Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Trillium recurvatum

Trillium recurvatum L. C. Beck  
Family: Melanthiaceae
Bloody-Butcher, more...prairie trillium, toadshade, bloody butcher, bloody noses
[Trillium recurvatum f. luteum Friesner, moreTrillium recurvatum f. shayi E.J.Palmer & Steyerm.]
Trillium recurvatum image
Paul Rothrock
  • FNA
  • vPlants
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Indiana Flora
  • Resources
Frederick W. Case Jr. in Flora of North America (vol. 26)
Rhizomes horizontal, white, slender, elongated, brittle. Scapes typically 1(-3), round in cross section, 1.5-4.8 dm, slender to robust, glabrous. Bracts held well above ground, strongly petiolate; blade at first strongly mottled in darker green or bronze, mottling fading with seasonal expansion after anthesis, rarely all green, ovate, elliptic, or lanceolate, 6-18 × 2.5-6.5 cm, not glossy, apex acuminate; petiole ca. 1/5 bract length. Flower erect, fragrance not reported; sepals strongly recurved basally and held against scape by turgor pressure, green, sometimes purple-streaked, ovate-lanceolate, 18-35 × 6-18 mm, margins entire, apex acute; petals long-lasting, erect, ± connivent, ± concealing stamens and ovary, dark maroon purple to clear yellow, occasionally 2-colored with purple and yellow, not spirally twisted, lanceolate to ovate, 1.8-4.8 × 0.9-2 cm, thick-textured, base attenuate to weakly clawed, margins entire, apex acute; stamens incurved, 10-15 mm; filaments erect, dark purple, 4-6 mm, ± slender; anthers strongly incurved above filaments, dark purple, 5-16 mm, ± thick, dehiscence introrse; connectives strongly incurved inward, dark purple, projecting about 1 mm beyond anther sacs; ovary greenish with ± purple stains distally, transversely rhombic to angular-ovate, somewhat 6-angled or -winged, 7-10 mm, ± equaling filament height; stigmas erect, divergent-recurved, distinct, ± linear, 4-6 mm, slightly thickened basally. Fruits green to white- and purple-streaked, odorless, rhomboid-ovoid, 6-angled, almost winged, ca. 1 cm diam., pulpy. 2n = 10.

Flowering spring (late Mar--late May). Rich clayey floodplain soils, plants often temporarily inundated while in flower; rich moist woods and bluffs, limestone-derived soils; 100--200 m; Ala., Ark., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Ky., La., Mich., Miss., Mo., Ohio, Tenn., Tex., Wis.

Trillium recurvatum has several named color forms, most notably forma shayi E. J. Palmer & Steyermark with clear yellow petals, and one foliose anomaly (possibly caused by mycoplasma).

The Morton Arboretum
Perennial herb with a relatively long, slender rhizome stem 15 - 48 cm tall Flowers: single, stalkless, with six distinct tepals. Stamens six, alternating in two whorls of three. Sepals: three, persistent, sometimes streaked purple, 2 - 3.5 cm long, 6 - 18 mm wide, egg- to lance-shaped, strongly recurved. Petals: three, dark maroon-purple to clear yellow (sometimes purple and yellow), 2 - 5 cm long, 0.9 - 2 cm wide, lance- to egg-shaped with a pointed tip, clawed, upright or arching inward, more or less concealing the stamens and ovary, long-lasting. Fruit: a many-seeded berry, green to white- and purple-streaked, about 1 cm wide, diamond- to egg-shaped, six-angled, nearly winged, pulpy. Seeds many, elliptic.

Similar species: This species and Trillium nivale differ from other Trillium species by having distinctly stalked leaves. Trillium nivale differs by having a stalked flower that is typically white.

Flowering: mid-April to mid-June

Habitat and ecology: Common in woods, and usually the most common member of the genus. It survives disturbance, and may be found in pastures and other degraded places.

Occurence in the Chicago region: native

Notes: Trilliums do not actually have true leaves or stems above the ground. The underground rhizome produces scale-like leaves called cataphylls. The aboveground leaf-like structures are bracts that subtend the flower, but these are internally and externally similar to leaves and function in photosynthesis. Many authors will refer to them as leaves.

Etymology: Trillium comes from the Greek word trilix, meaning triple, referring to how all the plant parts occur in threes. Recurvatum means "curved (or bent) backwards."

Author: The Morton Arboretum

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Rhizome horizontal, relatively long and slender; lvs with a distinct petiole 1-2 cm, the blade elliptic to ovate or subrotund, acute or short-acuminate, usually mottled; fl sessile; sep lance-triangular, commonly reflexed at anthesis, 2-2.5 cm; pet erect or arching inward, 2-3 cm, normally maroon, distinctly and slenderly clawed, the blade lanceolate to ovate, acute or short-acuminate; filaments half to fully as long as the distally incurved anther; stigmas slender, widely divergent, about as long as the 6-winged ovary; 2n=10. Moist woods; w. O. to s. Mich., s. Wis., and e. Io., s. to Ala., La., and e. Tex. Apr., May.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam
Infrequent throughout the state. All of my specimens are from woodland of different kinds although I recall seeing the species along the railroad south of Battle Ground, Tippecanoe County.

……

Indiana Coefficient of Conservatism: C = 4

Wetland Indicator Status: FACU

Trillium recurvatum
Open Interactive Map
Trillium recurvatum image
Morton Arboretum
Trillium recurvatum image
Paul Rothrock
Trillium recurvatum image
Paul Rothrock
Trillium recurvatum image
Paul Rothrock
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Morton Arboretum
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Morton Arboretum
Trillium recurvatum image
Morton Arboretum
Trillium recurvatum image
Morton Arboretum
Trillium recurvatum image
Morton Arboretum
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Richard Hull
Trillium recurvatum image
Paul Rothrock
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Trillium recurvatum image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.