Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Erythronium revolutum

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Liliaceae

Scientific name
  
Erythronium revolutum

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Liliales

Genus
  
Erythronium

Higher classification
  
Erythronium

Erythronium revolutum wwwplantworldseedscomimagesseedimagesERYTH

Similar
  
Erythronium, Erythronium oregonum, Erythronium tuolumnense, Erythronium californicum, Erythronium hendersonii

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Erythronium revolutum is a species of flowering plant in the family Liliaceae which is known by several common names, including mahogany fawn lily, coast fawn lily, and pink fawn lily. It is native to the west coast of North America.

Contents

Erythronium revolutum Scottish Rock Garden Club gtBulb Log

Bulb log video diary supplement comparing erythronium revolutum hybrids


Description

Erythronium revolutum Pacific Bulb Society Erythronium Four

Erythronium revolutum, a hardy perennial wildflower, grows from an oval-shaped bulb 3–5 cm (1–2 in) long, producing usually two wide, flat, mottled green leaves near the ground. It is indigenous to Northwest Washington.

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The plant flowers between March and June. Each bulb sends up a long, naked stalk bearing one or two showy lily flowers. The stalk bows at the end so that the face of the flower points at the ground. There are six tepals in shades of pink or light purple which may have yellow or white spotting toward the center of the flower. The tepals may be straight or recurved so far that their tips meet behind the flower; they tend to recurve further as the flower ages. The anthers are bright yellow.

E. revolutum can be distinguished from related species by its pink flowers, swollen anther filaments and mottled leaves.

The fruit is a capsule up to 6 cm (2 in) long.

Distribution

Erythronium revolutum is native to western North America, from coastal Northern California to British Columbia, including Vancouver Island.

Ecology

Erythronium revolutum Erythronium revolutum landscape architect39s pages

E. revolutum is most abundant within 100 miles (161 km) of the coast, at altitudes of less than 1000 m. The plant is found in moist places such as streambanks, bogs, and wet redwood and mixed evergreen forest understory. It is slow-growing, taking 5-7 years to form a flowering size bulb, and therefore is slow to establish in new locations.

Erythronium revolutum Erythronium revolutum 39Knightshayes Pink39Twelve Nunns

These habitats are threatened in the wild and in addition, E. revolutum may be threatened by collection for horticulture and soil compaction by forestry machinery.

Cultivation

Erythronium revolutum is cultivated as an ornamental plant, for use in traditional and natural gardens. Its combination of attractively patterned leaves and graceful flowers in mid spring make it a desirable plant. The best forms (often called var. johnstonii) have darker, richer pink flowers and well marked foliage. It should be planted in a shady spot (ideally beneath deciduous trees or shrubs) in humus-rich soil that does not dry out and is rather damp in spring. It will naturalise over time by self-seeding, though as seedlings take several years to reach flowering size this can be a slow process.

This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

References

Erythronium revolutum Wikipedia