Acianthus exsertus
Acianthus exsertus, commonly known as gnat orchid or large mosquito orchid, is a species of flowering plant in the orchid family Orchidaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a terrestrial herb with a single, heart-shaped leaf and up to 25 small, fine, dark brown flowers with pinkish and purplish markings and is found growing in sheltered places in forests in Queensland, New South Wales the ACT and Victoria.
Description
Acianthus exsertus is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herb with a single heart-shaped, glabrous, dark green leaf that is reddish-purple on its lower surface. The leaf is long, wide.There are from 3 to 25 flowers, well-spaced on a thin raceme, tall, each flower long. The dorsal sepal is linear to egg-shaped, long, wide with a point long with a red central stripe and forms a hood only partly covering the column. The lateral sepals are long, wide, linear to narrow lance-shaped, with a tip long and project forwards parallel to each other or diverging. The petals are a similar colour and are long, about wide, linear to narrow egg-shaped and turn towards the ovary. The labellum is wide, wide, heart-shaped to elliptic, dished near the base with the edges rolled under but lacking teeth. The thick, fleshy callus has many small pimple-like papillae on the outer half. Flowering occurs from March to August.
This species is distinguished from other mosquito orchids by its relatively large, well-spaced, dark coloured flowers and by the dorsal sepal which does not cover the column.