Blue fairy orchid

Pheladenia deformis

''Pheladenia deformis'', commonly known as blue fairy orchid or blue beard is the only species of the flowering plant genus ''Pheladenia'' and is endemic to Australia. Plants have a single, narrow, hairy leaf and usually blue flowers with relatively short, broad sepals and petals and an unusual labellum.
Blue bearded orchid - Pheladenia deformis  Australia,Blue fairy orchid,Eamw,Geotagged,Pheladenia deformis,Winter

Appearance

''Pheladenia deformis'' is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herb with a few inconspicuous, fine roots and a tuber partly surrounded by a fibrous sheath. The tuber produces two "droppers" which become daughter tubers in the following year. There is a single hairy convolute leaf at the base of the plant. The leaf is linear, 3–10 cm long and 2–5 mm wide with a few hairs, especially on the edges, about 1 mm long.

There is usually a single flower on a stem 5–15 cm high. The three sepals and two lateral petals are 14–20 mm long, 3–5 mm wide. The outer surface usually has a few glandular hairs and the inner surface is bright blue, or sometimes white, pinkish or yellow.

As is usual in orchids, one petal is highly modified as the central labellum. The labellum is dark blue near its tip, white near the base, 10–14 mm long, 4–6 mm wide. The edge of the labellum is fringed and there are many stalked calli, giving rise to the name blue beard. The column is 7–10 mm long, 3–4 mm wide.
Blue fairy orchid - Pheladenia deformis  Blue fairy orchid,Eamw flora,Eamw orchids,Geotagged,Mount Billy Conservation Park,Orchids August,Pheladenia deformis,Winter

Naming

This species was first formally described in 1810 by Robert Brown who gave it the name ''Caladenia deformis''. The description was published in ''Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae'' from a specimen collected at "Port Dalrymple", now George Town in Tasmania.

In 2000, Stephen Hopper and Andrew Brown changed the name to ''Cyanicula deformis'' and in 2001, David Jones and Mark Clements changed it to the present name.
Blue bearded orchid - Pheladenia deformis  Australia,Blue fairy orchid,Eamw flora,Eamw orchids,Mount Billy Conservation Park,Orchids August,Pheladenia deformis,Winter

Distribution

Blue fairy orchid grows in a variety of habitats, from the margins of swamps to granite outcrops, heath, woodland and forest. It occurs in all states of Australia except Queensland and the Northern Territory. In Western Australia it is found from north of Kalbarri to as far east as Israelite Bay on the south coast. In New South Wales it is uncommon but sometimes forms clumps on the Central West Slopes and South West Plains south from Molong.
Blue Fairy Orchid I think this is some kind of Waxlip Orchid - looking at example photographs though I was not sure of the correct species name...
Photographed in Horsenells Gully, South Australia, 11 Sept 2016
Edit: Appears to be a Pheladenia deformis - Blur Fairy Orchid - thanks WildFlower. 11 September 2016,Blue Fairy Orchid,Blue fairy orchid,Horsenells Gully,Orchid,Pheladenia deformis,South Australia

Status

''Pheladenia deformis'' is classified as "Not Threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassMonocots
OrderAsparagales
FamilyOrchidaceae
GenusPheladenia
SpeciesP. deformis
Photographed in
Australia