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Trillium chloropetalum var. giganteum (Hook. & Arn.) Munz  

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(redirected from: Trillium giganteum (Hook. & Arn.) A.Heller)
Family: Melanthiaceae
giant wakerobin
[Trillium giganteum (Hook. & Arn.) A.Heller, moreTrillium sessile subsp. giganteum (Hook. & Arn.) A.E.Murray, Trillium sessile var. giganteum Hook. & Arn.]
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Frederick W. Case Jr. in Flora of North America (vol. 26)
Petals greenish white to deep red or purple, lacking any yellow pigments. Flowering late winter--spring (late Feb--early or mid Apr). Variable habitat: edges, openings in and along ravines in redwood forest, thickets and tangles of cut-over forest, stream flats in deciduous woods, chaparral brushland, open wooded slopes on dunes, brushy islands in surprisingly open grasslands, but usually where soil remains moist most of the season; 0--600 m; Calif. Trillium chloropetalum var. giganteum occurs in and around the San Francisco Bay region. The epithet 'giganteum' is appropriate, considering this variety´s large size. In the populations that I have observed, it was more robust and generally larger than var. chloropetalum. Narrow-petaled forms of var. giganteum occasionally occur in mixed populations with the wider-petaled ones, and in a few places almost exclusively. J. D. Freeman (1975) suggested that these could represent the 'undiluted' var. giganteum, free from influences of hybridization, as the type specimen has narrow petals.

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