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Hemerocallis fulva (L. ) L.
ORANGE DAY-LILY
Hemerocallis lilioasphodelus var fulva L; Orange daylily; Tawny daylily; Hmrocalle fauve; Lis dun jour

Life   Plantae   Monocotyledoneae   Liliaceae   Hemerocallis

Hemerocallis fulva
© Les Mehrhoff, 2008-2010 · 7
Hemerocallis fulva

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Hemerocallis fulva
© Les Mehrhoff, 2008-2010 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva
Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - frontal view of flower
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - frontal view of flower

Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - lateral view of flower
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - lateral view of flower
Hemerocallis fulva, leaf - basal or on lower stem
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, leaf - basal or on lower stem

Hemerocallis fulva, whole plant - in flower - general view
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, whole plant - in flower - general view
Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - frontal view of flower
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - frontal view of flower

Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - lateral view of flower
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, inflorescence - lateral view of flower
Hemerocallis fulva, stem - showing leaf bases
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, stem - showing leaf bases

Hemerocallis fulva, leaf - basal or on lower stem
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, leaf - basal or on lower stem
Hemerocallis fulva, whole plant - in flower - general view
© Copyright Steve Baskauf, 2002-2011 · 4
Hemerocallis fulva, whole plant - in flower - general view

Hemerocallis fulva
© Les Mehrhoff, 2008-2010 · 3
Hemerocallis fulva
Hemerocallis fulva, flower
© Kay Yatskievych, 2003 · 1
Hemerocallis fulva, flower

Associates · map
FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Agaricaceae  Phoma liliacearum @ BPI (2)

Phoma @ BPI (1)
Botryosphaeriaceae  Phyllosticta variabilis @ BPI (1)
Mycosphaerellaceae  Heterosporium gracile @ BPI (1)

Heterosporium @ BPI (1)
Pucciniaceae  Puccinia hemerocallidis @ BPI (11)
Turritellidae  Vermicularia dematium @ BPI (1)

Vermicularia liliacearum @ BPI (7)
_  Beloniella hemerocallidis @ BPI (1)

Torula herbarum @ BPI (1)

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Following modified from Delaware Wildflowers
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http://delawarewildflowers.org/plant.php?id=0963 ---> https://delawarewildflowers.org/plant.php?id=0963

Delaware Wildflowers  •  Scientific names

Hemerocallis fulva (L.) L. Orange Daylily
Hemerocallidaceae — Day-lily family
Invasive non-native
Hemerocallis fulva
White Clay Creek State Park -- Thompson Station Road
July 2007

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Photos copyright David G. Smith

Information from the Delaware Flora Checklist used with author's permission.

Delaware Wildflowers main page

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FNA Vol. 26 Page 219, 220 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 26 | Liliaceae | Hemerocallis

1. Hemerocallis fulva (Linnaeus) Linnaeus, Sp. Pl., ed. 2. 1: 462. 1762.

Orange daylily, tawny daylily, hémérocalle fauve, lis d'un jour

Hemerocallis lilioasphodelus Linnaeus var. fulvus Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 324. 1753

Plants 7—15 dm; main roots fleshy. Leaf blade yellowish green, 7—10 dm × (1—)2.5—3 cm. Scape branched, 10—20-flowered, taller than foliage. Flowers diurnal, not fragrant; perianth tube, widely funnelform, 2—3 cm; tepals yellow basally with darker tawny orange zones and stripes, veins reticulate; outer tepals 7—8 × 1.8—2.2 cm, margins smooth; inner tepals 7.5—8.5 cm × 3—3.5 cm, margins wavy; filaments 4.5—6.5 cm; anthers 5—7 mm; ovary 8—10 mm; style white to pale orange, 9—10 cm; pedicel 3—6 mm. Capsules not or rarely developing. Seeds rarely produced. 2n = 33.

Flowering late spring--early summer. Roadsides, waste places, homesteads, open forests, stream banks; 0--1000 m; introduced; N.B., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que.; Ala., Ark., Conn., Del., D.C., Fla., Ga., Idaho, Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kans., Ky., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., Miss., Mo., Mont., Nebr., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., R.I., S.C., S.Dak., Tenn., Tex., Utah, Vt., Va., Wash., W.Va., Wis.; e Asia (China, Japan); naturalized Eurasia; expected elsewhere.

Following an earlier European introduction from Asia, Hemerocallis fulva was brought to North America in the seventeenth century. This commonly cultivated daylily, the wild type, is distinguished as cultivar 'Europa' Stout and is a self-sterile triploid producing no seed. Essentially, it is a large, complex clone. Plants persist from cultivation or have arisen from root or rhizome fragments, which are capable of plant regeneration. Cultivar 'Kwanso' Regel, another ancient garden selection, persists in many areas along with the wild type and has fully doubled flowers. In eastern Asia, both diploids and triploids occur in the H. fulva complex and have been the basis for extensive breeding and tetraploid cultivar selection (A. B. Stout 1934).

Updated: 2024-04-18 03:34:31 gmt
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