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Trillium

Trillium (trillium, wakerobin, toadshade, tri flower, birthroot, birthwort, and sometimes "wood lily") is a genus of about fifty flowering plant species in the family Melanthiaceae. Trillium species are native to temperate regions of North America and Asia,[3][4] with the greatest diversity of species found in the southern Appalachian Mountains in the southeastern United States.[5][6]

Trillium
Trillium erectum (red trillium)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Liliales
Family: Melanthiaceae
Tribe: Parideae
Genus: Trillium
L.
Type species
Trillium cernuum
Synonyms[2]
Trillium
    • Delostylis Raf.
    • Esdra Salisb.
    • Huxhamia Garden
    • Phyllantherum Raf.
    • Trillidium Kunth

Description edit

Plants of this genus are perennial herbs growing from rhizomes. There are three large leaf-like bracts arranged in a whorl about a scape that rises directly from the rhizome. There are no true aboveground leaves but sometimes there are scale-like leaves on the underground rhizome. The bracts are photosynthetic and are sometimes called leaves. The inflorescence is a single flower with three green or reddish sepals and three petals in shades of red, purple, pink, white, yellow, or green. At the center of the flower there are six stamens and three stigmas borne on a very short style, if any. The fruit is fleshy and capsule-like or berrylike. The seeds have large, oily elaiosomes.[3][4]

Occasionally individuals have four-fold symmetry, with four bracts (leaves), four sepals, and four petals in the blossom.[7][better source needed]. The tetramerous condition has been described for several species of Trillium including T. chloropetalum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. maculatum, T. sessile, and T. undulatum.[8]

Taxonomy edit

In 1753, Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus established the genus Trillium by recognizing three species, Trillium cernuum, Trillium erectum, and Trillium sessile.[9] The type specimen Trillium cernuum described by Linnaeus was actually Trillium catesbaei,[10] an oversight that subsequently led to much confusion regarding the type species of this genus.

Initially the Trillium genus was placed in the family Liliaceae. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries it was sometimes placed in a smaller family, Trilliaceae.[11] By 1981 Liliaceae had grown to about 280 genera and 4,000 species.[12] As it became clearer that the very large version of Liliaceae was polyphyletic, some botanists preferred to place Trillium and related genera into that separate family. Others defined a larger family, Melanthiaceae, for a similar purpose, but included several other genera not historically recognized as close relatives of Trillium. This latter approach was followed in 1998 by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group, which assigned the genus Trillium, along with its close relative Paris, to the family Melanthiaceae.[13] However, other taxonomists have since preferred to break up the heterogenous Melanthiaceae into several smaller monophyletic families, each with more coherent morphological features, returning Trillium to a resurrected Trilliaceae.[14]

In 1850, German botanist Carl Sigismund Kunth segregated Trillium govanianum Wall. ex D.Don into genus Trillidium.[15] Some authorities consider Trillidium Kunth to be a synonym for Trillium L.,[16] while others recognize the taxon Trillidium govanianum (Wall. ex D.Don) Kunth based on morphological differences (with other Trillium species) and molecular evidence.[17][18] Still others support the segregation of Trillium undulatum Willd. into genus Trillidium alongside Trillidium govanianum.[14][19]

Subdivisions edit

All names used in this section are taken from the International Plant Names Index.[20] As of February 2022, Plants of the World Online (POWO) accepts 49 species and 5 named hybrids,[2] all of which are listed below. The geographical locations are taken from POWO and the Flora of North America,[3] except where noted.

The Trillium genus has traditionally been divided into two subgenera, Trillium subgenus Trillium and Trillium subgenus Phyllantherum, based on whether the flower is pedicellate or sessile.[21][22] At the time, the former subgenus was considered to be the more primitive group.[23][24][3] Based on molecular systematics, Trillium subgen. Phyllantherum has been shown to be a monophyletic group, but its segregation renders the remaining Trillium subgen. Trillium paraphyletic.[25]

Trillium subgenus Phyllantherum was named by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820,[26] but since he did not provide a description, the name was declared invalid in 2014.[27] At that time, the correct name was thought to be Trillium subgen. Sessilium,[28] which was described by Rafinesque in 1830. However, that name was later found to be incorrect as well.[29] As of July 2022, the correct name of the subgenus is Trillium L. subgen. Sessilia Raf.[30] Its type species is Trillium sessile L.

In 1819, Rafinesque described and named the genus Delostylis,[31] and then placed Trillium stylosum Nutt. (now a synonym for Trillium catesbaei Elliott) into the new genus. Reversing himself a decade later, Rafinesque instead placed Trillium stylosum into a new subgenus Delostylium in 1830.[32] Presumably Rafinesque had intended the subgeneric name to replace the earlier generic name, and so the correct name of the former is Trillium L. subgen. Delostylis (Raf.) Raf..[33][29] Its type species is Trillium catesbaei. Historically, the subgenus has been known as the Catesbaei group.[34][35] The word Delostylis means "with a small but conspicuous style".[36]

Based on morphology and molecular evidence, a few taxa in genus Trillium have been segregated into other genera:

  • Trillium rivale, first described in 1885, was segregated into genus Pseudotrillium S.B.Farmer in 2002.[18] The name Pseudotrillium rivale (S.Watson) S.B.Farmer is widely recognized.
  • Trillium govanianum, first described in 1839, was segregated into genus Trillidium Kunth in 1850.[15] However, the name Trillidium govanianum (Wall. ex D.Don) Kunth is not widely recognized.
  • Trillium undulatum, first described in 1801, was segregated into genus Trillidium in 2018,[19] but the name Trillidium undulatum (Willd.) Floden & E.E.Schill. is controversial and not widely recognized.

Phylogenetic analysis places Trillidium govanianum and Trillidium undulatum together in a clade with high support.[37] However, since Trillium and Trillidium are both individually and collectively monophyletic, it is a matter of choice whether or not to recognize genus Trillidium.

Excluding the segregate taxa listed above, the remaining taxa separate into four clades with the following names:[29]

  1. Trillium L. subgen. Trillium
  2. Trillium L. subgen. Callipetalon Lampley & E.E.Schill.
  3. Trillium L. subgen. Delostylis (Raf.) Raf. [as Delostylium]
  4. Trillium L. subgen. Sessilia Raf. [as Sessilium]

Traditionally, Trillium subgen. Trillium has included all pedicellate-flowered species (which is a paraphyletic group), but in 2022, the subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of fourteen (14) species.[38] Its type species is Trillium erectum L. Historically, the subgenus has been known as the Erectum group.[34][39][40][35][41]

Trillium subgen. Callipetalon was described by Jayne A. Lampley and Edward E. Schilling in 2022.[42] The word Callipetalon means "beautiful petal", a reference to "the famously beautiful flowers" of its type species, Trillium grandiflorum (Michx.) Salisb.[43] Historically, the subgenus has been known as the Grandiflorum group.[34][39][40][35][41]

This leads to a four-part concept of Trillium that sharply contrasts with the traditional pedicellate vs. sessile dichotomy outlined previously.[44]

Subgenus Trillium edit

Trillium subgen. Trillium, the Erectum group, is a group of pedicellate-flowered trilliums that includes Trillium erectum. The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of fourteen (14) species in 2022.[38] Species in this subgenus have pedicellate flowers (on a stalk) with three distinct stigmas (no style) and solid green leaves (not mottled). They are distributed across North America and Asia. Hybrids are common within this subgenus (the only group of pedicellate-flowered trilliums with natural hybrids).

