What do you think of when I say “Lily”? Perhaps a large, trumpet-shaped bloom with fat, pollen-encrusted stamens that stain your nose when you try to smell them? That traditional lily flower is a member of the scientific family Liliaceae, but there are many other members that do not have that look. Recently I became curious what plants around me are actually part of the Lily family; here is what I found.
First I did some research to see what characteristics members of the Lily family might have in common. I thought that surely they would all have a bulb structure … nope! Some have bulbs and some have rhizomes or corms. Even their seed/fruit characteristics are not the same – some have fleshy fruits that are dispersed by animals while others have capsular fruits with papery seeds that travel by wind.
Next I decided to see how many genera are found in the family Liliaceae. A quick check on the USDA Plants database found 108 genera in the United States, but a few of them are not native. Still it would be accurate to say approximately 100 can be found. So I picked out the ones that I’ve found in Georgia – about 15 for sure.
The most obvious and one of the showiest is the genus Lilium. Both Lilium superbum and Lilium michauxii are found in North Georgia and their flowers are quite beautiful. These produce papery seeds in capsules and have the expected tear drop-shaped lily bulb.
Next I spotted some of my favorites that still at least have "lily" in the common name: Trout Lily, Spider Lily and Rain Lily. Trout Lily, also called Fawn Lily, is Erythronium umbilicatum. One of our earliest blooming flowers in North Georgia, the foliage disappears quickly once temperatures warm up. Spider Lily (Hymenocallis caroliniana) is incredibly showy; it is sometimes called Shoals Spider Lily or Cahaba Lily because some species of Hymenocallis are found in river shoals such as in the Cahaba River in Alabama. Rain lily, also called Atamasco Lily, is in the genus Zephyranthes. The beautiful blooms can be triggered to bloom by abundant rain after a dry spell. We find white ones (Zephyranthes atamasca), but they come in shades of yellow and pink also.
Erythronium umbilicatum |
Zephyranthes atamasca |
Hymenocallis caroliniana |
Trillium grandiflorum |
Even the familiar Trillium genus is in the Lily family and you can certainly see the resemblance. But after that it got harder and harder to "see" the resemblance! The next five all share the characteristic of clusters of many small flowers: Fly poison (Amianthium muscitoxicum), Camas (Camassia quamash), Fairy wand (Chamaelirium luteum), Featherbells (Stenanthium gramineum), and Solomon's Plume (Maianthemum racemosum).
Chamaelirium luteum |
Amianthium muscitoxicum |
The next four have bell like flowers: Solomon's Seal (Polygonatum biflorum), Bellwort (Uvularia), Mandarin (Prosartes maculata), and Clinton's lily (Clintonia umbellulata).
Polygonatum biflorum |
Prosartes maculata |
And finally there these two - I don't see the resemblance to lilies at all: Yellow star-grass (Hypoxis hirsuta) and Indian cucumber-root (Medeola virginiana).
Medeola virginiana |
Hypoxis hirsuta |
Photo by Sheri George |
What an interesting family!
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