Caladenia helvina, commonly known as the summer spider orchid, is a plant in the orchid family Orchidaceae and is endemic to Tasmania. It is a ground orchid with a single hairy leaf and usually a single greenish-yellow to pale yellow flower with reddish teeth on the sides of the labellum and reddish calli along its mid-line.
Caladenia helvina is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, herb with an underground tuber and a single, linear to lance-shaped, dull green, densely hairy leaf long and wide. Usually only a single greenish-yellow to pale yellow flower is borne on a thin, wiry, hairy spike tall. The sepals and petals are linear in shape near their base but suddenly taper after about one-third of their length to a narrow, thread-like glandular tail. The sepal is long, wide near the base and curves forward. The sepals are a similar size and shape to the dorsal sepal and the petals are slightly shorter and narrower. The labellum is egg-shaped to heart-shaped, about long and wide and is greenish-yellow or dull yellow. The tip of the labellum curls under and there are thin yellow or reddish-purple teeth up to long on the sides of the labellum, and four or six rows of yellowish or purplish, golf club-shaped calli along its mid-line, decreasing in size towards the tip. Flowering occurs from December to January.
Caladenia helvina was first formally described by David Jones in 1991 and the description was published in Australian Orchid Research. The specific epithet (helvina) is a Latin word meaning "yellowish" or "pale yellow", referring to the colour of the flowers of this orchid.
Summer spider orchid is widespread in Tasmania where it grows in forest in shallow, sometimes stony soil.