Gastrodia agnicellus has been called the ugliest orchid in the world by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Rick Burian
Orchids are usually seen as beautifully coloured flowers, but a newly discovered species from Madagascar is far from pretty.
The plant, Gastrodia agnicellus, was discovered earlier this year in the deep shade underneath leaves on the forest floor in Madagascar. This small, brown orchid spends most of its life underground and has no leaves, only surfacing to produce fruit and disperse its seeds.
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鈥淚鈥檓 sure its mother thinks it鈥檚 very lovely,鈥 says Johan Hermans at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew聽in London, who discovered the species. Hermans says the name 鈥补驳苍颈肠别濒濒耻蝉鈥 comes from the Latin word for 鈥渓ittle lamb鈥 as it has a woolly, tuberous root. 鈥淲ith a bit of an imagination, you can almost see a lamb鈥檚 tongue in the flower.鈥
Like most orchids, this species is a perennial plant, meaning it could live for many years, and has a symbiotic relationship with a fungus. While other orchids only depend on their fungus symbiote for food at the start of their lives, Gastrodia agnicellus doesn鈥檛 have any cells for photosynthesis so relies on its fungus for its entire life.
Hermans expected the orchid to smell awful, as most plants that have this decaying look often smell like rotting flesh as a way to entice insect pollinators to help them reproduce. 鈥淚t actually had quite a fresh, citrusy smell,鈥 he says.
He also says that they still don鈥檛 know how this orchid is actually pollinated. 鈥淥rchids are particularly clever at adapting,鈥 says Hermans, so it must have found a unique way to survive.
This new species was discovered in a tiny region of Madagascar, and it is thought that the extent of its range is very small and is declining, probably due to increased agriculture and fires in the area. As such, Gastrodia agnicellus has been classed as a threatened species.
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