Difference between revisions of "Erythronium propullans"
Amer. Naturalist 5: 300, fig. 74. 1871.
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|special status=Illustrated;Endemic;Conservation concern | |special status=Illustrated;Endemic;Conservation concern | ||
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|genus=Erythronium | |genus=Erythronium | ||
|species=Erythronium propullans | |species=Erythronium propullans |
Latest revision as of 21:14, 5 November 2020
Bulbs ovoid, 10–25 mm; stolon 1 in flowering plants, arising from halfway up stem, 1–3 from bulbs of 1-leaved, nonflowering plants. Leaves 4–13 cm; blade green, irregularly mottled, elliptic-lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate or elliptic, ± flat, glaucous, margins entire. Scape 3.9–12 cm. Inflorescences 1-flowered. Flowers: tepals 4–6, strongly reflexed at anthesis, pale pink to white, darker abaxially, lanceolate, 8–15 mm, auricles absent; stamens 2–6, 6–8 mm; filaments white, lanceolate; anthers yellow; pollen yellow; style white, 6–10 mm; stigma ± unlobed. Capsules very rarely produced; when present, may be result of hybridization with Erythronium albidum.
Phenology: Flowering spring.
Habitat: Mesic floodplain woods
Elevation: 300 m
Discussion
Of conservation concern.
Erythronium propullans is known only from Goodhue and Rice counties. It often forms extensive colonies in which flowering plants are sometimes more abundant than nonflowering, 1-leaved ones, and sometimes the reverse. It grows mixed with E. albidum (J. A. Banks 1980), and putative hybrids between them have been reported (T. Morley 1988). Flowers frequently have fewer than six tepals and stamens (C. O. Rosendahl 1919), and may occasionally have only two carpels.
Selected References
None.