DACF Home → Bureaus & Programs → Maine Natural Areas Program → Communities, Plants, and Animals → Rare Plants → Spiranthes lacera var. gracilis
Spiranthes lacera (Raf.) Raf. var. gracilis (Bigelow) Luer
Southern Slender Ladies'-tresses
- State Rank: SH
- Global Rank: G5T4T5
- State Status: Potentially Extirpated
Habitat: Xeric to mesic meadows, fields, woodlands, and roadsides.
Range: New Brunswick, south to Florida, west to Texas, north to Minnesota ans Saskatchewan.
Aids to Identification: Spiranthes lacera var. gracilis has a crowded inflorescence with several spirals. The sepals and lateral petals form a tube 1.5-2.5 mm in diameter. The apex of the labellum has a thin, white border and the leaves are senesced prior to anthesis. The rachis of the inflorescence is glabrous. The flowers of Spiranthes lucida appear late-June to mid-July, earlier than most other species of Spiranthes.
Ecological characteristics: None noted.
Phenology: Flowers August. Ladies-tresses are leafy stemmed orchids with small, mostly white, flowers borne in spiralled racemes.
Family: Orchidaceae
Synonyms: Gyrostachys gracilis (Bigelo) Kuntze; Ibidium gracile (Bigelow) House; Neottia gracilis Bigelow; Spiranthes gracilis (Bigelow) Beck. Hybrids with S. romanzoffiana occur in Maine.
Known Distribution in Maine: This rare plant has been documented from a total of 1 town(s) in the following county(ies): York.
Reason(s) for rarity: Near northern limit of range.