The Bog Big Three

In the Great Lakes Region the bog big three are Swamp Dragon (Arethusa bulbosa), Rose Pogonia (Pogonia ophioglossoides), and Grass-pink (Calopogon tuberosus). You can sometimes find all three in an undisturbed bog or fen. They are all sun-lovers and their colonies disappear if they become shaded. Swamp Dragon flowers first and Rose Pogonia is the last to flower but their blooming times overlap. I have seen Swamp Dragon and Grass-pink in flower on Memorial Day. Grass-pink and Rose Pogonia flower during July in the Upper Peninsula. Flowering time varies with the season, location, and genetics of the population.

Arethusa bulbosa-Flowers-Leaves

Arethusa Flowers & Leaves

I learned about Swamp Dragon as a boy from a Kodachrome slide my dad had taken. I saw my first one in 1974 during a family vacation to Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula. I jumped across a roadside ditch and over a dozen blooming plants.

I have found plants almost every year since then. They send up a single flower in late spring or early summer and the leaves develop just after the flower fades. A given population varies in size from year to year. One that I know in the eastern Upper Peninsula has fluctuated between 5 plants and 10,000 plants. Fred Case observed that individual plants are short lived, usually less than 5 years. If an early frost occurs, and plants fail to set seed for a couple of years in a row then the population drops.

Arethusa bulbosa

Arethusa Flowers

Morris and Eames in their classic Our Wild Orchids write, “To us it has always been, quite startling, a face watching and aware. We shall never forget the moment when our eyes first fell on its blossom in the lonely depths of a sphagnum bog.” I will always remember the first time I found this plant.I love this plant and currently have three colonies under annual observation. However, it is becoming rarer, because of habitat loss from invasive species such as Glossy Buckthorn (Frangula alnus)and wetland development.

Calopogon tuberosus

Grass -pink

Grass-pink is the largest of the bog big three. Under good conditions it can reach 60cm (2-feet) in height. It is normally easy to spot this plant. It is Michigan’s only non-respuinated orchid, meaning that the lip of the flower is uppermost. Other Michigan orchids have a 180-degree twist to the ovary. I find more Grass-pinks than Swamp Dragons. The Grass-pink populations fluctuate less than Swamp Dragons and are normally longer lived. I know of one station that my father photographed in the 1940s that still exists.

Pogonia ophioglossoides

Rose Pogonia

Rose Pogonia is the easiest member of the big three to find but it is not common. I don’t remember my first colony but it was probably the old station at Hart Lake in Bald Mountain Recreation Area that has since been overgrown. A tall plant of this species is 15cm (6-inches). It spreads by rootlets so when you find this plant there often are several hundred plants. It has a single leaf on the stem.

The big three are flowering now. Get out, get your feet wet, and have a look.
Copyright 2014 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Michigan Orchids

Orchids have intrigued people’s imagination for centuries. The plants use different methods to trick pollinators. They have complex flower designs that ensure they release and receive pollen. Some plants mimic insect’s forms and smells. Orchids occur everywhere except Antarctica. Many people are surprised to learn the Michigan has 56 native orchid species. Most of our natives are obscure. Upon showing people a native orchid, their first response is often something such as “that’s an orchid?”

L-R Pink Lady-slipper,Yellow Lady-slipper, Showy Lady-slipper

L-R Pink Lady-slipper,Yellow Lady-slipper, Showy Lady-slipper

Our five species of Lady-slippers are the orchids that most people see. The first orchid I remember seeing was a Pink Lady-slipper (Cypripedium acaule) at Proud Lake Recreation Area. I think this was before I started elementary school. Those plants grew in a quaking bog and a few years later I saw plants growing in dry soil behind a sand dune. It was the acid soil they required not the moisture.

Arethusa bulbosa

Swamp Dragon

The Swamp Dragon (Arethusa bulbosa) was another plant that I learned about from one of my father’s Kodachrome slides. The first colony I ever found was back in 1974 in the Keweenaw Peninsula. I leapt across a roadside ditch to explore a rock outcropping and jumped over a few hundred plants. They were growing out of sphagnum moss. I have seen thousands of plants since then.

 

 

 

Alaska Orchid (Platanthera unalascensis) is a disjunct from the west. It grows in the Rocky Mountains, the Black Hills, the eastern end of the Upper Peninsula, the Bruce Peninsula, and the Gaspe Bay area. It has been placed in the genus Habenaria, and also Piperia. Currently, it is grouped with the Rein Orchids in the genus Platanthera. It has been called the “tall, thin, green, nothing.”

Platanthera unalascensis

Alaska Orchid

I found the plants in the spring of 1979, near Cedarville, Michigan while looking for Calypso. I returned a month later and discovered that the plants were in bud. Ten days later, I drove the 300 miles from my house to the colony (this was before I had heard the term “carbon footprint.”)  None of the plants had opened their blossoms. I returned a week later and the deer had browsed off every flower spike. I found plants, sometimes in bud and sometimes in seed. It was over 30 years before I finally saw the plant in flower.

Hunting orchids is a great reason to get out into nature. You never know what you will find when you jump over a ditch or wander onto a limestone outcropping. Just get out and explore.