Babiana torta
Babiana torta is a species of geophyte of high that is assigned to the family Iridaceae. It has pale mirror-symmetrical flowers with a long narrow tube that split into six tepal lobes, have three stamens, and line- to lance-shaped, laterally compressed, undulating and coiled leaves. It is an endemic species of South Africa that can be found in the extreme north of the Western Cape province and the coastal mountains of the Northern Cape south of Namaqualand. It flowers from mid May to mid June.
Description
Babiana torta is a perennial plant of mostly, sometimes up to 12 cm high, that emerges from an underground globular corm at the start of its growing season. It has an unbranched stem that is largely underground but sometimes extends up to above the ground. It has soft-textured, undulating, lance-shaped, softly hairy or nearly hairless leaves of mostly, sometimes up to 18 mm wide, that are twisted beyond midlength, with usually only the margins and central vein thickened. Young leaves however, do not undulate, are loosely coiled and distinctly hairy. The 2 bracts subtending each flower are slightly hairy, forked in the upper third, long, green with the tip drying to pale brown, the inner bract as long as or slightly longer than the outer.Each inflorescence carries mostly 1–3, sometimes up to 5 mirror-symmetrical, sweetly scented flowers close to the ground. The perianth is mauve to pale slate-blue, sometimes white, the lower tepal having pale yellow to white central blotches, that are mostly edged with darker blue. The perianth tube is 2-2¼ cm long, the dorsal tepal with 3-3½ cm considerably larger than the three lower tepals that measure 2¼-2½ cm. The stamens are clustered under the dorsal tepal, have arched filaments of about that carry anthers of about long. The ovary is hairless and the style divides into the three branches at the tip of the anthers. It flowers mostly between the middle of May and the middle of June.