  • Trillium apetalon Makino[45][46][47] – Japan, Kuril Islands, E Russia (Sakhalin)
  • Trillium camschatcense Ker Gawl.[48][49] – NE China (Jilin), Japan, Korea, Kuril Islands, E Russia (Primorsky Krai, Khabarovsk Krai, Kamchatka Peninsula, Sakhalin)
  • Trillium cernuum L. – Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Saskatchewan; Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin; Saint Pierre and Miquelon
  • Trillium channellii Fukuda, J.D.Freeman & Itou[50][51] – Japan (E Hokkaido)
  • Trillium erectum L. – New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec; Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia
  • Trillium flexipes Raf. – Ontario; Alabama, Arkansas,[6] Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland,[6] Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin
  • Trillium × hagae Miyabe & Tatew.[52] (Trillium camschatcense × Trillium tschonoskii) – Japan, E Russia (S Sakhalin)
  • Trillium hibbersonii (T.M.C.Taylor & Szczaw.) D.O'Neill & S.B.Farmer – British Columbia
  • Trillium × komarovii H.Nakai & Koji Ito[53] (Trillium camschatcense × unknown) – Japan, E Russia (Primorsky Krai)
  • Trillium × miyabeanum Tatew. ex J.Samej.[54] (Trillium apetalon × Trillium tschonoskii) – Japan
  • Trillium rugelii Rendle – Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
  • Trillium simile Gleason – Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee
  • Trillium smallii Maxim.[55] – Japan, E Russia (S Sakhalin)
  • Trillium sulcatum T.S.Patrick – Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia
  • Trillium taiwanense S.S.Ying[56][57] – E Taiwan
  • Trillium tschonoskii Maxim.[58][59] – Bhutan, China (Anhui, Fujian, Gansu, Hubei, Shaanxi, Sichuan, Tibet Autonomous Region, Yunnan, Zhejiang), NE India (Sikkim), Japan, Korea, Kuril Islands, Myanmar, Russia (Sakhalin), Taiwan
  • Trillium vaseyi Harb. – Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
  • Trillium × yezoense Tatew. ex J.Samej.[60] (Trillium apetalon × Trillium camschatcense) – Japan

Subgenus Callipetalon edit

Trillium subgen. Callipetalon, the Grandiflorum group, is a group of pedicellate-flowered trilliums that includes Trillium grandiflorum. The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of three (3) species in 2022.[43] Species in the subgenus have pedicellate flowers (on a stalk) and solid green leaves (except T. ovatum on the west coast of California, which occasionally has mottled leaves). The stigmas are fused together at their bases (basally connate) but lack a definite style. They are distributed across North America (but not Asia). Flowers were and still are consumed and used by indigenous peoples in various regions of North America.

  • Trillium crassifolium Piper – Washington
  • Trillium grandiflorum (Michx.) Salisb. – Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec; Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin
  • Trillium nivale Riddell – Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, West Virginia, Wisconsin
  • Trillium ovatum Pursh – Alberta, British Columbia; California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming
  • Trillium scouleri Rydb. ex Gleason – Alberta, British Columbia; Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Washington, Wyoming

Subgenus Delostylis edit

Trillium subgen. Delostylis, the Catesbaei group, is a group of pedicellate-flowered trilliums that includes Trillium catesbaei. The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of seven (7) species in 2022.[61] Species in this subgenus have pedicellate flowers (except for one variety of T. pusillum) with a definite style and solid green leaves (not mottled). Distribution is restricted to the southeastern and south central United States.

Subgenus Sessilia edit

Trillium subgen. Sessilia, the sessile-flowered trilliums, is a group of species that includes Trillium sessile. The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of twenty-six (26) species in 2022.[62] Species in this subgenus have sessile flowers (no flower stalk), erect petals (except in T. stamineum), and mottled leaves (except in T. petiolatum and occasionally in plants of other sessile-flowered species).[22]

Ungrouped taxa edit

The following pair of taxa do not fit into any of the above groups since they are markedly different from other Trillium species. There is evidence to support the segregation of these species into a separate genus (Trillidium) but the proposal is controversial.

  • Trillium govanianum Wall. ex D.Don[63][64][65] – NE Afghanistan, Bhutan, China (Tibet Autonomous Region, Yunnan), N + NE India (Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Sikkim, Uttarakhand), Nepal, N Pakistan
  • Trillium undulatum Willd. – New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec; Connecticut, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia

Other taxa edit

As of April 2023, Plants of the World Online does not accept these taxa:

  • Trillium tennesseense E. E. Schill & Floden is considered by some authorities to be a synonym for Trillium lancifolium Raf.[66]
  • Trillium parviflorum V.G.Soukup is an accepted name by some authorities[67][68] while others regard this name as a synonym of T. albidum subsp. parviflorum (V.G.Soukup) K.L.Chambers & S.C.Meyers.[69][70]

The following taxa are of historical interest:

  • Trillium rivale S.Watson[71] has been segregated to a monotypic genus as Pseudotrillium rivale (S.Watson) S.B.Farmer.[18]
  • Trillium × crockerianum Halda was originally described as a hybrid with parents Trillium ovatum and Trillium rivale,[72] but since the latter is now a member of genus Pseudotrillium, the hybrid has become an undescribed intergeneric hybrid, and therefore its taxonomic placement is uncertain.[73]

Distribution edit

Trillium species are native to North America and Asia.[3][4][74]

North America edit

More than three dozen Trillium species are found in North America,[3] most of which are native to eastern North America. Just six species are native to western North America: T. albidum, T. angustipetalum, T. chloropetalum, T. kurabayashii, T. ovatum, and T. petiolatum. Of these, only T. ovatum is pedicellate-flowered.

Canada edit

Trillium species are found across Canada, from Newfoundland to southern British Columbia. The greatest diversity of species are found in Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia.[3]

United States edit

Except for the desert regions of the southwestern United States, Trillium species are found throughout the contiguous U.S. states. In the western United States, species are found from Washington to central California, east to the Rocky Mountains. In the eastern United States, species range from Maine to northern Florida, west to the Mississippi River valley. Trillium species are especially diverse in the southeastern United States, in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina, and South Carolina.[3] The state of Georgia is home to 21 species of trillium.

  • Alabama:[75] T. catesbaei, T. cuneatum, T. decipiens, T. decumbens, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. lancifolium, T. luteum, T. maculatum, T. pusillum, T. recurvatum, T. reliquum, T. rugelii, T. sessile, T. stamineum, T. sulcatum, T. underwoodii, T. vaseyi
  • Alaska: none
  • Arizona: none
  • Arkansas: T. flexipes, T. pusillum, T. recurvatum, T. sessile, T. texanum, T. viridescens
  • California: T. albidum, T. angustipetalum, T. chloropetalum, T. kurabayashii, T. ovatum
  • Colorado: T. ovatum, T. scouleri
  • Connecticut: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. undulatum
  • Delaware: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum
  • District of Columbia:[76] T. grandiflorum, T. luteum, T. sessile
  • Florida: T. decipiens, T. lancifolium, T. maculatum, T. underwoodii
  • Georgia: T. catesbaei, T. cuneatum, T. decipiens, T. decumbens, T. delicatum, T. discolor, T. erectum, T. georgianum, T. grandiflorum, T. lancifolium, T. luteum, T. maculatum, T. persistens, T. reliquum, T. rugelii, T. simile, T. sulcatum, T. underwoodii, T. undulatum, T. vaseyi
  • Hawaii: none
  • Idaho: T. ovatum, T. petiolatum, T. scouleri
  • Illinois: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. recurvatum, T. sessile, T. viride
  • Indiana: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. recurvatum, T. sessile
  • Iowa: T. cernuum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. recurvatum
  • Kansas: T. sessile, T. viridescens
  • Kentucky: T. cuneatum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. luteum, T. nivale, T. pusillum, T. recurvatum, T. sessile, T. sulcatum, T. undulatum
  • Louisiana: T. foetidissimum, T. gracile, T. ludovicianum, T. recurvatum, T. texanum
  • Maine: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. undulatum
  • Maryland: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. pusillum, T. sessile, T. undulatum
  • Massachusetts: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. undulatum
  • Michigan: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. recurvatum, T. sessile, T. undulatum
  • Minnesota: T. cernuum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale
  • Mississippi: T. cuneatum, T. foetidissimum, T. ludovicianum, T. pusillum, T. recurvatum, T. stamineum
  • Missouri: T. flexipes, T. nivale, T. pusillum, T. recurvatum, T. sessile, T. viride, T. viridescens
  • Montana: T. ovatum, T. scouleri
  • Nebraska: T. nivale
  • Nevada: none
  • New Hampshire: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. undulatum
  • New Jersey: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. undulatum
  • New Mexico: none
  • New York: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. sessile, T. undulatum
  • North Carolina: T. catesbaei, T. cuneatum, T. discolor, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. luteum, T. pusillum, T. rugelii, T. sessile, T. simile, T. sulcatum, T. undulatum, T. vaseyi
  • North Dakota: T. cernuum
  • Ohio: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. recurvatum, T. sessile, T. undulatum
  • Oklahoma: T. pusillum, T. sessile, T. viridescens
  • Oregon: T. albidum, T. kurabayashii, T. ovatum, T. petiolatum
  • Pennsylvania: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. sessile, T. undulatum
  • Rhode Island: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. undulatum
  • South Carolina: T. catesbaei, T. cuneatum, T. discolor, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. lancifolium, T. maculatum, T. oostingii, T. persistens, T. pusillum, T. reliquum, T. rugelii, T. undulatum, T. vaseyi
  • South Dakota: T. cernuum, T. flexipes, T. nivale
  • Tennessee: T. catesbaei, T. cuneatum, T. decumbens, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. lancifolium, T. luteum, T. pusillum, T. recurvatum, T. rugelii, T. sessile, T. simile, T. stamineum, T. sulcatum, T. tennesseense, T. undulatum, T. vaseyi
  • Texas: T. gracile, T. ludovicianum, T. recurvatum, T. texanum, T. viridescens
  • Utah: none
  • Vermont: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. grandiflorum, T. undulatum
  • Virginia: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. pusillum, T. sessile, T. sulcatum, T. undulatum
  • Washington: T. albidum, T. ovatum, T. petiolatum, T. scouleri
  • West Virginia: T. cernuum, T. erectum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. pusillum, T. sessile, T. sulcatum, T. undulatum
  • Wisconsin: T. cernuum, T. flexipes, T. grandiflorum, T. nivale, T. recurvatum
  • Wyoming: T. ovatum, T. scouleri

Other edit

Asia edit

In Asia, the range of Trillium species extends from the Himalayas across China, Korea, Japan, and eastern Russia to the Kuril Islands. The greatest diversity of Trillium species is found on the islands of Japan and Sakhalin.

