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Common Star Lily

Zigadenus fremontii

Photo by DonnaPomeroy
Published on Project Noah
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36.5212, -121.951

Field Notes

Description:

Zigadenus fremontii, known as the common star lily, Frémont's deathcamas (after John C. Frémont)[1] or star zigadene, is an attractive wildflower found on grassy or woody slopes, or rocky outcrops, in many lower-lying regions of California, southern Oregon, and northern Baja California. Like other deathcamases, Z. fremontii grows from a more or less spherical bulb, which in this species has a diameter of 20–35 mm. Its leaves can reach up to half a metre in length, but are normally more like half that. They grow from the base of the plant. Flowers, which can be seen from March to June, grow in clusters. They have six petals (strictly, three petals and three very similar sepals), arranged symmetrically, giving rise to the name star-lily. Each flower is 1–4 cm across.

Habitat:

grassy meadow along coastal bluffs south of Monterey

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Photographed
PublishedFebruary 22, 2012

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