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#NoID...

Fiori

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#NoID sent on July 03, 2019 (17:57) by Giuseppe Taverna. 6 comments, 234 views. [retina]

, 0.8 sec f/16.0, ISO 100, tripod.




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avatarsenior
sent on July 03, 2019 (22:40) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Nice picture, too bad for the dirty sensor.
Personally I don't think it's a hybrid (but I could be wrong).
Simply a white version of D. spotted subsp. fuchsii. ;-)
Hello
Roberto

avatarsupporter
sent on July 04, 2019 (17:45) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thank you Roberto, I'm actually waiting for confirmation of the determination of an experienced Trentino. It seems that the genus Dactylorhiza lends itself a lot to natural intersections between specimens, hence hybrids with variability of shapes and colors. But I'm interested in having more information about the dirty sensor. I looked at other photos taken in the same day and didn't notice anything that made you think about the sensor. In fact, in this one it's dirty. Apart from a spider web, there are those black speckles that I think are on the lens glass. I say this because the machine body and the target, since the purchase, have never been disconnected. What do you think?

avatarsenior
sent on July 04, 2019 (18:38) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Unfortunately, I am certainly not an experiato to understand the nature of speckles.
I thought of the dirty sensor because my mirrorless happens often.
Maybe in other photos you didn't notice them because maybe you used a more open diaphragm
which makes them less notice. ;-)
As for the determination of the orchid, beware of the fake experts (I would be curious too).
Hello
Roberto

avatarsupporter
sent on July 05, 2019 (13:56) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thank you Roberto for the information, the confirmed determination is that of Dactylorhiza fuchsii (Druce) Soò 1962 (controversial entity) Soò 1962 s.l.
In any case if you want to distinguish within the complex of D. spotted s.l. the commonly growing populations in the Trentino Region South Tyrol, should be attributed to D. fuchsii.
Examples seemingly more similar to the typical D. spotted are in Trentino rare and perhaps the result of hybridizations (Giorgio Perazza in "Spontaneous Orchids in Trentino South Tyrol)
Hello and again thank you.

avatarsenior
sent on July 19, 2019 (16:08) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Beautiful, and I think not at all common even in the parts of Adamello-Brenta.
A similar specimen I photographed here in Predazzo a few years ago (but no longer appeared in the following years), along a path that had different botanical peculiarities, but that after the storm Vaia practically no longer exists (also because there are working with bulldozers and other heavy vehicles).
If Giorgio Perazza made the determination, I'd say you're at the top of security.

avatarsupporter
sent on July 19, 2019 (20:20) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

In fact I do not have the pleasure of knowing Giorgio Perazza in person, but only through his book from where I extrapolated the statements mentioned in the text concerning Dactylorhiza fuchsii. Hello and thank you.


RCE Foto

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