Identification edit

A fully general dichotomous key requires a mature, flowering plant.[3][77][78][79] The first step is to determine whether or not the flower sits on a pedicel, which determines the subgenus. (Any mature plant may be identified to this extent, even if it is not in bloom.) Identification proceeds based on flower parts, leaves, and other characteristics. A combination of characteristics is usually required to identify the plant.

Identification of a non-flowering, non-fruiting plant with bare leaves may be difficult. Although some species of Trillium have petioles (leaf stalks) and/or distinctive leaf shapes, these features are seldom sufficient to identify the plant down to the species level.

In eastern North America, jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum) is often mistaken for bare-leaved Trillium. Both species are about the same height with trifoliate leaves but the former lacks 3-way rotational symmetry and has leaf veins unlike those of Trillium.

Ecology edit

Trilliums are myrmecochorous, that is, ants act as agents of seed dispersal. Each seed of a ripe fruit has a white fleshy appendage called an elaiosome. Ants are attracted to the elaiosome, so much so they often bore holes into the fruit instead of waiting for it to drop off on its own.[80] The ants carry the seeds back to their nest where they eat the elaiosomes and discard the seeds. Here the seeds eventually germinate, an average of about 1 meter away from the parent plant.

For example, the seeds of Trillium camschatcense and T. tschonoskii are collected by ant species Aphaenogaster smythiesi and Myrmica ruginodis.[81] Sometimes beetles interfere with the dispersal process by eating the elaiosomes, which makes the seeds less attractive to ants.

Yellow jackets (Vespula spp.) and other wasps are similarly attracted to elaiosomes. The wasps carry off the seeds and feed on the elaiosomes an average of about 1.4 meters away from the parent plant. Yellow jackets are documented seed dispersers for at least three species of Trillium (T. catesbaei, T. cuneatum, T. undulatum).[82]

Hybrids edit

As of February 2022, Plants of the World Online recognizes five named hybrids,[2] four in Asia and one in North America. Three of the Asian hybrids, T. × hagae, T. × miyabeanum, and T. × yezoense, are well studied,[83] but little is known about the Asian hybrid T. × komarovii. One of its parents is T. camschatcense but the other parent is unknown.[53]

The only named hybrid in North America is T. × crockerianum whose type specimen was collected in Del Norte County, California.[72] As originally described, its parents are Trillium ovatum and Trillium rivale, but the latter species is now a member of genus Pseudotrillium, and so T. × crockerianum has become an intergeneric hybrid.

In 1982, Haga and Channell crossed the Asiatic species Trillium camschatcense with several North American species. Of those, the crosses with T. erectum, T. flexipes, and T. vaseyi produced solid, seemingly viable seed. Seeds of the cross between T. camschatcense and T. erectum flowered in 9 to 10 years.[84]

Disease edit

 
Diseased T. grandiflorum with virescent petals, extra petals, and other abnormalities

Various Trillium species are susceptible to a greening disorder caused by bacterial organisms called phytoplasmas that alter the morphology of infected plants.[85] Symptoms of phytoplasma infection include abnormal green markings on the petals (floral virescence), extra leaves (phyllody), and other abnormal characteristics.[86] Infected populations occur throughout the species range but are prevalent in Ontario, Michigan, and New York.[87]

For many years, this condition was thought to originate from mutation, and so many of these forms were given taxonomic names now known to be invalid. In 1971, Hooper, Case, and Meyers used electron microscopy to detect the presence of mycoplasma-like organisms (i.e., phytoplasmas) in T. grandiflorum with virescent petals. The means of transmission was not established but leafhoppers were suspected.[88] As of November 2021, the insect vector for Trillium greening disorder is unknown.

Phytoplasmas were positively identified in T. grandiflorum and T. erectum in Ontario in 2016. Phylogenetic analysis supported the grouping of the phytoplasmas isolated from infected plants as a related strain of 'Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni' (subgroup 16SrIII-F) with 99% sequence identity.[89] This subgroup of phytoplasmas is associated with various other diseases, including milkweed yellows, Vaccinium witches' broom, and potato purple top.[90]

Conservation edit

 
Trillium grandiflorum (great white trillium)

Picking parts off a trillium plant can kill it even if the rhizome is left undisturbed.[91] Some species of trillium are listed as threatened or endangered and collecting these species may be illegal. Laws in some jurisdictions may restrict the commercial exploitation of trilliums and prohibit collection without the landowner's permission. In the US states of Michigan[91] and Minnesota[92] it is illegal to pick trilliums. In New York it is illegal to pick the red trillium.[93]

In 2009, the Ontario Trillium Protection Act, a Private Members Bill, was proposed in the Ontario legislature that would have made it illegal to in any way injure the common Trillium grandiflorum (white trillium) in the province (with some exceptions), however the bill was never passed.[94] The rare Trillium flexipes (drooping trillium) is also protected by law in Ontario, because of its decreasing Canadian population.[95]

High white-tailed deer population density has been shown to decrease or eliminate trillium in an area, particularly white trillium.[96]

Some species are harvested from the wild to an unsustainable degree. This is particularly dire in the case of T. govanianum, whose high selling price as a folk medicine has motivated harvesters to destroy swathes of ecologically sensitive Himalayan forests, causing mudslides.[97]

Medicinal uses edit

Several species contain sapogenins. They have been used traditionally as uterine stimulants, the inspiration for the common name birthwort. In a 1918 publication, Joseph E. Meyer called it "beth root", probably a corruption of "birthroot". He claimed that an astringent tonic derived from the root was useful in controlling bleeding and diarrhea.[98]

Culture edit

 
Ontario trillium emblem on an Ottawa courthouse sign.

The white trillium (Trillium grandiflorum) serves as the official flower and emblem of the Canadian province of Ontario. It is an official symbol of the Government of Ontario. The large white trillium is the official wildflower of Ohio.[99] In light of their shared connection to the flower, the Major League Soccer teams in Toronto and Columbus compete with each other for the Trillium Cup.

Citizen scientists regularly report observations of Trillium species from around the world. T. grandiflorum, T. erectum, and T. ovatum (in that order) are the most often observed Trillium species.[100]

Trillium is the literary magazine of Ramapo College of New Jersey, which features poetry, fiction, photography, and other visual arts created by Ramapo students.[101]

In Mexican LGBT culture, the trillium is included as a symbol on their version of the bisexual pride flag, borrowing the abstracted emblem from Ontario.[102]

Gallery edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Barksdale, Lane (1938). "The pedicellate species of Trillium found in the southern Appalachians". Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. 54 (2): 271–296. JSTOR 24332541.
  • Case, Frederick W.; Case, Roberta B. (1997). Trilliums. Portland, Oregon: Timber Press. ISBN 978-0-88192-374-2.
  • Farmer, Susan B. (2007). A Systematic Study of Trillium subgenus Delostylis (PhD). University of Tennessee. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  • Freeman, J. D. (1975). "Revision of Trillium subgenus Phyllantherum (Liliaceae)". Brittonia. 27 (1): 1–62. doi:10.2307/2805646. JSTOR 2805646. S2CID 20824379.
  • Gleason, Henry Allan (July 1906). "The pedunculate species of Trillium". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 33 (7): 387–396. doi:10.2307/2478819. hdl:2027/hvd.32044106472392. JSTOR 2478819. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  • Gledhill, David (2008). The Names of Plants (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-86645-3.
  • Lampley, Jayne A. (2021). A systematic and biogeographic study of Trillium (Melanthiaceae) (PhD). University of Tennessee. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  • Lampley, Jayne A.; Gereau, Roy; Floden, Aaron; Schilling, Edward E. (2022-07-05). "A revised subgeneric classification of Trillium (Parideae, Melanthiaceae)". Phytotaxa. 552 (5): 278–286. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.552.5.1. S2CID 250368253.
  • Meredith, Clayton; Frances, Anne; Highland, Amy; Oliver, Leah; Floden, Aaron; Gaddy, L.L.; Knapp, Wesley; Leaman, Danna; Leopold, Susan; Littlefield, Tara; Raguso, Robert; Schilling, Edward; Schotz, Alfred; Walker, Anna; Wayman, Kjirsten (2022). The Conservation Status of Trillium in North America. Hockessin, DE and Albuquerque, NM: Mt. Cuba Center, and New Mexico BioPark Society. ISBN 979-8-9850471-0-3. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  • Patrick, Thomas S. (August 1986), The trilliums of eastern North America (mimeographed handout), Knoxville, Tennessee, pp. 1–7, retrieved 30 March 2023{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Spaulding, Daniel D.; Kartesz, John T.; Horne, Howard E.; Finzel, Brian J.; England, J. Kevin (2021). "Flora of Northern Alabama, part 5: Liliaceous Families" (PDF). Phytoneuron. 2021–30: 1–262. ISSN 2153-733X. Retrieved 9 March 2023.
  • Weakley, Alan S. (2020). "Flora of the southeastern United States". University of North Carolina Herbarium, North Carolina Botanical Garden.

