Missouri Botanical Garden Orchid Show 2007

Missouri Botanical Garden
Missouri Botanical Garden Orchid Show 2007 Podcast

MBG: Orchid Show 2007

Episodes

  1. 01/01/2006

    5# – What is the history of the Garden's orchid collection?

    Voice: Andrew Colligan, archivist and historian Resources: Public Relations fact sheet, Bulletin articles, Kemper Center handout I’m Andrew Colligan, the Garden’s archivist and historian. The Missouri Botanical Garden has collected, grown and displayed orchids for more than a century. The first specimens were given as a gift to the Garden’s founder, Henry Shaw, in 1876. Mr. Shaw was especially fond of orchids. At his death in 1889, the Garden’s collection, though small at the time, was one of the country’s most complete. The collection grew steadily, and in 1918, the largest public display of orchids ever held in St. Louis made it’s debuted at a Christmas Show. In 1923, George Pring, an orchidologist on the Garden staff, spent six months collecting plants in Panama and Colombia. He returned with eight tons of orchids, including 5,000 Cattleyas. The Garden held its first orchid show the following year, in 1924. Eight-thousand visitors came! In 1926, the Garden set up a tropical field station in Panama and continued to collect orchids there. Meanwhile, back in St. Louis, industrial smoke and pollution threatened the orchids…so, they were moved 30 miles west to Gray Summit, to what is now the Shaw Nature Reserve, where special greenhouses were built for them. An orchid seedling department was started in 1927 and the collection continued to grow in size and prominence. By 1958, air quality in the city had improved and the orchids were returned to the Garden. They have remained here ever since.

    1 min
  2. 01/01/2006

    6# – Where do orchids originate and how do they grow?

    Voice: Dr. Jim Solomon, curator of the herbarium Resource: Talking Orchid script, Bulletin articles, 2005 2006 Orchid Show brochures Hi, I’m Dr. Jim Solomon, curator of the herbarium here at the Missouri Botanical Garden. Did you know that orchids are the largest family of flower plants in the world, with some 30 to 35,000 species? That’s approaching nearly 10 percent of all flowering plants! They grow on every continent except Antarctica. While there are only about 200 orchid species in North America the tropical countries have many, many more. For example, there’s more than 3,500 species in Ecuador and more than 1,300 in Costa Rica. Some orchid plants are less than an inch tall with flowers the size of a pinhead, while others grow up to 40 feet tall, with flowers approaching a foot in width. Terrestrial orchids grow on the ground, where their roots absorb moisture and nutrients from the soil with the help of soil fungi. Epiphytic orchids on the other hand grow on tree trunks or branches for support and have no direct contact with the ground. They have adapted to grow where water and nutrients are limited, and a spongy covering on their roots helps them soaks up moisture. Some orchids have roots that grow upwards, forming a basket to catch leaves and other debris that fall from the treetops. Although many orchids are incredibly fragrant, not all of them smell nice! Some smell musty and others actually reek - of decay, or rotting meat, or even old tennis shoes. There’s a good reason for this – a strong scent attracts specific pollinators. And orchid are pollinated by a wide variety of different kinds of animals, bees, flies, moths, butterflies, wasps, birds and beetles all carry pollen from one flower to another. For orchids to make seeds, they must receive pollen from another orchid of the same species. Their seeds are so small, as small as speck of dust, and weigh almost nothing, that they are easily picked up and blown about by the wind. That’s how they spread from one place to another. Did you know that an orchid fruit can contain up to a million seeds?

    1 min
  3. 01/01/2006

    7# – What are the threats to orchids growing in the wild?

    Voice: Dr. Peter H. Raven, president Resources: 2005 Orchid Island brochure If you read the bestseller The Orchid Thief, by Susan Orlean, then you not only would have been highly entertained but you would have learned that since Victorian times, passionate collectors have driven the search for the rarest of orchids. It’s important to remember that individual orchid species which are often very rare are extremely vulnerable to simply being wiped out to be driven to extinction in nature. Wild orchids are often over-collected. Many species are restricted to a specific habitat, such as the branches of a particular kind of tree and many of them with their bizarre and unusual and well adapted flowers depend on a particular kind of visiting animal or pollinator in order to be able to thrive, produce seeds and spread themselves. Since 1975, the international plant trade has been regulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. As president of the Garden, I want to say that this institution stands firmly behind these principles and is devoted to the conservation of plants and animals and to building up sustainable life systems that will support people throughout the world. In all the areas where we work, in Latin America, in Africa, and in Asia, we strive to enable people through the knowledge of plants to take care of their own lives and to improve them accordingly. All of the Garden’s plants have been acquired legally from growers and researchers.

    2 min

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MBG: Orchid Show 2007

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