Genoplesium citriodorum


Genoplesium citriodorum, commonly known as the lemon-scented midge orchid, is a species of small terrestrial orchid that is endemic to New South Wales. It has a single thin leaf fused to the flowering stem and up to thirty three small, lemon scented, dark purplish black flowers. It usually grows under shrubs in shallow sandstone soil in the Blue Mountains.

Description

Genoplesium citriodorum is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, herb with an underground tuber and a single thin leaf long and fused to the flowering stem with the free part long. Between twenty and thirty three dark purplish black flowers are arranged along a flowering stem tall and taller than the leaf. The flowers are about long and wide and lean forward. As with others in the genus, the flowers are inverted so that the labellum is above the column rather than below it. The dorsal sepal is narrow egg-shaped, about long and wide with prominent red lines and sparsely hairy edges. The lateral sepals are about long, wide, turn downwards and spread widely apart from each other. The petals are narrow egg-shaped, about long, wide with prominent stripes and hairy edges. The labellum is purple, narrow egg-shaped, about long, wide, with many hairs up to on its edges. There is a dark reddish purple callus in the centre of the labellum and extending two-thirds of the way to its tip. Flowering occurs between December and April.

Taxonomy and naming

The lemon scented midge orchid was first formally described in 1991 by David Jones and Mark Clements who gave it the name Genoplesium citriodorum and published the description in Australian Orchid Research. In 2002, Jones and Clements changed the name to Corunastylis citriodora but the change is not accepted by the Australian Plant Census. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin words citrea meaning "the citron-tree" and odor meaning "smell", referring to the strongly lemon-scented flowers.

Distribution and habitat

Genoplesium citriodorum is only known from the Blue Mountains at heights of where it grows under shrubs in shallow soil over sandstone and sometimes in permanently wet areas.