External links edit

  • (Java)
  • Utah Agricultural Experiment Station — Fact Sheets
  • McKelvie, D. Woodland Plants: The Trillium. Ontario Woodlot Association.
  • Biodiversity Information Serving Our Nation (BISON) occurrence data and maps for Trillium
  • Friesner, Ray C. (1929). "The genus Trillium in Indiana". Butler University Botanical Studies. Butler University Botanical Studies: Vol. 1, Article 4. 1 (1). Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  • "About Trilliums". U.S. Forest Service. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  • "Ten Things to Know about Trilliums". The Native Plant Herald. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  • Ohara, Masashi; Kawano, Shoichi (1986). "Life History Studies on the Genus Trillium (Liliaceae) IV. Stage Class Structures and Spatial Distribution of Four Japanese Species" (PDF). Plant Species Biology. 1 (2): 147–161. doi:10.1111/j.1442-1984.1986.tb00023.x. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  • "Trillium and the Trillium Family (Trilliaceae)". Susan B. Farmer. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  • Patrick, Tom (2010). "Georgia Trilliums: An Appreciation". Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  • "Feeling Antsy". Roads End Naturalist. July 23, 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  • "Trilliums!". Scott Ranger's Nature Notes. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  • "Trillium". Michigan Flora Online. University of Michigan. Retrieved 7 March 2023.

