Tall shield orchid

Nervilia concolor

Nervilia concolor is a small terrestrial orchid found in South and Southeast Asia and in northern Australia. It has pale green, short-lived flowers with a cream-coloured or yellowish labellum and a more or less circular leaf which emerges at the base of the flowering stem after flowering.
Aragoa-Like Nervilia (Nervilia aragoana) Aragoa-Like Nervilia (Nervilia aragoana) - Short lived terrestrial orchid or also called as Ephemeral found in Sanjay Gandhi National Park, Borivali, Mumbai. Just few months to go for emergence of the flower. The bloom is seen just after the first shower and the flowers perish with in a week or two. The vegetative state (leaves) are heart shaped and develop until after the flowers fade. Geotagged,Ground Orchid,India,Nervilia concolor,Rains,Tall shield orchid,endemic

Appearance

"Nervilia concolor" is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herb which grows in colonies with only a few individuals producing flowers in any one year. Between two and six pale green flowers 35–40 mm long and 30–35 mm wide are borne on an erect flowering stem 200–350 mm tall. The sepals are 17–24 mm long and about 2 mm wide and the petals are similar but slightly shorter. The labellum has three lobes and is cream-coloured or yellowish with hairy purple or green veins. The side lobes curl inwards and the middle lobe has wavy edges and three hairy ridges. The flowers only last up to four days, following which a single leaf develops, including on those plants that did not flower. The leaf is bright green, heart-shaped or kidney-shaped but appears almost circular, 150–250 mm in diameter with wavy edges and prominent radiating veins. In Australia, flowering occurs between September and December after heavy rain but in areas north of the equator in April and May.
Nervilia aragoana  Geotagged,India,Nervilia concolor,Tall shield orchid,Winter

Naming

The tall shield orchid was first formally described in 1825 by Carl Ludwig Blume who gave it the name "Cordyla concolor" and published the description in "Bijdragen tot de flora van Nederlandsch Indië". In 1825 Rudolf Schlechter changed the name to "Nervilia concolor". The specific epithet is a Latin word meaning "coloured uniformly".

In Australia the species is known as "Nervilia aragoana", first described in 1827 by Charles Gaudichaud-Beaupré.

The species is known by a variety of vernacular names in Asia:
⤷ Malaysia: Daun sa-helai sa-tahun, daun satu tahun.
⤷ Thailand: Phaen din yen, waan phra chim.
⤷ Vietnam: Ch[aa]n tr[aa]u xanh, thanh thi[ee]n q[uf]y, Ian c[owf].
⤷ Japan: Yaeyama-kuma-sô, aoi-bokuro
Aragoa-Like Nervilia (Nervilia aragoana)  Geotagged,India,Nervilia concolor,Summer,Tall shield orchid

Distribution

"Nervilia concolor" occurs in Nepal, Bhutan, eastern India, Myanmar, Indochina, southern China, Taiwan, southern Japan, Thailand, the Malaysian region, the Pacific Islands, Queensland and the Northern Territory. It grows in forest, rainforest and monsoonal rainforest.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassMonocots
OrderAsparagales
FamilyOrchidaceae
GenusNervilia
SpeciesN. concolor
Photographed in
India