Hymenocallis liriosme

(Rafinesque) Shinners

Field & Lab. 19: 102. 1951.

Common names: Western marsh spider-lily Louisiana marsh spider-lily
Endemic
Basionym: Pancratium liriosme Rafinesque Fl. Ludov., 19. 1817
Synonyms: Choretis galvestonensis Herbert Hymenocallis galvestonensis (Herbert) Baker Hymenocallis galvestonensis subsp. angustifolia Traub
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 26. Treatment on page 287. Mentioned on page 285.
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Bulb nonrhizomatous, subglobose to ovoid, 4.5–6 × 5–6 cm; basal plate 2–3 cm; neck 3–5 cm; tunic grayish brown. Leaves deciduous, 5–8, suberect, 3.2–8.5(–10.6) dm × 1.7–3.6 cm, highly coriaceous; blade shiny green, liguliform to narrowly lanceolate, channeled, apex acute. Scape 3.6–6.8(–8.8) dm, 2-edged, glaucous; scape bracts 2, enclosing buds, 4.5–8 × 1.5–2 cm; subtending floral bracts 3–4 cm × 5–10 mm. Flowers (3–)5–12, opening sequentially, sweetly fragrant; perianth tube green, 4.5–8(–10.5) cm; tepals slightly ascending from base of corona, white, green-striped on keel, 6–9 cm × 4–8 mm; corona white with prominent, yellowish green eye, becoming rotate, shortly tubulose proximally, 2–3.5 × 4–5 cm, margins between free portions of filaments wavy to coarsely dentate; free portions of filaments inserted on flat sinal base, suberect, 1.5–3 cm; anthers 1–2.3 cm, pollen yellow; ovary subglobose, 1.2–1.8 cm × ca. 10 mm, ovules 2–3 per locule; style green in distal 1/2, fading to white proximally, 10–17 cm. Capsules subglobose, ca. 2 × 2 cm. Seeds ca. 2 × 1.5 cm. 2n = 40, 42.


Phenology: Flowering early–mid spring.
Habitat: Ditches, margins of marshes and ponds, swamps, alluvial woods
Elevation: 0–200 m

Distribution

V26 549-distribution-map.jpg

Ala., Ark., La., Miss., Okla., Tex.

Discussion

Hymenocallis liriosme has become a favorite for gardens west of Mobile Bay, Alabama. Its leaves are numerous, liguliform to narrowly lanceolate, highly coriaceous, and shiny green. The numerous, small, highly fragrant flowers with the center of the staminal corona having a prominent, yellowish green eye are characteristics useful in distinguishing this species from H. occidentalis (W. S. Flory 1950) and from H. choctawensis (R. Gooch and G. L. Smith 1994; G. L. Smith and N. C. Coile 1999).

Numerous herbarium specimens of Hymenocallis liriosme were identified by H. P. Traub as H. galvestonensis. However, close examination of Rafinesque’s original publication of Pancratium liriosme leaves no doubt that this earlier name does apply to this taxon and that therefore its epithet has priority.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Hymenocallis liriosme"
Gerald L. Smith +  and Walter S. Flory† +
(Rafinesque) Shinners +
Pancratium liriosme +
Western marsh spider-lily +  and Louisiana marsh spider-lily +
Ala. +, Ark. +, La. +, Miss. +, Okla. +  and Tex. +
0–200 m +
Ditches, margins of marshes and ponds, swamps, alluvial woods +
Flowering early–mid spring. +
Field & Lab. +
Choretis galvestonensis +, Hymenocallis galvestonensis +  and Hymenocallis galvestonensis subsp. angustifolia +
Hymenocallis liriosme +
Hymenocallis +
species +