trillium, toadshade, redirects, here, other, uses, toadshade, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, trillium, wakerobin, toadshade, flower, birthroot, birthwort, sometimes, wood, lily, genus, about, fifty, flowering, plant, species, family, melanthiacea. Toadshade redirects here For other uses see Toadshade disambiguation For other uses see Trillium disambiguation Trillium trillium wakerobin toadshade tri flower birthroot birthwort and sometimes wood lily is a genus of about fifty flowering plant species in the family Melanthiaceae Trillium species are native to temperate regions of North America and Asia 3 4 with the greatest diversity of species found in the southern Appalachian Mountains in the southeastern United States 5 6 TrilliumTrillium erectum red trillium Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MonocotsOrder LilialesFamily MelanthiaceaeTribe ParideaeGenus TrilliumL Type speciesTrillium cernuumL 1 Synonyms 2 Trillium Delostylis Raf Esdra Salisb Huxhamia GardenPhyllantherum Raf Trillidium Kunth Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Subdivisions 3 1 Subgenus Trillium 3 2 Subgenus Callipetalon 3 3 Subgenus Delostylis 3 4 Subgenus Sessilia 3 5 Ungrouped taxa 3 6 Other taxa 4 Distribution 4 1 North America 4 1 1 Canada 4 1 2 United States 4 1 3 Other 4 2 Asia 5 Identification 6 Ecology 6 1 Hybrids 6 2 Disease 7 Conservation 8 Medicinal uses 9 Culture 10 Gallery 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksDescription editPlants of this genus are perennial herbs growing from rhizomes There are three large leaf like bracts arranged in a whorl about a scape that rises directly from the rhizome There are no true aboveground leaves but sometimes there are scale like leaves on the underground rhizome The bracts are photosynthetic and are sometimes called leaves The inflorescence is a single flower with three green or reddish sepals and three petals in shades of red purple pink white yellow or green At the center of the flower there are six stamens and three stigmas borne on a very short style if any The fruit is fleshy and capsule like or berrylike The seeds have large oily elaiosomes 3 4 Occasionally individuals have four fold symmetry with four bracts leaves four sepals and four petals in the blossom 7 better source needed The tetramerous condition has been described for several species of Trillium including T chloropetalum T erectum T grandiflorum T maculatum T sessile and T undulatum 8 Taxonomy editIn 1753 Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus established the genus Trillium by recognizing three species Trillium cernuum Trillium erectum and Trillium sessile 9 The type specimen Trillium cernuum described by Linnaeus was actually Trillium catesbaei 10 an oversight that subsequently led to much confusion regarding the type species of this genus Initially the Trillium genus was placed in the family Liliaceae In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries it was sometimes placed in a smaller family Trilliaceae 11 By 1981 Liliaceae had grown to about 280 genera and 4 000 species 12 As it became clearer that the very large version of Liliaceae was polyphyletic some botanists preferred to place Trillium and related genera into that separate family Others defined a larger family Melanthiaceae for a similar purpose but included several other genera not historically recognized as close relatives of Trillium This latter approach was followed in 1998 by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group which assigned the genus Trillium along with its close relative Paris to the family Melanthiaceae 13 However other taxonomists have since preferred to break up the heterogenous Melanthiaceae into several smaller monophyletic families each with more coherent morphological features returning Trillium to a resurrected Trilliaceae 14 In 1850 German botanist Carl Sigismund Kunth segregated Trillium govanianum Wall ex D Don into genus Trillidium 15 Some authorities consider Trillidium Kunth to be a synonym for Trillium L 16 while others recognize the taxon Trillidium govanianum Wall ex D Don Kunth based on morphological differences with other Trillium species and molecular evidence 17 18 Still others support the segregation of Trillium undulatum Willd into genus Trillidium alongside Trillidium govanianum 14 19 Subdivisions editAll names used in this section are taken from the International Plant Names Index 20 As of February 2022 update Plants of the World Online POWO accepts 49 species and 5 named hybrids 2 all of which are listed below The geographical locations are taken from POWO and the Flora of North America 3 except where noted The Trillium genus has traditionally been divided into two subgenera Trillium subgenus Trillium and Trillium subgenus Phyllantherum based on whether the flower is pedicellate or sessile 21 22 At the time the former subgenus was considered to be the more primitive group 23 24 3 Based on molecular systematics Trillium subgen Phyllantherum has been shown to be a monophyletic group but its segregation renders the remaining Trillium subgen Trillium paraphyletic 25 Trillium subgenus Phyllantherum was named by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820 26 but since he did not provide a description the name was declared invalid in 2014 27 At that time the correct name was thought to be Trillium subgen Sessilium 28 which was described by Rafinesque in 1830 However that name was later found to be incorrect as well 29 As of July 2022 update the correct name of the subgenus is Trillium L subgen Sessilia Raf 30 Its type species is Trillium sessile L In 1819 Rafinesque described and named the genus Delostylis 31 and then placed Trillium stylosum Nutt now a synonym for Trillium catesbaei Elliott into the new genus Reversing himself a decade later Rafinesque instead placed Trillium stylosum into a new subgenus Delostylium in 1830 32 Presumably Rafinesque had intended the subgeneric name to replace the earlier generic name and so the correct name of the former is Trillium L subgen Delostylis Raf Raf 33 29 Its type species is Trillium catesbaei Historically the subgenus has been known as the Catesbaei group 34 35 The word Delostylis means with a small but conspicuous style 36 Based on morphology and molecular evidence a few taxa in genus Trillium have been segregated into other genera Trillium rivale first described in 1885 was segregated into genus Pseudotrillium S B Farmer in 2002 18 The name Pseudotrillium rivale S Watson S B Farmer is widely recognized Trillium govanianum first described in 1839 was segregated into genus Trillidium Kunth in 1850 15 However the name Trillidium govanianum Wall ex D Don Kunth is not widely recognized Trillium undulatum first described in 1801 was segregated into genus Trillidium in 2018 19 but the name Trillidium undulatum Willd Floden amp E E Schill is controversial and not widely recognized Phylogenetic analysis places Trillidium govanianum and Trillidium undulatum together in a clade with high support 37 However since Trillium and Trillidium are both individually and collectively monophyletic it is a matter of choice whether or not to recognize genus Trillidium Excluding the segregate taxa listed above the remaining taxa separate into four clades with the following names 29 Trillium L subgen Trillium Trillium L subgen Callipetalon Lampley amp E E Schill Trillium L subgen Delostylis Raf Raf as Delostylium Trillium L subgen Sessilia Raf as Sessilium Traditionally Trillium subgen Trillium has included all pedicellate flowered species which is a paraphyletic group but in 2022 the subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of fourteen 14 species 38 Its type species is Trillium erectum L Historically the subgenus has been known as the Erectum group 34 39 40 35 41 Trillium subgen Callipetalon was described by Jayne A Lampley and Edward E Schilling in 2022 42 The word Callipetalon means beautiful petal a reference to the famously beautiful flowers of its type species Trillium grandiflorum Michx Salisb 43 Historically the subgenus has been known as the Grandiflorum group 34 39 40 35 41 This leads to a four part concept of Trillium that sharply contrasts with the traditional pedicellate vs sessile dichotomy outlined previously 44 Subgenus Trillium edit Trillium subgen Trillium the Erectum group is a group of pedicellate flowered trilliums that includes Trillium erectum The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of fourteen 14 species in 2022 38 Species in this subgenus have pedicellate flowers on a stalk with three distinct stigmas no style and solid green leaves not mottled They are distributed across North America and Asia Hybrids are common within this subgenus the only group of pedicellate flowered trilliums with natural hybrids Trillium apetalon Makino 45 46 47 Japan Kuril Islands E Russia Sakhalin Trillium camschatcense Ker Gawl 48 49 NE China Jilin Japan Korea Kuril Islands E Russia Primorsky Krai Khabarovsk Krai Kamchatka Peninsula Sakhalin Trillium cernuum L Manitoba New Brunswick Newfoundland Nova Scotia Ontario Prince Edward Island Quebec Saskatchewan Connecticut Delaware Illinois Indiana Iowa Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Dakota Ohio Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Dakota Vermont Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Saint Pierre and Miquelon Trillium channellii Fukuda J D Freeman amp Itou 50 51 Japan E Hokkaido Trillium erectum L New Brunswick Nova Scotia Ontario Quebec Connecticut Delaware Georgia Illinois Indiana Kentucky Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina Ohio Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina Tennessee Vermont Virginia West Virginia Trillium flexipes Raf Ontario Alabama Arkansas 6 Delaware Illinois Indiana Iowa Kentucky Maryland 6 Michigan Minnesota Missouri New York Ohio Pennsylvania South Dakota Tennessee Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Trillium hagae Miyabe amp Tatew 52 Trillium camschatcense Trillium tschonoskii Japan E Russia S Sakhalin Trillium hibbersonii T M C Taylor amp Szczaw D O Neill amp S B Farmer British Columbia Trillium komarovii H Nakai amp Koji Ito 53 Trillium camschatcense unknown Japan E Russia Primorsky Krai Trillium miyabeanum Tatew ex J Samej 54 Trillium apetalon Trillium tschonoskii Japan Trillium rugelii Rendle Alabama Georgia North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Trillium simile Gleason Georgia North Carolina Tennessee Trillium smallii Maxim 55 Japan E Russia S Sakhalin Trillium sulcatum T S Patrick Alabama Georgia Kentucky North Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia Trillium taiwanense S S Ying 56 57 E Taiwan Trillium tschonoskii Maxim 58 59 Bhutan China Anhui Fujian Gansu Hubei Shaanxi Sichuan Tibet Autonomous Region Yunnan Zhejiang NE India Sikkim Japan Korea Kuril Islands Myanmar Russia Sakhalin Taiwan Trillium vaseyi Harb Alabama Georgia North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Trillium yezoense Tatew ex J Samej 60 Trillium apetalon Trillium camschatcense Japan Subgenus Callipetalon edit Trillium subgen Callipetalon the Grandiflorum group is a group of pedicellate flowered trilliums that includes Trillium grandiflorum The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of three 3 species in 2022 43 Species in the subgenus have pedicellate flowers on a stalk and solid green