North America Native Plant

Florida Lady’s Tresses

Botanical name: Spiranthes floridana

USDA symbol: SPFL10

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to the lower 48 states  

Synonyms: Ibidium floridanum Wherry (IBFL)  âš˜  Spiranthes brevilabris Lindl. var. floridana (Wherry) Luer (SPBRF)  âš˜  Spiranthes gracilis (Bigelow) Beck var. floridana (Wherry) Correll (SPGRF)   

Florida Lady’s Tresses: A Rare Native Orchid Worth Protecting Meet one of the Southeast’s most elusive botanical treasures: Florida lady’s tresses (Spiranthes floridana). This delicate native orchid might not be destined for your garden, but it deserves a spot on every nature lover’s must-see list. Here’s why this spiraling beauty ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: Conservation status by state

Status: S1: Status is uncertain but is somewhere between the following rankings: Critically Imperiled: Extremely rare due to factor(s) making it especially vulnerable to extinction. Typically 5 or fewer occurrences or very few remaining individuals (<1,000) ⚘

Florida Lady’s Tresses: A Rare Native Orchid Worth Protecting

Meet one of the Southeast’s most elusive botanical treasures: Florida lady’s tresses (Spiranthes floridana). This delicate native orchid might not be destined for your garden, but it deserves a spot on every nature lover’s must-see list. Here’s why this spiraling beauty is both fascinating and critically important to protect.

What Makes Florida Lady’s Tresses Special

Florida lady’s tresses is a native perennial orchid that belongs to the diverse Spiranthes genus. As a forb (that’s botanist-speak for a non-woody flowering plant), it produces slender stems topped with distinctive white flowers that spiral gracefully upward – hence the charming lady’s tresses common name that evokes images of braided hair.

This isn’t your typical garden center find. Florida lady’s tresses blooms in late summer to early fall, creating delicate spikes of small white orchid flowers that seem to dance in a helical pattern up the stem. The effect is subtle but absolutely enchanting when you stumble upon one in the wild.

Where to Find This Native Gem

Florida lady’s tresses calls the southeastern United States home, with populations scattered across Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas. It primarily inhabits the coastal plain regions, where it has adapted to the unique growing conditions of this distinctive ecosystem.

A Conservation Concern

Here’s where things get serious: Florida lady’s tresses carries a Global Conservation Status of S1, meaning it’s critically imperiled. With typically five or fewer known occurrences and very few remaining individuals (fewer than 1,000), this orchid is teetering on the edge of extinction. This rarity status completely changes how we should think about this plant.

Why You Shouldn’t Try to Grow It (And What You Can Do Instead)

While we love encouraging native plant gardening, Florida lady’s tresses falls into the admire from afar category. Here’s why:

  • Extreme rarity: With so few plants remaining, every individual matters for species survival
  • Complex growing requirements: Like most orchids, it depends on specific mycorrhizal fungi relationships that are nearly impossible to replicate in cultivation
  • Specialized habitat needs: It requires very specific wetland conditions that are difficult to recreate
  • Collection pressure: Any harvesting from wild populations could push this species closer to extinction

Its Natural Habitat Preferences

Florida lady’s tresses has a fascinating relationship with water. In the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain regions, it’s classified as a facultative wetland plant, meaning it usually grows in wetlands but can occasionally pop up in drier spots. In the Eastern Mountains and Piedmont regions, it’s more flexible, equally at home in wet and dry conditions.

This adaptability might seem like it would make the plant easier to grow, but remember – orchids are notoriously finicky, and this one’s rarity suggests it needs very specific, undisturbed conditions to thrive.

Supporting Pollinators the Right Way

While we can’t invite Florida lady’s tresses into our gardens, we can certainly support the native pollinators that depend on it and other native orchids. The small native bees and specialized insects that visit these delicate flowers also appreciate other native plants that are more garden-friendly.

Better Alternatives for Your Native Garden

If you’re enchanted by the idea of native orchids in your landscape, consider these more common and garden-suitable alternatives:

  • Other Spiranthes species that aren’t critically endangered
  • Native wildflowers that support similar pollinators
  • Wetland plants that create habitat for the ecosystem Florida lady’s tresses depends on

How You Can Help

The best thing you can do for Florida lady’s tresses is to support habitat conservation efforts in its native range. If you’re lucky enough to encounter one in the wild, resist the urge to dig it up or even collect seeds. Instead:

  • Take photos (from a respectful distance)
  • Report sightings to local botanical organizations
  • Support land conservation efforts in the Southeast
  • Choose abundant native plants for your own garden

Sometimes the most loving thing we can do for a plant is to leave it exactly where it belongs. Florida lady’s tresses reminds us that not every beautiful native plant needs to come home with us – some are meant to be wild, rare, and absolutely precious in their natural habitat.

Florida Lady’s Tresses

Classification

Group

Monocot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Liliopsida - Monocotyledons

Subclass

Liliidae

Order

Orchidales

Family

Orchidaceae Juss. - Orchid family

Genus

Spiranthes Rich. - lady's tresses

Species

Spiranthes floridana (Wherry) Cory - Florida lady's tresses

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA