Triteleia
Triteleia is a genus of monocotyledon flowering plants also known as triplet lilies. The 16 species are native to western North America, from British Columbia south to California and east to Wyoming and Arizona, with one species in northwestern Mexico. However they are most common in California.[1][2][3] They are perennial plants growing from a fibrous corm, roughly spherical in shape. They get their name from the fact that all parts of their flowers come in threes.
The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group’s 2009 revision placed the genus in family Asparagaceae, subfamily Brodiaeoideae[4] (having previously placed treated Brodiaeoideae as a separate family Themidaceae). Other modern authors place it in the family Alliaceae.[citation needed] Both these families are in the order Asparagales.
There are currently 16 recognized species in Triteleia. One species, Triteleia ixioides, has five well-defined subspecies. Varieties and subspecies have been proposed within several other Triteleia species, but these are no longer widely accepted. Some common species that are now placed in genus Triteleia were formerly placed in genus Brodiaea, and as a consequence the word “brodiaea” has been incorporated into some of their common names.
Triteleia ixioides ssp. scabra flower
Triteleia bridgesii – Bridges’ brodiaea – on serpentine soils below 1,200 m (3,900 ft) in northern Sierra Nevada foothills and Klamath Range of northwestern California and southwestern Oregon
Triteleia clementina – San Clemente Island triteleia – endemic to San Clemente Island, the southernmost of the Channel Islands of California
Triteleia crocea – Yellow triteleia – on serpentine soils at elevations of 650–2,200 m (2,130–7,220 ft) in the Klamath Range of northern California and southwestern Oregon
Triteleia dudleyi – Dudley’s triteleia – at elevations of 1,200–3,500 m (3,900–11,500 ft) in the Sierra Nevada from Mono County southwards; possibly also in the San Gabriel Range of Los Angeles County
Triteleia grandiflora – large-flowered triteleia, Howell’s triteleia, wild hyacinth – at elevations of 100–3,000 m (330–9,840 ft) in southern British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, extreme northern California; isolated population in southwestern Colorado
Triteleia guadalupensis – jacinto del desierto – endemic to Guadalupe Island off the west coast of Baja California
Triteleia hendersonii – Henderson’s triteleia – at elevations of 100–3,000 m (330–9,840 ft) in southwestern Oregon and extreme northern California
Triteleia hyacinthina – white triteleia, white brodiaea, hyacinth brodiaea, fool’s onion – common below 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in much of British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, California; also western Nevada and northern Idaho
Triteleia ixioides – prettyface, golden brodiaea – California north of the Transverse Ranges; the five subspecies have mostly separate distributions:
ssp. analina – middle and high elevations (600–3,000 m (2,000–9,800 ft)) in the Sierra Nevada and southern Cascade ranges and west to the southeast fringes of the Klamath Range
ssp. cookii – a rare subspecies found in the Santa Lucia Range along the central California coast
ssp. ixioides – common below 1,500 m (4,900 ft) in the Coast Ranges of central and northern California from Big Sur north to San Bruno Mountain
ssp. scabra – widespread in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada up to 2,200 m (7,200 ft) with isolated populations in the San Emigdio and Tehachapi Mountains and in southwestern Oregon; similar plants have been collected from northern Baja California, Mexico, but not formally described
ssp. unifolia – confined to a few areas of the central and northern Sierra Nevada foothills
Triteleia laxa – Ithuriel’s spear, grassnut, wallybasket – common below 1,500 m (4,900 ft) across from much of California; from the Tehachapi Mountains north along the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada and southern Cascade ranges, and in the Coast Ranges north from the Santa Lucia Mountains through the Bay Area to the Klamath Range as far as southwestern Oregon
Triteleia lemmoniae – Oak Creek triplet lily, Lemmon’s star – on the Mogollon Rim southeast of Flagstaff, Arizona, with an elevation range of 980–2,340 m (3,220–7,680 ft)
Triteleia lilacina – lilac prettyface – on volcanic hills and mesas at elevations of 70–200 m (230–660 ft) in the northern Sierra Nevada foothills of California
Triteleia lugens – Coast Range triteleia – two populations in the Coast Ranges of California, one around Pinnacles National Park and the other around the Sonoma and Napa valleys, north of San Francisco; possibly a third population in the San Gabriel Range of Los Angeles County
Triteleia montana – mountain triteleia – at elevations of 1,200–3,000 m (3,900–9,800 ft) in the central and northern Sierra Nevada and southern Cascade ranges of California
Triteleia peduncularis – longray triplet lily, long-rayed Brodiaea – in wet grassland and near vernal streams and pools on serpentine soils below 800 m (2,600 ft) in coastal counties of northern California
Triteleia piutensis – Piute Mountains triteleia – described in April 2014 from two populations in the Piute Mountains of the southern Sierra Nevada in Kern County, California, at elevations of 1,560–1,680 m (5,120–5,510 ft)
Triteleia × versicolor – Pinto triplet lily – a sterile hybrid believed to be T. hyacinthina × T. ixioides, recorded only from the type specimen collected in 1935 at Whaler’s Knoll in Point Lobos State Park, Monterey County
A 2002 phylogenetic review of related genera found four clades within Triteleia that were all supported with 100 percent jackknife resampling values:[5]
Triteleia montana and Triteleia lemmoniae
Triteleia peduncularis, Triteleia laxa, and Triteleia bridgesii
Triteleia hyacinthina and Triteleia ixioides
Triteleia grandiflora, Triteleia crocea, and Triteleia hendersonii