leaves except T ovatum on the west coast of California which occasionally has mottled leaves The stigmas are fused together at their bases basally connate but lack a definite style They are distributed across North America but not Asia Flowers were and still are consumed and used by indigenous peoples in various regions of North America Trillium crassifolium Piper Washington Trillium grandiflorum Michx Salisb Nova Scotia Ontario Quebec Alabama Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kentucky Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina Ohio Pennsylvania South Carolina Tennessee Vermont Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Trillium nivale Riddell Illinois Indiana Iowa Kentucky Maryland Michigan Minnesota Missouri Nebraska Ohio Pennsylvania South Dakota West Virginia Wisconsin Trillium ovatum Pursh Alberta British Columbia California Colorado Idaho Montana Oregon Washington Wyoming Trillium scouleri Rydb ex Gleason Alberta British Columbia Colorado Idaho Montana Washington Wyoming Subgenus Delostylis edit Trillium subgen Delostylis the Catesbaei group is a group of pedicellate flowered trilliums that includes Trillium catesbaei The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of seven 7 species in 2022 61 Species in this subgenus have pedicellate flowers except for one variety of T pusillum with a definite style and solid green leaves not mottled Distribution is restricted to the southeastern and south central United States Trillium catesbaei Elliott Alabama Georgia North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Trillium georgianum S B Farmer Georgia Trillium persistens W H Duncan Georgia South Carolina Trillium pusillum Michx Alabama Arkansas Kentucky Maryland Mississippi Missouri North Carolina Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia Trillium texanum Buckley Arkansas Louisiana Texas Subgenus Sessilia edit Trillium subgen Sessilia the sessile flowered trilliums is a group of species that includes Trillium sessile The subgenus was circumscribed as a clade of twenty six 26 species in 2022 62 Species in this subgenus have sessile flowers no flower stalk erect petals except in T stamineum and mottled leaves except in T petiolatum and occasionally in plants of other sessile flowered species 22 Trillium albidum J D Freeman California Oregon Washington Trillium angustipetalum Torr J D Freeman California Trillium chloropetalum Torr Howell California Trillium cuneatum Raf Alabama Georgia Kentucky Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Trillium decipiens J D Freeman Alabama Florida Georgia Trillium decumbens Harb Alabama Georgia Tennessee Trillium delicatum Floden amp E E Schill Georgia Trillium discolor Hook Georgia North Carolina South Carolina Trillium foetidissimum J D Freeman Louisiana Mississippi Trillium gracile J D Freeman Louisiana Texas Trillium kurabayashii J D Freeman California Oregon Trillium lancifolium Raf Alabama Florida Georgia South Carolina Tennessee Trillium ludovicianum Harb Louisiana Mississippi Texas Trillium luteum Muhl Harb District of Columbia Georgia Kentucky North Carolina Tennessee Trillium maculatum Raf Alabama Florida Georgia South Carolina Trillium oostingii Gaddy South Carolina 6 Trillium petiolatum Pursh Idaho Oregon Washington Trillium recurvatum L C Beck Alabama Arkansas Illinois Indiana Iowa Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Mississippi Missouri Ohio Tennessee Texas Wisconsin Trillium reliquum J D Freeman Georgia South Carolina Trillium sessile L Alabama Arkansas District of Columbia Illinois Indiana Kansas Kentucky Maryland Michigan Missouri New York North Carolina Ohio Oklahoma Pennsylvania Tennessee Virginia West Virginia Trillium stamineum Harb Alabama Mississippi Tennessee Trillium underwoodii Small Alabama Florida Georgia Trillium viride L C Beck Illinois Missouri Trillium viridescens Nutt Arkansas Kansas Missouri Oklahoma Texas Ungrouped taxa edit The following pair of taxa do not fit into any of the above groups since they are markedly different from other Trillium species There is evidence to support the segregation of these species into a separate genus Trillidium but the proposal is controversial Trillium govanianum Wall ex D Don 63 64 65 NE Afghanistan Bhutan China Tibet Autonomous Region Yunnan N NE India Himachal Pradesh Jammu and Kashmir Sikkim Uttarakhand Nepal N Pakistan Trillium undulatum Willd New Brunswick Nova Scotia Ontario Prince Edward Island Quebec Connecticut Georgia Kentucky Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina Ohio Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina Tennessee Vermont Virginia West Virginia Other taxa edit As of April 2023 update Plants of the World Online does not accept these taxa Trillium tennesseense E E Schill amp Floden is considered by some authorities to be a synonym for Trillium lancifolium Raf 66 Trillium parviflorum V G Soukup is an accepted name by some authorities 67 68 while others regard this name as a synonym of T albidum subsp parviflorum V G Soukup K L Chambers amp S C Meyers 69 70 The following taxa are of historical interest Trillium rivale S Watson 71 has been segregated to a monotypic genus as Pseudotrillium rivale S Watson S B Farmer 18 Trillium crockerianum Halda was originally described as a hybrid with parents Trillium ovatum and Trillium rivale 72 but since the latter is now a member of genus Pseudotrillium the hybrid has become an undescribed intergeneric hybrid and therefore its taxonomic placement is uncertain 73 Distribution editTrillium species are native to North America and Asia 3 4 74 North America edit More than three dozen Trillium species are found in North America 3 most of which are native to eastern North America Just six species are native to western North America T albidum T angustipetalum T chloropetalum T kurabayashii T ovatum and T petiolatum Of these only T ovatum is pedicellate flowered Canada edit Trillium species are found across Canada from Newfoundland to southern British Columbia The greatest diversity of species are found in Ontario Quebec and Nova Scotia 3 Alberta T ovatum T scouleri British Columbia T hibbersonii T ovatum T scouleri Manitoba T cernuum New Brunswick T cernuum T erectum T undulatum Newfoundland T cernuum Northwest Territories none Nova Scotia T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum Nunavut none Ontario T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T undulatum Prince Edward Island T cernuum T undulatum Quebec T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum Saskatchewan T cernuum Yukon none United States edit Except for the desert regions of the southwestern United States Trillium species are found throughout the contiguous U S states In the western United States species are found from Washington to central California east to the Rocky Mountains In the eastern United States species range from Maine to northern Florida west to the Mississippi River valley Trillium species are especially diverse in the southeastern United States in Georgia Tennessee Alabama North Carolina and South Carolina 3 The state of Georgia is home to 21 species of trillium Alabama 75 T catesbaei T cuneatum T decipiens T decumbens T flexipes T grandiflorum T lancifolium T luteum T maculatum T pusillum T recurvatum T reliquum T rugelii T sessile T stamineum T sulcatum T underwoodii T vaseyi Alaska none Arizona none Arkansas T flexipes T pusillum T recurvatum T sessile T texanum T viridescens California T albidum T angustipetalum T chloropetalum T kurabayashii T ovatum Colorado T ovatum T scouleri Connecticut T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum Delaware T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum District of Columbia 76 T grandiflorum T luteum T sessile Florida T decipiens T lancifolium T maculatum T underwoodii Georgia T catesbaei T cuneatum T decipiens T decumbens T delicatum T discolor T erectum T georgianum T grandiflorum T lancifolium T luteum T maculatum T persistens T reliquum T rugelii T simile T sulcatum T underwoodii T undulatum T vaseyi Hawaii none Idaho T ovatum T petiolatum T scouleri Illinois T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T recurvatum T sessile T viride Indiana T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T recurvatum T sessile Iowa T cernuum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T recurvatum Kansas T sessile T viridescens Kentucky T cuneatum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T luteum T nivale T pusillum T recurvatum T sessile T sulcatum T undulatum Louisiana T foetidissimum T gracile T ludovicianum T recurvatum T texanum Maine T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum Maryland T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T pusillum T sessile T undulatum Massachusetts T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum Michigan T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T recurvatum T sessile T undulatum Minnesota T cernuum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale Mississippi T cuneatum T foetidissimum T ludovicianum T pusillum T recurvatum T stamineum Missouri T flexipes T nivale T pusillum T recurvatum T sessile T viride T viridescens Montana T ovatum T scouleri Nebraska T nivale Nevada none New Hampshire T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum New Jersey T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum New Mexico none New York T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T sessile T undulatum North Carolina T catesbaei T cuneatum T discolor T erectum T grandiflorum T luteum T pusillum T rugelii T sessile T simile T sulcatum T undulatum T vaseyi North Dakota T cernuum Ohio T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T recurvatum T sessile T undulatum Oklahoma T pusillum T sessile T viridescens Oregon T albidum T kurabayashii T ovatum T petiolatum Pennsylvania T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T sessile T undulatum Rhode Island T cernuum T erectum T undulatum South Carolina T catesbaei T cuneatum T discolor T erectum T grandiflorum T lancifolium T maculatum T oostingii T persistens T pusillum T reliquum T rugelii T undulatum T vaseyi South Dakota T cernuum T flexipes T nivale Tennessee T catesbaei T cuneatum T decumbens T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T lancifolium T luteum T pusillum T recurvatum T rugelii T sessile T simile T stamineum T sulcatum T tennesseense T undulatum T vaseyi Texas T gracile T ludovicianum T recurvatum T texanum T viridescens Utah none Vermont T cernuum T erectum T grandiflorum T undulatum Virginia T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T pusillum T sessile T sulcatum T undulatum Washington T albidum T ovatum T petiolatum T scouleri West Virginia T cernuum T erectum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T pusillum T sessile T sulcatum T undulatum Wisconsin T cernuum T flexipes T grandiflorum T nivale T recurvatum Wyoming T ovatum T scouleri Other edit Saint Pierre and Miquelon T cernuumAsia edit In Asia the range of Trillium species extends from the Himalayas across China Korea Japan and eastern Russia to the Kuril Islands The greatest diversity of Trillium species is found on the islands of Japan and Sakhalin Afghanistan T govanianum Bhutan T govanianum T tschonoskii China 4 T camschatcense Jilin T govanianum Tibet Autonomous Region Yunnan T taiwanense E Taiwan T tschonoskii Anhui