Corybas incurvus


Corybas incurvus, commonly known as the slaty helmet orchid, is a species of terrestrial orchid endemic to south-eastern Australia. It has a broad egg-shaped to heart-shaped leaf and a dark purple flower with a white patch in the middle.

Description

Corybas incurvus is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, herb that has a broad egg-shaped to heart-shaped leaf long and wide. The leaf is dark green on the upper surface and silvery green on the lower side. The single flower is dark purple, long and wide. The dorsal sepal is greenish with purple markings, long, wide and curves forward forming a hood over the labellum. The lateral sepals are linear, about long, wide and joined at their base. The petals are about long, wide, often with tip divided into two. The labellum is tube shaped near its base, the tube about long, then opens into a flattened area a further long and broad. There is a white patch in the centre of the labellum and the edges turn inwards and have a few short teeth. Flowering occurs from June to August.

Taxonomy

Corybas incurvus was first formally described in 1988 by David Jones and Mark Clements from a specimen collected near Tyabb and the description was published in the Kew Bulletin. The specific epithet refers to the in-turned edges of the labellum.

Distribution and habitat

The slaty helmet orchid grows in moist heath, woodland and forest south from Cowra in New South Wales, in all but the north-west of Victoria, in the south-east of South Australia and in Tasmania.