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I have grown this Trillium from seed ex as T.erectum hybrids, it was 2013 I think, and now they flower for the first time, both plants have similar flowers.
Gabriela with sessile Trillium I meant the sessile group (the other group is the pedicellate one). In the Gentiana acaulis group there are different species: angustifolia, clusii, acaulis ... But Gentiana acaulis as species is something that is many times used wrong.I have added my Trillium sessile, the flowers are more compact as the other Trilliums of the sessile group.
Beautiful plants show well even without great pictures Kris I'm glad about your T. grandiflorum seedlings, but why just 3 of them?
I got only three seedlings. But still I am happy. May be the cold winter is the culprit. I tried Trillium grandiflorum plants several times but always failed.
Herman, your T. sessile specimens are very nice. But I don't think you open the link to see how variable this species can be.All of them are 'true' T. sessile. It just happened for you to get some with short petals, that's all. Many times we are acquainted only with the forms of certain species grown in the gardens without being aware of their variability.Screenshoots from Flora of Michigan, there should be no problem since the pictures have the author names. All T. sessile in wild habitats.I recommend this very accessible on-line searchable flora, there are keys for the species, simpler to use than FNA. https://michiganflora.net/
Wow! very nice Leena. Maybe not a hybrid and var. album? T. erectum hybridizes indeed with various others, including with T. flexipes shown above.
Here Trillium berries are not quite yet ripe. This T.chloropetalum 'Rubrum' has only one seed pod ripening even though it had many flowers. I have been wondering all summer about the smaller leaves at the base of the big plant. They look like seedling leaves, what do you think? Or can they come up from the bigger rhizome? Last year I got seeds from this plant, but previous year someone stole the seeds before I realized they were ready. This plant flowered for the first time 2015.Another question, what do I do now? Should I dig it up and divide?
This Trillium sp. is the only one we've been able to grow and re-flower, though it took 10 years to get the first bloom and it doesn't flower every year. The first pic was taken 2 days earlier.I presume it's a form of Trillium chloropetalum but stand to be correctedcheersfermi
Fermi, can you take a picture inside the flower to see the anther sacs and the ovary.Description F. W. Case: Stamens erect, 17-26 mm long filament widest at base about 4 mm long; anther sacs introrse; connectives purple, prolonged about 1 mm beyond anther sac.The leaves are right. But the sepals are so dark?
Hi Herman,I can't see the ovary clearly in this pic but it may make things clearer - the flower may not be fully mature yetcheersfermi