Pachystoma pubescens


Pachychila pubescens, commonly known as pink kunai orchid or as 粉口兰 , is a plant in the orchid family. It is native to areas from Asia through Southeast Asia to New Guinea and northern Australia. It is a deciduous, terrestrial herb with one or two grass-like leaves and up to ten dull pink, more or less drooping flowers. It grows in wet, grassy places in forests and woodlands.

Description

Pachystoma pubescens is a deciduous, terrestrial herb with one or two dark green, linear, pleated, sharply pointed leaves long and wide. Between four and ten resupinate, dull pink, more or less tubular, drooping flowers long and wide are borne on a flowering stem tall. The dorsal sepal is long, about wide and the lateral sepals are a similar length but wide with a humped base. The petals are a similar length to the sepals but narrower. The labellum is long and wide with three lobes. The middle lobe has a square tip and pimply surface and the side lobes curve upwards. Flowering occurs in November and December in Australia and March to September in Asia.

Taxonomy and naming

Pachystoma pubescens was first described in 1825 by Carl Ludwig Blume, in his Bijdragen tot de Flora van Nederlandsch Indie. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin word pubesco meaning "put on the down of puberty" with the ending -escens meaning "beginning of" or "becoming", hence "pubescent".

Distribution and habitat

The pink kunal orchid often grows with grasses such as kunai grass in woodland and forest areas that are seasonally wet. It occurs in China, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, New Guinea, the Philippines, Vietnam and in Australia where it is found in northern parts of the Northern Territory and in Tropical North Queensland.