Fujian Gansu Hubei Shaanxi Sichuan Tibet Autonomous Region Yunnan Zhejiang India T govanianum Himachal Pradesh Jammu and Kashmir Sikkim Uttarakhand T tschonoskii Sikkim Japan T apetalon T camschatcense T channellii Hokkaido T hagae T komarovii T miyabeanum T smallii T tschonoskii T yezoense Korea T camschatcense T tschonoskii Kuril Islands T apetalon T camschatcense T tschonoskii Myanmar T tschonoskii Nepal T govanianum Pakistan 65 T govanianum Russia T apetalon Sakhalin T camschatcense Primorsky Krai Khabarovsk Krai Kamchatka Peninsula Sakhalin T hagae Sakhalin T komarovii Primorsky Krai T smallii Sakhalin T tschonoskii Sakhalin Taiwan T taiwanense T tschonoskiiIdentification editA fully general dichotomous key requires a mature flowering plant 3 77 78 79 The first step is to determine whether or not the flower sits on a pedicel which determines the subgenus Any mature plant may be identified to this extent even if it is not in bloom Identification proceeds based on flower parts leaves and other characteristics A combination of characteristics is usually required to identify the plant Identification of a non flowering non fruiting plant with bare leaves may be difficult Although some species of Trillium have petioles leaf stalks and or distinctive leaf shapes these features are seldom sufficient to identify the plant down to the species level In eastern North America jack in the pulpit Arisaema triphyllum is often mistaken for bare leaved Trillium Both species are about the same height with trifoliate leaves but the former lacks 3 way rotational symmetry and has leaf veins unlike those of Trillium Ecology editTrilliums are myrmecochorous that is ants act as agents of seed dispersal Each seed of a ripe fruit has a white fleshy appendage called an elaiosome Ants are attracted to the elaiosome so much so they often bore holes into the fruit instead of waiting for it to drop off on its own 80 The ants carry the seeds back to their nest where they eat the elaiosomes and discard the seeds Here the seeds eventually germinate an average of about 1 meter away from the parent plant For example the seeds of Trillium camschatcense and T tschonoskii are collected by ant species Aphaenogaster smythiesi and Myrmica ruginodis 81 Sometimes beetles interfere with the dispersal process by eating the elaiosomes which makes the seeds less attractive to ants Yellow jackets Vespula spp and other wasps are similarly attracted to elaiosomes The wasps carry off the seeds and feed on the elaiosomes an average of about 1 4 meters away from the parent plant Yellow jackets are documented seed dispersers for at least three species of Trillium T catesbaei T cuneatum T undulatum 82 Hybrids edit As of February 2022 update Plants of the World Online recognizes five named hybrids 2 four in Asia and one in North America Three of the Asian hybrids T hagae T miyabeanum and T yezoense are well studied 83 but little is known about the Asian hybrid T komarovii One of its parents is T camschatcense but the other parent is unknown 53 The only named hybrid in North America is T crockerianum whose type specimen was collected in Del Norte County California 72 As originally described its parents are Trillium ovatum and Trillium rivale but the latter species is now a member of genus Pseudotrillium and so T crockerianum has become an intergeneric hybrid In 1982 Haga and Channell crossed the Asiatic species Trillium camschatcense with several North American species Of those the crosses with T erectum T flexipes and T vaseyi produced solid seemingly viable seed Seeds of the cross between T camschatcense and T erectum flowered in 9 to 10 years 84 Disease edit nbsp Diseased T grandiflorum with virescent petals extra petals and other abnormalitiesVarious Trillium species are susceptible to a greening disorder caused by bacterial organisms called phytoplasmas that alter the morphology of infected plants 85 Symptoms of phytoplasma infection include abnormal green markings on the petals floral virescence extra leaves phyllody and other abnormal characteristics 86 Infected populations occur throughout the species range but are prevalent in Ontario Michigan and New York 87 For many years this condition was thought to originate from mutation and so many of these forms were given taxonomic names now known to be invalid In 1971 Hooper Case and Meyers used electron microscopy to detect the presence of mycoplasma like organisms i e phytoplasmas in T grandiflorum with virescent petals The means of transmission was not established but leafhoppers were suspected 88 As of November 2021 update the insect vector for Trillium greening disorder is unknown Phytoplasmas were positively identified in T grandiflorum and T erectum in Ontario in 2016 Phylogenetic analysis supported the grouping of the phytoplasmas isolated from infected plants as a related strain of Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni subgroup 16SrIII F with 99 sequence identity 89 This subgroup of phytoplasmas is associated with various other diseases including milkweed yellows Vaccinium witches broom and potato purple top 90 Conservation edit nbsp Trillium grandiflorum great white trillium Picking parts off a trillium plant can kill it even if the rhizome is left undisturbed 91 Some species of trillium are listed as threatened or endangered and collecting these species may be illegal Laws in some jurisdictions may restrict the commercial exploitation of trilliums and prohibit collection without the landowner s permission In the US states of Michigan 91 and Minnesota 92 it is illegal to pick trilliums In New York it is illegal to pick the red trillium 93 In 2009 the Ontario Trillium Protection Act a Private Members Bill was proposed in the Ontario legislature that would have made it illegal to in any way injure the common Trillium grandiflorum white trillium in the province with some exceptions however the bill was never passed 94 The rare Trillium flexipes drooping trillium is also protected by law in Ontario because of its decreasing Canadian population 95 High white tailed deer population density has been shown to decrease or eliminate trillium in an area particularly white trillium 96 Some species are harvested from the wild to an unsustainable degree This is particularly dire in the case of T govanianum whose high selling price as a folk medicine has motivated harvesters to destroy swathes of ecologically sensitive Himalayan forests causing mudslides 97 Medicinal uses editSeveral species contain sapogenins They have been used traditionally as uterine stimulants the inspiration for the common name birthwort In a 1918 publication Joseph E Meyer called it beth root probably a corruption of birthroot He claimed that an astringent tonic derived from the root was useful in controlling bleeding and diarrhea 98 Culture edit nbsp Ontario trillium emblem on an Ottawa courthouse sign The white trillium Trillium grandiflorum serves as the official flower and emblem of the Canadian province of Ontario It is an official symbol of the Government of Ontario The large white trillium is the official wildflower of Ohio 99 In light of their shared connection to the flower the Major League Soccer teams in Toronto and Columbus compete with each other for the Trillium Cup Citizen scientists regularly report observations of Trillium species from around the world T grandiflorum T erectum and T ovatum in that order are the most often observed Trillium species 100 Trillium is the literary magazine of Ramapo College of New Jersey which features poetry fiction photography and other visual arts created by Ramapo students 101 In Mexican LGBT culture the trillium is included as a symbol on their version of the bisexual pride flag borrowing the abstracted emblem from Ontario 102 Gallery edit nbsp Nodding trillium Trillium cernuum nbsp Idaho trillium Trillium petiolatum nbsp White trillium Trillium grandiflorum nbsp Red trillium Trillium erectum nbsp Pacific trillium Trillium ovatum nbsp Prairie trillium Trillium recurvatum nbsp Relict trillium Trillium reliquum an endangered species nbsp Painted trillium Trillium undulatum References edit Trillium Tropicos Missouri Botanical Garden a b c Trillium L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 a b c d e f g h i Case Jr Frederick W 2002 Trillium In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA a b c d Liang Songyun Soukup Victor G Trillium Flora of China Vol 24 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Trilliums Species United States Forest Service Retrieved 25 June 2019 a b c d Trillium County level distribution maps from the North American Plant Atlas NAPA Biota of North America Program BONAP 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2019 Kevin Kirkland Two 4 petaled trilliums found Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 11 2013 Trillium erectum and Trillium grandiflorum examples are given Shaver Jesse M 1959 Tetramerism in Trillium maculatum Raf Castanea Southern Appalachian Botanical Society 24 1 33 38 ISSN 0008 7475 JSTOR 4031681 Retrieved 3 February 2022 Case amp Case 1997 p 16 Barksdale 1938 pp 271 273 Patrick Tom 2007 Trilliums of Georgia Tipularia 22 3 22 Utech Frederick H 2002 Liliaceae In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Zomlefer Wendy B Williams Norris H Whitten W Mark Judd Walter S 2001 Generic Circumscription and Relationships in the Tribe Melanthieae Liliales Melanthiaceae with Emphasis on Zigadenus Evidence from ITS and trnL F Sequence Data American Journal of Botany 88 9 1657 1669 doi 10 2307 3558411 JSTOR 3558411 PMID 21669700 a b Weakley 2020 p 201 a b Kunth Karl Sigismund 1850 Trillidium Enumeratio Plantarum Omnium Hucusque Cognitarum Secundum Familias Naturales Disposita Adjectis Characteribus Differentiis et Synonymis Stutgardiae et Tubingae Stuttgart and Tubingen 5 120 Retrieved 30 November 2021 Trillidium Kunth Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Case amp Case 1997 p 245 a b c Farmer Susan B Schilling Edward E October 2002 Phylogenetic Analyses of Trilliaceae based on Morphological and Molecular Data PDF Systematic Botany 27 4 674 692 JSTOR 3093915 a b Weakley Alan S Sorrie Bruce A LeBlond Richard J Poindexter Derick B Floden Aaron J Schilling Edward E Franck Alan R Kees John C 2018 New combinations rank changes and nomenclatural and taxonomic comments in the vascular flora of the southeastern United States IV Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 12 2 477 478 Retrieved 3 October 2021 Search for Trillium International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 2019 10 08 Case Jr Frederick W 2002 Trillium subg Trillium In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA a b Case Jr Frederick W 2002 Trillium subg Phyllantherum In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Freeman 1975 p 2 Case amp Case 1997 p 19 Farmer Susan B 2006 Phylogenetic Analyses and Biogeography of Trilliaceae Aliso A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany 22 1 579 592 doi 10 5642 aliso 20062201 45 Trillium subgen Phyllantherum Raf International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 25 March 2023 Reveal James L Gandhi Kanchi N 2 April 2014 On the validity of Trillium L subg Phyllantherum Raf Melanthiaceae Parideae PDF Phytoneuron 2014 40 1 3 ISSN 2153 733X Reveal James L Gandhi Kanchi N 16 June 2014 Trillium subg Sessilium Raf 1830 an earlier name for Trillium subg