Trillium luteum, the yellow trillium or yellow wakerobin, is a species of flowering plant in the bunchflower family Melanthiaceae. It is a member of the Trillium cuneatum complex, a closely related group of sessile-flowered trilliums. The species is Endemism to the southeastern United States, especially in and around the Great Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina.
Description
Trillium luteum is a
Perennial plant,
Herbaceous plant,
flowering plant that persists by means of an underground
rhizome. Like all trilliums, it has a whorl of three
(leaves) and a single
trimerous flower with three
, three
, two whorls of three
each, and three
(fused into a single ovary with three stigmas). It has a sessile flower (no flower stalk), erect petals, and mottled leaves. It grows to tall by wide, with lemon yellow scented blooms. The large stalkless triple leaves often have grey-green marbling on the surface. It flowers in April-May beneath the bare branches of
deciduous trees.
After flowering and setting seed it goes dormant in summer, before appearing again in late winter.
Taxonomy
In 1813, Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg described the yellow-petaled variety
Trillium sessile var.
luteum, but the taxon was given specific rank (
Trillium luteum) by Thomas Grant Harbison in 1901. The latter is distinguished from
T. sessile by its larger size, the mottling of its leaves, shorter filaments, the color of its petals, and the character of its stigmas. The
specific epithet luteum, which means "yellow", refers to the color of its petals.
Trillium luteum is a member of the Trillium cuneatum complex, a group of eight Taxon including Trillium maculatum and Trillium cuneatum (in the strict sense). All members of the complex are sessile-flowered trilliums ( Trillium subgen. Sessilia).
Distribution and habitat
Trillium luteum is
Endemism to the southeastern United States, ranging from southeastern Kentucky to northwestern Georgia, with significant populations in and around the Great Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina. It is especially abundant around Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
T. luteum has been widely introduced elsewhere, with known populations in Maryland, Michigan, Ontario, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Virginia. There are hundreds of
citizen science observations of
T. luteum outside of its natural range, especially in Pennsylvania, Maryland, New York, and Virginia. A few disjunct populations of yellow sessile-flowered trilliums in central Alabama have been identified as
T. luteum but botanists disagree on this point.
The ranges of T. luteum and T. cuneatum generally do not overlap except in Casey County in southern Kentucky, in southeastern Tennessee, and along the Little Tennessee River on the border between Tennessee and North Carolina. Hybrids will be found along these points of contact, which makes identification difficult.
Cultivation
Though hardy down to , this plant requires a sheltered position with rich, moist
leafmould in a shaded, deciduous woodland setting which mimics its native habitat in North American broadleaf forests. It must be left undisturbed to grow into a large colony. It requires some experience to grow successfully, but nevertheless has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Bibliography
External links