Picture of green and red orchid flower with black spots.
Cymbidiella pardalina is one of roughly a thousand orchid varieties—rare, threatened, or thriving—that call Madagascar home.
Photograph by JOHAN HERMANS

Where to find an island with a thousand orchids

Better known for lemurs, Madagascar is home to an amazing variety of orchids—and there are still more to be discovered.

ByKatie Knorovsky
June 07, 2022

From the showstopper Cymbidiella pardalina, with its operatic scarlet lip, to the thumbnail-size yellow Angraecum rhynchoglossum, about a thousand species of orchids call Madagascar home. Known for their delicate details, these flowers exhibit remarkable resistance to wildfire and the severe drought now plaguing this biodiverse Indian Ocean island. Orchids with underground tubers act as survival powerhouses, says Jeannie Raharimampionona, a Malagasy botanist, conservationist, and National Geographic Explorer. In her 22 years of award-winning work in defense of island flora, she has helped create a dozen refuges to protect plant species from deforestation and habitat loss. What continues to motivate her is the astonishing rate of flora discovery here. Even just “as a traveler, you could see an orchid that is new for science,” she says.

This story appears in the July 2022 issue of National Geographic magazine.

Learn more about the National Geographic Society’s support of Explorers’ work protecting critical species at natgeo.com/impact.

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