Stage 1: Make Observations

Study the orchid data to identify interesting patterns and phenomena

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Observation → Hypothesis → Methods → Data → Analysis → Conclusions → Paper

230+

Orchid Specimens

40+

Different Genera

15+

Geographic Regions

Mixed

Wild & Cultivated

Record Your Observations

What patterns, differences, or interesting phenomena do you notice in the orchid data?

Explore the Data First

Before forming hypotheses, explore our orchid database to make informed observations:

Good Observation Examples
  • Pattern: "Epiphytic orchids tend to have smaller flowers than terrestrial orchids in our database"
  • Geographic: "Orchids from tropical regions show more diverse flower colors than temperate species"
  • Seasonal: "Most Asian Cymbidium species flower in late winter/early spring in cultivation"
  • Morphological: "Orchids with pseudobulbs seem to have different water requirements than those without"
  • Ecological: "Wild-collected specimens show greater size variation than cultivated ones"
Current Data Highlights

Most Common Genus: Cymbidium (40+ specimens)

Geographic Spread: Asia, Americas, Australia

Growth Habits: Epiphytic, terrestrial, lithophytic

Photo Sources: Wild collections, gardens, shows

AI Analysis: 95%+ specimens have detailed metadata

Time Span: Photos from multiple seasons and years