In the arboretum, we have patches marked for T. gracile and T. recurvatum. T. gracile
was acquired first, in 1992. Professor Leuck's Plant Systematics class took a field trip down to the Kisatchie National Forest in Natchitoches Parish, and they brought back one T. gracile plant. It was planted in the arboretum, and over the years a patch of trillim developed. Two additional plantings were added to this patch, all thought to be T. gracile: in 1993, Will Cook donated two plants, and in 1994, the Plant Systematics class brought back two more plants from Kisatchie.
In 1994, Jack Price donated T. recurvatum, collected from Caddo Parish. Two years later, another plant from the grounds of the Veterans Affairs Hospital in Shreveport was added to the patch. In 1998, two pots of T. recurvatum origianlly collected from Ida, Louisiana, were then added to the same spot. Finally, in 2013, Professor Leuck donated his own private collection of T. recurvatum to the arboretum, adding them to same location.
Since we haven't closely
examined these species on the blog, let's start today, as this week we
noticed seeds from a patch marked T. gracile. Have you ever seen trillium seeds? Few people have.
This is another individual, in the same patch of trillium, and it has a slightly different look. First, it appears more withered: the bracts are yellowing and wrinkling. Second, these bracts are not snuggly whorled around the ripe seed pod; thin, light-green sepals partially curve down between the bracts. This is a characteristic of T. recurvatum. Also, interestingly, our patch of T. recurvatum, located under our native witch-hazel, is completely done for the year―nothing is above ground at this time. |
The withering individual was snipped for closer examination. |
Six small seeds were collected and planted in a completely different location. Hopefully something will come up! |
Next spring, we ought to measure and smell the fresh trillium flowers.
Have you ever thought to smell a trillium flower? I hope not. The
reviews are less than favorable. In Louisiana, you run the risk of encountering the odor of rotten meat. Yuck! What critter is attracted by this foul stench? Such undesirable tasks as sniffing the flowers will
help us carefully classify the trilliums that the arboretum has in its
collection. In the interim, check out the "Key to Trillium" from the North Carolina Botantical Garden for all of the different trillium characteristics.
From the USDA Forest Service, you can find a little more information about the the four species shown on the above map: