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Trillium decumbens Harb.  

No occurrences found

Family: Melanthiaceae
trailing wakerobin
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Frederick W. Case Jr. in Flora of North America (vol. 26)
Rhizomes short, thick. Scapes 1-2, decumbent, usually by an S-shaped curvature, round in cross section, 0.5-2 dm, somewhat stout, slightly expanded toward bracts, densely puberulent, especially just below bracts and on bases of main bract veins beneath. Bracts appearing early in season, in good condition for only a few weeks after anthesis, dying back to semipersistent bases early, resting on ground surface, sessile; blade strongly mottled in shades of green and bronze and with silvery overlay, mottling becoming obscure with age, ovate to suborbicular, 4-12 × 3.3-7 cm, apex acute to rounded. Flower erect, odor unreported; sepals divergent, green- or maroon-streaked, lanceolate-ovate, 22-48 × 9-14 mm, margins entire, flat, apex acute; petals long-lasting, rigidly erect, ± connivent, ± concealing stamens and ovary, dark maroon-purple when fresh, fading especially distally to dull reddish brown, greenish brown, or with creamy yellow tones, very rarely pale lemon yellow forms occur, twisted (but not spiraled), linear-lanceolate or oblanceolate, 4-8+ × 0.7-1 cm, thick-textured, margins entire, apex acute; stamens erect, straight, dark purple, 10-25 mm; filaments dark purple, 2-5 mm; anthers straight, dark purple, 9-20 mm, dehiscence extrorse; connectives broad, extending to 3.5-4 mm beyond anther sacs; ovary dark purple, oval, 6-angled, 5-10 mm; stigmas erect, divergent-recurved, distinct, sessile, pink or white, subulate, 4.5-8 mm. Fruits baccate, dark purple, broadly ovoid to subglobose, crownlike, strongly ridged, 1-1.5 × 1 cm, pulpy but not juicy, present and enlarging on naked scapes until early autumn. 2n = 10. Flowering late winter--spring (mid Mar--Apr). Thin, open rocky wooded slopes, mature deciduous woodlands, rocky talus and disintegrating shale, flats (floodplains) of small streams and adjacent slopes near river entrance; 50--200 m; Ala., Ga., Tenn. Trillium decumbens occurs in the Ridge and Valley and Cumberland Plateau physiographic provinces. It has a large, deep, horizontal rhizome, the growing point of which always faces downslope.

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