizabeth A. Kellogg, Peter F. Stevens, Michael J. Donoghue: Plant Systematics: A Phylogenetic Approach, Sinauer Associates Inc. 2007
- Batygina, T. B., Bragina, E. A., and Vasilyeva, E. 2003. The reproductive system and germination in orchids. Acta Biol. Cracov. ser. Bot. 45: 21-34.
- Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart
- Kreutz, C. A. J. 2004. Kompendium der Europaischen Orchideen. Catalogue of European Orchids. Kreutz Publishers, Landgraaf, Netherlands
- Ramírez, S., et al. Nature 448 , 1042- 1045 (2007).
- D. Lee Taylor and Thomas D. Bruns : Ectomycorrhizal mutualism by two nonphotosynthetic orchids; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA; Vol. 94, pp. 4510-4515, April 1997 (on line).
- Stevens, P. F. (2001 onwards). Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. Version 7, May 2006 [and more or less continuously updated since]. http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APweb/
- Strasburger, Noll, Schenck, Schimper: Lehrbuch der Botanik für Hochschulen. 4. Auflage, Gustav Fischer, Jena 1900, p. 459
External links
- American Orchid Society - Orchid Web
- Auckland Orchid Club
- Austrian Orchid Society
- Cymbidium Orchids
- Kew checklist
- Native Orchid Conservation Inc
- Orchids of Europe
- Orchids of Kerala
- Orchid Photo Encyclopedia
- Orchid Picture Gallery
- OrchidWorks - a photo album and overview of a variety of orchids
- Orange County (California) Orchid Society
- Orchid Plant Care Information
- Peloric "Two Lips" Phalaenopsis
- Peruvian Orchids - Mayumi Hashi, a botanical illustrator's report on a trip to Peru, which was partly funded by the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS).
- RBO - Web-Portal about Reproductive Biology of Orchids
- Report on pollination tactics by orchids
- Revealing the secret life of orchids ( Centre for plant biodiversity research - CSIRO and Botanic Gardens Australia )
- Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) International Orchid Register (with search capability)
- Swiss Orchid Foundation at the Herbarium Jany Renz
- Tasmanian terrestrial orchids (Hobart District Group of The Australian Plants Society)
- Waling-waling, an endangered orchid
- Wild orchids of "Alta Murgia" (Apulia - Southern Italy)
- Wild orchid of Japan - Flavon's art gallery
- Wild orchids - South Indian orchids
- Stevens, P. F. (2001 onwards). Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. Version 7, May 2006 [and more or less continuously updated since]. http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/APweb/
- Orchids in Utopia Park (Israel) - Photo gallery
- Orchid Bees Pollinating Mormodes Orchid - Video
orchid in Arabic: سحلب
orchid in Aragonese: Orquidias
orchid in Bulgarian: Орхидеи
orchid in Catalan: Orquídia
orchid in Czech: Vstavačovité
orchid in Corsican: Orchidaceae
orchid in Danish: Gøgeurt-familien
orchid in German: Orchideen
orchid in Estonian: Käpalised
orchid in Spanish: Orchidaceae
orchid in Esperanto: Orkidacoj
orchid in French: Orchidaceae
orchid in Galician: Orquídea
orchid in Upper Sorbian: Orchidejowe
rostliny
orchid in Croatian: Orhideje
orchid in Indonesian: Orchidaceae
orchid in Italian: Orchidaceae
orchid in Hebrew: סחלביים
orchid in Georgian: ჯადვარისებრნი
orchid in Haitian: Òkide
orchid in Luxembourgish: Orchideeën
orchid in Lithuanian: Gegužraibiniai
orchid in Hungarian: Kosborfélék
orchid in Malagasy: Orkide
orchid in Malayalam: ഓര്ക്കിഡ്
orchid in Malay (macrolanguage): Pokok Bunga
Anggerik
orchid in Burmese: သစ္ခ္ဝ
orchid in Dutch: Orchideeënfamilie
orchid in Japanese: ラン科
orchid in Norwegian: Orkidéfamilien
orchid in Polish: Storczykowate
orchid in Portuguese: Orquídea
orchid in Romanian: Orhidee
orchid in Quechua: Hillurina yura rikch'aq
ayllu
orchid in Russian: Орхидные
orchid in Simple English: Orchidaceae
orchid in Slovak: Vstavačovité
orchid in Slovenian: Kukavičevke
orchid in Finnish: Kämmekkäkasvit
orchid in Swedish: Orkidéer
orchid in Thai: กล้วยไม้
orchid in Vietnamese: Họ Phong lan
orchid in Tonga (Tonga Islands): ʻOketi
orchid in Turkish: Salepgiller
orchid in Ukrainian: Орхідні
orchid in Chinese: 蘭科