The chromosome count is 2n = 28. Since the orchid seed does not provide any nutrient tissue, germination only takes place when infected by a mycorrhizal root fungus.
Taxonomy The accepted generic name
Calypso was described in 1808 by the English gardener
Richard Anthony Salisbury in the work
Paradisus Londinensis. It was published with the then-director of the
Royal Botanic Gardens in London,
William Jackson Hooker (1785–1865). In 1905,
Homer Doliver House proposed that the genus be renamed as
Cytherea because of the earlier publication of
Calypso by
Louis-Marie Aubert du Petit-Thouars 1804, regarded as a synonym of
Salacia. In 1930 it was made a
conserved name by the
International Botanical Congress. The following generic names have been published as synonyms: •
Cytherea (1812) •
Orchidium (1814) •
Calypsodium (1829) •
Norna (1833)
Calypso bulbosa was assigned to the genus
Cypripedium in 1753 by
Carl von Linné in
Species Plantarum. It was moved to the genus
Calypso by the botanist
William Oakes 1842. File:The paradisus londinensis (8318676110).jpg|
C. bulbosa in "Paradisus Londinensis" File:Flora Europaea inchoata (Pl. 7) (6032619343).jpg|Illustration of
Calypso bulbosa as
Cypripedium bulbosum by
Johann Jacob Roemer in Flora Europaea inchoata (1797) File:Calypso bulbosa (as Calypso borealis) - Curtis' 54 (N.S. 1) pl. 2763 (1827).jpg|Illustration of
Calypso bulbosa (as syn. Calypso borealis) in "
Curtis's Botanical Magazine" vol.54 (N.S. 1) pl. 2763 (1827) File:Abbildungen der in Deutschland und den angrenzenden gebieten vorkommenden grundformen der orchideenarten (Pl 60 Calypso bulbos) (6022132370).jpg|
Calypso bulbosa Rchb. F. by Kränzlin, Friedrich; Müller, Walter in Abbildungen der in Deutschland und den angrenzenden gebieten vorkommenden grundformen der orchideenarten (1904) ;Varieties Four
varieties and one nothovariety, a variety of hybrid origin that is established in the wild, are recognized:
Synonyms Calypso bulbosa has
synonyms of the species or one of its four varieties, including 16 species.
Names The genus
Calypso is named in reference to the nymph
Calypso, whose name means concealment. The habitat of these plants in the deep woods habitat metaphorically hides them from plant hunters. The species name,
bulbosa, means possessing a bulb, referring to its growth habit.
Calypso bulbosa is known by the
common names
fairy slipper,
fairyslipper orchid, and
fairy-slipper orchid, due to the prominent lower lip of the flower resembling a slipper. Similarly it is known as
Venus slipper or ''Venus' slipper
, but this name is also applied to orchids of the genus Cypripedium
because of the mythological association with the goddess Venus. It is also known as angel slipper
, slipper orchid
, redwoods orchid
, deer-head orchid
, and calypso''. ==Range and habitat==