Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Clintonia borealis is commonly known as bluebead, bluebead lily, or yellow clintonia. [4] [5] The term "bluebead" refers to the plant's small blue spherical fruit, perhaps its most striking feature. However, the term can be misleading since all but one of the species in genus Clintonia have blue fruits (notably, the fruit of C. umbellulata is
Blue lily may refer to the following plant species: Agapanthus praecox, native to South Africa and widely cultivated; Nymphaea caerulea (Blue Egyptian water lily or sacred blue lily), native to East Africa and widely cultivated; Nymphaea violacea, a species of waterlily native to northern Australia; Stypandra glauca (nodding blue lily), native ...
Clintonia is a genus of flowering plants in the lily family Liliaceae.Plants of the genus are distributed across the temperate regions of North America and eastern Asia, [1] [2] in the mesic understory of deciduous or coniferous forests. [3]
Bead lily is a common name for several flowering plant species in genus Clintonia, including: Clintonia andrewsiana , Andrews' bead lily, also known as the red bead lily Clintonia borealis , the blue bead-lily
Clintonia uniflora, the blue-bead lily, or simply the blue bead; See also. Bluebeam (disambiguation) Bluebeard (disambiguation) Bluebeat (disambiguation)
Clintonia uniflora, commonly known as bride's bonnet, queen's cup, or bead lily, [3] [4] [5] is a species of flowering plant in the lily family Liliaceae. The specific epithet uniflora means "one-flowered", [ 6 ] a characteristic that distinguishes this species from others in the genus Clintonia .
Clintonia andrewsiana is a species of flowering plant in the lily family Liliaceae. The species was discovered by John Milton Bigelow in 1854 and described by John Torrey in 1856. [ 3 ] The specific epithet andrewsiana honors Timothy Langdon Andrews (1819–1908), [ 4 ] a "gentleman who assiduously examined the botany" of California during the ...
Lily usually refers to herbaceous plants of the genus Lilium, with large showy trumpet-shaped flowers. Many species are cultivated as ornamentals. Many species are cultivated as ornamentals. Many other plants not closely related to lilies are called lilies, usually because their flowers resemble lilies.