Allium LILIACEAE Erythronium 



A. cemuum Roth. 



Rare: rocky island in the Susquehanna River near Conowingo 

 (Ce), J. Crawford, 29 June 1924 (A), locaUty destroyed. 



'' fr A. canadense L. Wild Garlic. 



Frequent; meadows and beaches, Piedmont and Coastal Plain. 

 May, June. rn.i./'V C^ ' 



A. vineale L. Field Garlic. 



Common; fields, meadows and brackish shores, Piedmont and 

 Coastal Plain. June, July. Nat. from Europe. 



Nothoscordum Kunth. 

 N. bivalve (L.) Britton. 



Rare: salt marsh near Kiptopeke (No), Fernald, Long & Fogg, 

 5268, 14 Oct. 1939 (G, T). 



Hemerocallis L. 

 H. fulva L. Day Lily. 



Escaped from cultivation, and well established on roadsides. 

 June. Introd. from Europe. 



Lilium L. Lily. 

 L. philadelphicum L. Wood Lily. 



Rare; dry ground in New Castle County: "New Castle County," 

 Commons, July 1865 (A); Centreville, Commons, 17 June 1870 (A); 

 near brickyard on ElUott Ave., Wilmington, E. Tatnall, June 1896 

 (D). 



L. superbum L. Turk's- cap Lily. 



Common in meadows and swampy woodlands, Piedmont and 

 Coastal Plain. July, Aug. 



L. canadense L. Wild Yellow Lily. 



Meadows and low woods; infrequent in the Piedmont; rare on 

 the Coastal Plain: woods, Woodland Beach (K), Commons, 30 June 

 1898 (A); same, R. R. Tatnall, 1461, 4 July 1932 (T); woods 3 mi. 

 n. e. of Trappe (Ta), Earle, 2765, 5 July 1940 (P). 



Erythronium L. 



E. americanum Ker. "Dog's-tooth Violet." Trout Lily. 



Rich or sandy woods; common in the Piedmont area, infrequent 

 on the Coastal Plain southward to Talbot County (Earle). April. 



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