Calopogon oklahomensis D.H. Goldman
Oklahoma Grass Pink
Facts About
Accepted Synonym: Calopogon oklahomensis f. albiflorus
Calopogon oklahomensis, the Oklahoma Grass Pink, is distributed throughout the south central US. It can be distinguished from other Calopogon species by its relatively wide leaf that tends to be as long as or longer than the flowering stem, and the widely-spaced, pink to white, fragrant flowers that open nearly simultaneously. The lip of the non-resupinate flower is fiddle shaped with a rounded tip and a cluster of long, yellow tipped, stamen-like bristles. A second cluster of shorter pink bristles occur in the center of lip. C. oklahomensis prefers drier habitats such as prairies, pine savannas, flatwoods, and meadows, avoiding the wetter sites preferred by most other Calopogon species.
Calopogon oklahomensis is considered vulnerable and appears to have been extirpated from much of its historic range. Causes of this decline include the loss of prairie habits to agriculture and urbanization.
Pollination
The flowers of Calopogon appear to be upside down with the lip at the top of the flower and use deception to attract pollinators. Midway up the lip, a tuft of orange-yellow hairs resembles pollen which attract naive, recently emerged bees expecting a reward. Bees of sufficient weight, force the hinged labellum to swing down, dropping the pollinator backwards onto the column. Any pollen attached to the bee is pressed onto the stigma and as the bee exits the flower, it picks up a new load of sticky pollen found on the end of the column.
Ecosystem Type
Bogs, disturbed habitats, grassland, marshes, prairie, savanna, woodlands
Characteristics
- Habitat:
- terrestrial
- Leaf arrangement:
- alternate
- Number of leaves on stem:
-
- one
- two
- Form of the labellum:
- the labellum is not pouch-like
- Main color of labellum:
-
- blue to purple
- pink to red
- white
- Nectar spur:
- absent
- Inflorescence type:
- the inflorescence is a raceme
- Labellum length:
- 10–17 mm
- Sepal length:
- 15–22 mm
- Plant height:
- 15–36 cm
-
Flowers
- Floral bract length:
- anything
- Flower petal color:
-
- blue
- pink
- purple
- white
- Flower symmetry:
- the flower is zygomorphic
- Flowering date:
-
- March
- April
- May
- June
March-June
- Flowers per inflorescence:
- 2–7
- Form of the labellum:
- the labellum is not pouch-like
- Hairs on flower stalk:
- the pedicel is hairless
- Hairs on inflorescence axis:
- the inflorescence stem is hairless
- Inflorescence length:
- 110–340 mm
- Inflorescence type:
- the inflorescence is a raceme
- Labellum length:
- 10–17 mm
- Labellum position:
- the flowers are non-resupinate
- Lower petal strongly red-veined:
- no
- Main color of labellum:
-
- blue to purple
- pink to red
- white
- Nectar spur:
- absent
- Number of stamens:
- 1
- Orientation of side petals:
-
- the lateral petals are declined
- the lateral petals are spreading
- Self-pollinating flowers:
- there are no cleistogamous flowers
- Sepal length:
- 15–22 mm
- Sepals fused only to sepals:
- the sepals are separate from one another
- Spots on labellum:
- no
-
Growth form
- Plant height:
- 15–36 cm
- Roots:
- the rhizomes are non-coralloid
- Underground organs:
- the plant has one or more swollen storage organs underground, such as bulbs, tubers or corms
- myco-heterotrophic or not:
- the plant is chlorophyllous
-
Leaves
- Bract relative length:
- the bract is shorter than the associated flower
- Features of leaves:
- the leaf is ribbed
- Leaf arrangement:
- alternate
- Leaf blade edges:
- the leaf edges are entire
- Leaf blade length:
- 70–350 mm
- Leaf blade length to width ratio:
- 14–23
- Leaf blade shape:
-
- lanceolate
- linear
- Leaf blade tip:
- the tip of the leaf blade is acuminate
- Leaf blade width:
- 5–15 mm
- Leaves during flowering:
- leaves are present during flowering
- Number of leaves on stem:
-
- one
- two
-
Place
- Ecosystem type:
-
- bogs
- disturbed habitats
- grasslands
- marshes
- prairie
- savanna
- woodlands
- Habitat:
- terrestrial
- Location:
-
- Alabama
- Arkansas
- Georgia
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Kansas
- Louisiana
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Oklahoma
- South Carolina
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Wisconsin
-
Facts and Uses
- Mycorrhiza
- Monitoring
- Propagation
- Restoration
Native to North America
Yes
North American Conservation Status & Distribution
Conservation Status
Conservation and Wetland Status | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Alabama | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Alabama Rank | Highly State Rare |
Alabama Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Arkansas | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Arkansas Rank | Highly State Rare |
Arkansas Status | Species of Concern |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Georgia | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Georgia Rank | Possible Extirpated |
Georgia Status | Historical |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Iowa | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Iowa Rank | Possible Extirpated |
Iowa Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Illinois | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Illinois Rank | Highly State Rare |
Illinois Status | Endangered |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Indiana | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Indiana Rank | Possible Extirpated |
Indiana Status | Endangered |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Kansas | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Kansas Rank | Highly State Rare |
Kansas Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Louisiana | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Louisiana Rank | Highly State Rare |
Louisiana Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Minnesota | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Minnesota Rank | Possible Extirpated |
Minnesota Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Missouri | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Missouri Rank | N/A |
Missouri Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Mississippi | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Mississippi Rank | Highly State Rare |
Mississippi Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Oklahoma | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Oklahoma Rank | Highly State Rare |
Oklahoma Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: South Carolina | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
South Carolina Rank | Possible Extirpated |
South Carolina Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Tennessee | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Tennessee Rank | Possible Extirpated |
Tennessee Status | Historical |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Texas | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Texas Rank | Highly State Rare |
Texas Status | N/A |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |
Conservation status for: Wisconsin | |
---|---|
Global Rank | Vulnerable |
US Status | N/A |
Wisconsin Rank | Possible Extirpated |
Wisconsin Status | Species of Concern |
Canadian Status | N/A |
Wetland Status | N/A |