Typhonium jonesii

Typhonium jonesii is a species of plant in the arum family that is endemic to Australia.

The specific epithet jonesii honours Australian botanist David L. Jones who made valuable collections of Typhonium species in the Northern Territory in 1984.

[2] The species is a small, deciduous, geophytic, perennial herb, which resprouts annually from a corm about 2.5 cm in diameter.

The flower is enclosed in a pale mauve-cream spathe, appearing in December.

The main potential threats include land clearing for forestry, habitat disturbance by feral animals such as water buffalos, horses, pigs and cattle, weed invasion by mission grass and gamba grass, and inappropriate fire regimes.