Eria queenslandica T.E.Hunt Bryobium queenslandicum, commonly known as the dingy urchin orchid,[2] is an epiphytic or lithophytic clump-forming orchid that has cylindrical, fleshy green pseudobulbs, each with two leaves and between three and twelve small, self-pollinating, cream-coloured or pinkish flowers.
Bryobium queenslandicum is an epiphytic or lithophytic herb that forms dense clumps with crowded, cylindrical pseudobulbs 40–60 millimetres (1.6–2.4 in) long and 8–12 millimetres (0.31–0.47 in) wide.
[2][3] The dingy urchin orchid was first formally described in 1948 by Trevor Edgar Hunt who gave it the name Eria queenslandica and published the description in The North Queensland Naturalist.
[4][5] In 2002 Mark Clements and David Jones changed the name to Bryobium queenslandicum.
[6] Bryobium queenslandicum grows on trees and rocks in rainforest between the McIlwraith Range and the Tully River.