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Stellatum: Answers to key
questions leading to this species, from Lilies, Irises & Orchids of
Saskatchewan by Vernon L. Harms and Anna L. Leighton. The answers are in
the order you would normally work through the key.
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Umbels less compact, +/- hemispheric;
flowers white or pink; pedicels as long as or much longer than the
flowers; stems solid (not hollow); leaf blades solid, channelled, flat
to somewhat round in cross-section; anthers yellow, pollen yellow.
NOT [Umbels compact, nearly spherical; flowers pale purple to deep
lilac; pedicels shorter than the flowers; stems hollow; leaf blades
hollow, round in cross-section; anthers purple, pollen white.] |
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Stamens and style longer than the
perianth; appendages on capsule +/- triangular, conspicuous (up to 1 mm
long); tepals withering in fruit, the midrib visible but not
thickened; outer bulb coat membranous, if fibers present, they are
remains of nerves and parallel to each other rather than part of a
network of fibers. NOT [Stamens and style shorter than perianth;
appendages on capsule rounded, inconspicuous (<0.3 mm long); tepals
persisting in fruit and permanently enveloping capsule, the midribs
becoming thick; outer bulb coat a network of fibers.] |
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Flowers star-shaped; tepals spreading,
deep rose or pink (rarely almost white); tepal tips acute; tip of
scape usually erect (the inflorescence sometimes nodding in bud, but
usually becoming erect by flowering time); pedicels long, firm, straight
to scarcely arching; bulbs ovoid, distinctly wider than the base of the
stem; leaves to 3.6 mm broad. NOT [Flowers bell-shaped; tepals +/-
erect, mostly white to lightly pinkish (in Saskatchewan, but often
darker rose farther west); outer tepal tips usually obtuse or rounded,
inner tepal tips narrower; tip of scape distinctly curved downward or
sideways at anthesis; pedicels slender, flexuous or loosely arched;
bulbs elongate, grading into the base of the stem; leaves often over 3
(to 8) mm broad.] |
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