All representatives of the Cypripedioideae are perennial, herbaceous plants. The fleshy roots sometimes possess a veil. The leaves are arranged spirally or in two rows, the shoot is slender or compressed. In the bud, the leaves are rolled and the leaf blade is plikat (folded) or the leaves are folded in the bud, smooth and leathery. There is no dividing tissue between leaf and shoot. The
inflorescence of the Cypripedioideae are terminal and mostly unbranched. The flowers are spiral or in two lines on the shoot, they are
resupinated. The petals are in two threefold circles, with mostly two petals of the outer circle are completely fused. The
labellum forms a sac-like structure. The ovary is under constant and one-chambered or three-chambered. Two fertile
stamens, a staminode and
style are fused into a complex structure. The stylus is short and thick, the
stigma is large and convex, the central lobe of the stigma is larger than the two lateral ones. The two lateral stamens are fertile, the pollen grains are glued together to form a paste or formed into connected pollinia in some
Phragmipedium species. The middle, barren stamen is shield-shaped widened. The fruits are mostly capsule fruits, with
Selenipedium they are berry-like. They contain numerous flattened seeds, about a millimeter long and 0.1 millimeters wide. In contrast, the seeds of
Selenipedium are lens-shaped and have a hard seed coat. Chromosome numbers vary within the subfamily over a wide range from 2n=20 in
Cypripedium to 26 to 44 chromosomes in
Paphiopedilum. The chromosomes are quite large. The species in this subfamily form trap flowers in which insect access to the saclike lip from the front is quite easy. The inside is designed in such a way that the insects climb out of the flower past the stigma and the stamens and thereby pollinate the flower. s in
Nova Scotia, Canada ==Distribution==