Thismia americana, known as thismia[2] or banded Trinity[3] was a species of flowering plant that was first discovered in 1912 by
Norma Etta Pfeiffer in the wetlands surrounding Chicago's
Lake Calumet, and described by her in 1914.[4] The type specimen was found in what was then a wet-mesic sand prairie at 119th Street and Torrence Avenue in what would become the industrial neighborhood of
South Deering.[5] The plant has not been seen since 1916, and the ground where it was observed has since been
extensively altered by industrial development. The species is believed to be
extinct.[2] Several extensive searches have not uncovered any living specimens of the vanished species.[6][7][8]
Although occasionally regarded as a hoax,[9][10] preserved specimens exist. One was located in the
Naturalis Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands in 2022. In the 1980s, one of Pfeiffer's specimens had been sent to the Utrecht herbarium, but it went missing after the collection moved to a new site in 2006. This was located when staff undertook delayed maintenance and curation during the COVID-19 epidemic.[11]
Life cycle
Thismia americana drew interest from botanists because of its extremely specialized
ecological niche. T. americana lacked
chlorophyll. Instead of converting solar energy, the flowering plant was a
mycoheterotroph, utilizing local
fungi of the
southern Lake Michigan wetlands for its nourishment. The plant enjoyed a short, shy life cycle above ground; in July, its roots would sprout a tiny flowering head, which produced a white flower the size of a pea.[2]
The description of Thismia americana was published by
University of Chicago student Norma Etta Pfeiffer in the
Botanical Gazette[4] and reprinted in her doctoral thesis Morphology of Thismia americana.[12] She became the first and only scientist to collect the species. By examining the plant's
morphology, Pfeiffer determined that it was a species of the genus Thismia, a genus that at the time was believed to occur only in the
Southern Hemisphere. No one knows how this
isolated population survived in North America until historic times.[2][10]
^Merckx, Vincent S. F. T.; Smets, Erik F.; Kellogg, Elizabeth A. (2014). "Thismia americana, the 101st Anniversary of a Botanical Mystery". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 175 (2): 165–175.
doi:
10.1086/674315.
JSTOR674315.
S2CID84525776.
Schmid, Rudolf (1976). "Floral anatomy of Thismia americana and T. roadway (Burmanniaceae)." Botanical Society of America, abstracts of papers. Tulane University, New Orleans, 30 May – 4 June 1976, page 48, May–June [May–June 1976 AIBS meetings, New Orleans, Louisiana.]