Hetaeria, commonly known as hairy jewel orchids, is a genus of about thirty species of flowering plants in the orchid family Orchidaceae. Plants in this genus are terrestrial herbs with a succulent rhizome and a loose rosette of leaves. Small, pale, hairy non-resupinate flowers are borne on a thin, hairy flowering stem. They are found in tropical Africa and Asia to New Guinea, Australia and some Pacific Islands.
Description
Orchids in the genus Hetaeria are terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herbs with a creeping, succulent, above-ground rhizome anchored to the ground by wiry roots. The leaves are dark green, usually narrow, thin-textured and arranged in a loose rosette with a short petiole-like base, the lower leaves usually withered by flowering time. The flowers are non-resupinate and usually small, dull-coloured and hairy with the sepal and petals joined to form a hood over the column. The labellum is and has a deep pouch near its base.
Taxonomy and naming
The genus Hetaeria was first formally described in 1825 by Carl Ludwig Blume and the description was published in Bijdragen tot de flora van Nederlandsch Indië. (Blume gave the name Etaeria, but Hetaeria is a conserved name.) The name Hetaeria is an Ancient Greek word meaning "comrade" or "companion".
Species list
Species recognized as of October 2025:
- Hetaeria affinis <small>(Griff.) Seidenf. & Ormerod</small> - Himalayas, Thailand, Vietnam, Yunnan, Bangladesh
- Hetaeria alta <small>Ridl.</small> - Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Borneo
- Hetaeria anomala <small>Lindl.</small> - from Assam east to Taiwan and south to Sumatra and the Philippines
- Hetaeria armata <small>Ormerod & H.A.Pedersen</small> - Thailand
- Hetaeria baeuerlenii <small>Schltr.</small> - New Guinea
- Hetaeria callosa <small>(J.J.Sm.) Ormerod</small> - New Guinea, Bismarcks
- Hetaeria elata <small>Hook.f.</small> - Malaysia, Borneo, Philippines
- Hetaeria elegans <small>Ridl.</small> - Malaysia
- Hetaeria finlaysoniana <small>Seidenf.</small> â Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Guangxi, Hainan
- Hetaeria goodyeroides <small>Schltr.</small> - New Guinea
- Hetaeria heterosepala <small>(Rchb.f.) Summerh.</small> - Africa from Liberia to Tanzania; also Madagascar
- Hetaeria hylophiloides <small>(Carr) Ormerod & J.J.Wood</small> - Sabah
- Hetaeria lamellata <small>Blume</small> - Java
- Hetaeria latipetala <small>Schltr.</small> - New Guinea
- Hetaeria linguella <small>(Carr) J.J.Wood & Ormerod</small> - Sarawak
- Hetaeria mannii <small>(Rchb.f.) Benth. ex Durand & Schinz</small> - Cameroon, Gabon, Congo-Brazzaville, Congo-Kinshasa, islands in the Gulf of Guinea
- Hetaeria obliqua <small>Blume</small> - Hainan, Nicobar Islands, Thailand, Borneo, Malaysia, Sumatra
- Hetaeria oblongifolia <small>Blume</small> - widespread from India east to Japan and Micronesia, south to Australia
- Hetaeria occidentalis <small>Summerh.</small> - Africa from Sierra Leone to Congo-Kinshasa
- Hetaeria pelota <small>N.Pearce & P.J.Cribb</small> - Bhutan
- Hetaeria rhombipetala <small>Ormerod & J.J.Wood</small> - Sabah
- Hetaeria rostrata <small>J.J.Sm.</small> - Sumatra
- Hetaeria tetraptera <small>(Rchb.f.) Summerh.</small> - Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, Congo-Kinshasa
- Hetaeria vaginalis <small>Rchb.f.</small> - Comoros
- Hetaeria whitmeei <small>Rchb.f.</small> - Fiji, New Caledonia, Samoa, Tonga
- Hetaeria youngsayei <small>Ormerod</small> - Thailand, Vietnam, Hainan
References
External links