Phyllantherum Schult amp Schult f J D Freeman Melanthiaceae Parideae PDF Phytoneuron 2014 62 1 3 ISSN 2153 733X a b c Lampley et al 2022 p 279 Trillium subgen Sessilia Raf International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 25 March 2023 Delostylis Raf International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 25 March 2023 Rafinesque C S 1830 Medical Flora or Manual of the Medical Botany of the United States of North America Vol 2 Philadelphia p 97 Retrieved 14 February 2022 Trillium subgen Delostylis Raf Raf International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b c Gleason 1906 a b c Farmer 2007 pp 3 4 Gledhill 2008 pp 137 219 364 Lampley 2021 pp 15 17 a b Lampley et al 2022 pp 280 281 a b Barksdale 1938 a b Case amp Case 1997 pp 67 71 a b Lampley 2021 Trillium subgen Callipetalon Lampley amp E E Schill International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b Lampley et al 2022 p 281 Lampley 2021 Ch 1 Trillium apetalon Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Makino T 1910 Observations on the Flora of Japan Botanical Magazine Tokyo 24 282 137 doi 10 15281 jplantres1887 24 282 137 Retrieved 3 August 2019 Trillium apetalon Keeping It Green Nursery Retrieved 3 August 2019 Trillium camschatcense Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium camschatcense Flora of China Vol 24 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Trillium channellii Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Fukuda Ichiro Freeman John D Itou Masakazu 1996 Trillium channellii sp nov Trilliaceae in Japan and T camschatcense Ker Gawler Correct Name for the Asiatic diploid Trillium Novon 6 2 164 171 doi 10 2307 3391914 JSTOR 3391914 Trillium hagae Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 a b Trillium komarovii H Nakai amp Koji Ito Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium miyabeanum Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium smallii Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium taiwanense Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium taiwanense Flora of China Vol 24 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Trillium tschonoskii Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium tschonoskii Flora of China Vol 24 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Trillium yezoense Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Lampley et al 2022 pp 281 282 Lampley et al 2022 p 282 Trillium govanianum Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium govanianum Flora of China Vol 24 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA a b Trillium Flora of Pakistan via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Trillium tennesseense E E Schill amp Floden Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Trillium parviflorum V G Soukup World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 10 August 2019 via The Plant List Note that this website has been superseded by World Flora Online Case Jr Frederick W 2002 Trillium parviflorum In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved 23 July 2019 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Trillium parviflorum World Checklist of Selected Plant Families WCSP Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Trillium parviflorum Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 17 February 2023 Case Jr Frederick W 2002 Trillium rivale In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved July 16 2019 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA a b Trillium crockerianum Halda International Plant Names Index IPNI Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Harvard University Herbaria amp Libraries Australian National Botanic Gardens Retrieved 2 December 2021 Trillium crockerianum Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 23 March 2023 Trillium State level distribution maps from the North American Plant Atlas NAPA Biota of North America Program BONAP 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2019 Spaulding et al 2021 pp 24 59 Shetler Stanwyn G Orli Sylvia Stone 2002 Annotated Checklist of the Vascular Plants of the Washington Baltimore Area Part II Monocotyledons PDF National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 28 January 2022 Case amp Case 1997 pp 71 85 Barksdale 1938 pp 278 279 Freeman 1975 pp 4 6 Case amp Case 1997 p 26 Ohara M Higashi S 1987 Interference by ground beetles with the dispersal by ants of seeds of Trillium species Liliaceae The Journal of Ecology 75 4 1091 98 doi 10 2307 2260316 JSTOR 2260316 Zettler Jennifer A Spira Timothy P Allen Craig R 2001 Yellow Jackets Vespula spp Disperse Trillium spp Seeds in Eastern North America The American Midland Naturalist 146 2 444 446 doi 10 1674 0003 0031 2001 146 0444 YJVSDT 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0003 0031 JSTOR 3082926 S2CID 37149406 Case amp Case 1997 p 38 Case amp Case 1997 pp 38 69 Candeias Matt June 1 2021 When Trillium Flowers Go Green In Defense of Plants Retrieved 10 November 2021 Case Frederick W Jr Winter 1994 Trillium grandiflorum Doubles Forms and Diseases PDF Bulletin of the American Rock Garden Society 52 1 40 49 Archived PDF from the original on 1 September 2019 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Gates R R February 1917 A systematic study of the North American genus Trillium its variability and its relation to Paris and Medeola Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 4 1 43 92 doi 10 2307 2990062 JSTOR 2990062 Archived from the original on 28 October 2021 Retrieved 28 October 2021 Hooper G R Case Jr F W Myers R 1971 Mycoplasma like bodies associated with a flower greening disorder of a wild flower Trillium grandiflorum Plant Disease Reporter 55 824 828 Archived from the original on 10 November 2021 Retrieved 7 November 2021 Arocha Rosete Y Morales Lizcano N P Hasan A Yoshioka K Moeder W Michelutti R Satta E Bertaccini A Scott J 2016 First report of the identification of aCandidatusPhytoplasma pruni related strain in Trillium species in Canada New Disease Reports 34 19 doi 10 5197 j 2044 0588 2016 034 019 Davis R E Zhao Y Dally E L Lee I M Jomantiene R Douglas S M 2013 Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni a novel taxon associated with X disease of stone fruits Prunus spp multilocus characterization based on 16S rRNA secY and ribosomal protein genes Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 63 Pt 2 766 776 doi 10 1099 ijs 0 041202 0 PMID 22798643 a b O Connor R P Penskar M R 2004 Special plant abstract for Trillium undulatum painted trillium PDF Lansing MI USA Michigan Natural Features Inventory Wisconsin 2005 Minnesota Code 18H 18 Conservation of Certain Wildflowers US Codes and Statutes Minnesota Nuffer B April 2009 Red Trillium New York State Conservationist New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Legislative Assembly of Ontario An Act to amend the Floral Emblem Act Archived 2017 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Bill 184 Ontario Trillium Protection Act 2009 Drooping trillium Government of Ontario 2014 07 17 Retrieved 2018 09 22 Rooney Thomas P Gross Kevin 2003 A Demographic Study of Deer Browsing Impacts on Trillium grandiflorum Plant Ecology 168 2 267 277 doi 10 1023 A 1024486606698 JSTOR 20146481 S2CID 16769133 Sharma Suresh Jul 24 2014 Nag Chhatri trade strips forests upsets ecology Times of India Retrieved 17 September 2019 Meyer J E The Herbalist and Herb Doctor Hammond IN Indiana Herb Gardens 1918 p 50 Adoption of the Ohio State Wildflower Citizen science observations of Trillium species iNaturalist Retrieved 1 September 2019 Trillium Ramapo College of New Jersey Scupham Bilton Tony 14 June 2012 Putting Out the Mexican Bisexual Flag The Queerstory Files Blogspot Retrieved 11 July 2020 Bibliography editBarksdale Lane 1938 The pedicellate species of Trillium found in the southern Appalachians Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society 54 2 271 296 JSTOR 24332541 Case Frederick W Case Roberta B 1997 Trilliums Portland Oregon Timber Press ISBN 978 0 88192 374 2 Farmer Susan B 2007 A Systematic Study ofTrilliumsubgenusDelostylis PhD University of Tennessee Retrieved 25 March 2023 Freeman J D 1975 Revision of Trillium subgenus Phyllantherum Liliaceae Brittonia 27 1 1 62 doi 10 2307 2805646 JSTOR 2805646 S2CID 20824379 Gleason Henry Allan July 1906 The pedunculate species of Trillium Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 33 7 387 396 doi 10 2307 2478819 hdl 2027 hvd 32044106472392 JSTOR 2478819 Retrieved 24 March 2023 Gledhill David 2008 The Names of Plants 4th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 86645 3 Lampley Jayne A 2021 A systematic and biogeographic study ofTrillium Melanthiaceae PhD University of Tennessee Retrieved 10 February 2022 Lampley Jayne A Gereau Roy Floden Aaron Schilling Edward E 2022 07 05 A revised subgeneric classification of Trillium Parideae Melanthiaceae Phytotaxa 552 5 278 286 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 552 5 1 S2CID 250368253 Meredith Clayton Frances Anne Highland Amy Oliver Leah Floden Aaron Gaddy L L Knapp Wesley Leaman Danna Leopold Susan Littlefield Tara Raguso Robert Schilling Edward Schotz Alfred Walker Anna Wayman Kjirsten 2022 The Conservation Status ofTrilliumin North America Hockessin DE and Albuquerque NM Mt Cuba Center and New Mexico BioPark Society ISBN 979 8 9850471 0 3 Retrieved 19 March 2023 Patrick Thomas S August 1986 The trilliums of eastern North America mimeographed handout Knoxville Tennessee pp 1 7 retrieved 30 March 2023 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Spaulding Daniel D Kartesz John T Horne Howard E Finzel Brian J England J Kevin 2021 Flora of Northern Alabama part 5 Liliaceous Families PDF Phytoneuron 2021 30 1 262 ISSN 2153 733X Retrieved 9 March 2023 Weakley Alan S 2020 Flora of the southeastern United States University of North Carolina Herbarium North Carolina Botanical Garden External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trillium Interactive Identification Key Java Utah Agricultural Experiment Station Fact Sheets McKelvie D Woodland Plants The Trillium Ontario Woodlot Association Biodiversity Information Serving Our Nation BISON occurrence data and maps for Trillium Friesner Ray C 1929 The genus Trillium in Indiana Butler University Botanical Studies Butler University Botanical Studies Vol 1 Article 4 1 1 Retrieved 28 September 2021 About Trilliums U S Forest Service Retrieved 3 November 2021 Ten Things to Know about Trilliums The Native Plant Herald Retrieved 21 January 2022 Ohara Masashi Kawano Shoichi 1986 Life History Studies on the Genus Trillium Liliaceae IV Stage Class Structures and Spatial Distribution of Four Japanese Species PDF Plant Species Biology 1 2 147 161 doi 10 1111 j 1442 1984 1986 tb00023 x Retrieved 1 February 2022 Trillium and the Trillium Family Trilliaceae Susan B Farmer Retrieved 6 February 2022 Patrick Tom 2010 Georgia Trilliums An Appreciation Retrieved 10 February 2022 Feeling Antsy Roads End Naturalist July 23 2019 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Trilliums Scott Ranger s Nature Notes Retrieved 7 March 2023 Trillium Michigan Flora Online University of Michigan Retrieved 7 March 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trillium amp oldid 1174731122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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