Top
Header

(First upload on July 30 2009. Last on June 30 2021) [ 日本語 | English ]

Lilium cordatum Thunberg var. glehnii (Fr. Schmidt) Woodcock et Coutts






Mount Usu / Sarobetsu post-mined peatland
From left: Crater basin in 1986 and 2006. Cottongrass / Daylily

Lilium L. (ユリ)
L. cordatum Thunberg
Ubayuri (ウバユリ, 姥百合), heartleaf lily
Distribution: endemic to south to southern Tohoku District (mostly in western Japan)
var. glehnii (Fr. Schmidt) Woodcock et Coutts
Ooubayuri (オオウバユリ, 大姥百合)

Ainu (アイヌ語): turep (トゥレ)

Lifeform: monocarpic, deciduous perennial forb, flowering stalk > 1 m high
Distribution: Kuriles - Sakhalin - Japan (northern Honshu - Hokkaido)
Habitat: mainly deciduous forest

Field training on integrated environmental research (統合環境調査法実習) (fauna and flora 種リスト)

Flower: 9-13 cm long
Seed dispersal: wind
Utilization: an edible plant for ainu
Chromosome number: 2n = 24
Synonyms:

Cardiocrinum cordatum (Thunberg) Makino var. glehnii (Fr. Schmidt) H. Hara
Cardiocrinum glehnii (Fr. Schmidt) Makino, commonly used
Lilium glehnii Fr. Schmidt

索引

Lilium cordatum in Japan


var. glehnii

ST1 ST2 ST3 ST4
ST5 ST6 ST7
ST8
[1/2] inflorescences in Keiteki-no-Mori forest on July 23 2009. [3] young shoots in Keiteki-no-Mori forest on April 22 2013. [4] on Fukuura-jima Island in Matsushima Islands, northern Honshu, on March 21 2016. [5] in the backyard of GSEES on April 21 2020. [6] at a fruit stage in the forest on August 31 2009. [7] How many seeds are there? On October 13 2009. [1-3, 5-7] in the Hokkaido University campus. [8] at the foot of Mount Yosomi, which erupted in 1910, on July 23 2010. Records: in the Archeological Site of Hokkaido University (遺跡庭園) on March 31 2020

フッター