If you are just starting to investigate and learn about orchids then you will probably have read that there are believed to be over twenty thousand different orchid types or species which grow naturally. This seems like a lot of orchid types, but once you have added in the hybrid orchids you are looking at an extra hundred thousand orchids. People often become obsessive about orchids and as a result there are some orchid types which have been declared protected species and they are not allowed to be picked or cut.Photos of protected orchids are permitted, but that is a close as you can get.
The orchid family is continually growing and it is believed at the moment that the number of different orchid types increases by as much as eight hundred each year.
Hybrids do not have to be created in a laboratory or nursery, they are occurring all the time naturally. Many people think that nature will always produce the most beautiful of the orchids and that mans attempts will always be second rate.Much cross pollination takes place with when wasps, bees or moths fly between plants and carry pollen from one to another and hence create a new species. Some of these cross breeds do not survive; this is natures management of the environment.
Man has become so obsessed with creating the most beautiful and perfect orchid that there is a register which details all the different orchid types, and the breeding methods used for each one. This registry is held and maintained at the Royal Horticultural Society. Creating orchid hybrids has been happening for a long time, infact, since 1854.
The addiction of the orchid may seem strange to those who are new to orchids, however, with a bit of research into the history it becomes more understandable. The orchid is an undeniably beautiful plant, a plant which is so delicate and yet can some be found in some harsh and inhospitable environments.To add to this daintiness there are the external roots which appear to be so vulnerable. All this creates a plant which calls out to be protected and nurtured.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Do We Really Need More Orchid Types?
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