Species of flowering plant
Fritillaria verticillata
|
|
Scientific classification
|
Kingdom:
|
Plantae
|
Clade:
|
Tracheophytes
|
Clade:
|
Angiosperms
|
Clade:
|
Monocots
|
Order:
|
Liliales
|
Family:
|
Liliaceae
|
Subfamily:
|
Lilioideae
|
Tribe:
|
Lilieae
|
Genus:
|
Fritillaria
|
Species:
|
F. verticillata
|
Binomial name
|
Fritillaria verticillata
|
Synonyms[1]
|
- Corona verticillata (Willd.) Fisch. ex Graham
- Fritillaria albidiflora X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria albidiflora var. jimunaica (X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng) X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria albidiflora var. purpurea X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria albidiflora var. rhodanthera X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria albidiflora var. viridicaulina (X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng) X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria altaica Lam. ex Schult. & Schult.f.
- Fritillaria amoena Y.C.Yang
- Fritillaria borealixingjiangensis Y.K.Yang, S.X.Zhang & G.J.Liu
- Fritillaria heboksarensis X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria leucantha Fisch. ex Graham
- Fritillaria parvialbiflora var. viridicaulina X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria scandens Fisch. ex Schult. & Schult.f.
- Fritillaria tortifolia var. albiflora X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria tortifolia var. citrina X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria tortifolia var. parviflora X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Fritillaria verticillata var. albidiflora (X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng) G.J.Liu
- Fritillaria verticillata var. jimunaica X.Z.Duan & X.J.Zheng
- Imperialis leucantha Fisch. ex Graham
|
Fritillaria verticillata is a flowering plant in the lily family Liliaceae, native to Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Xinjiang, Kazakhstan and the Altay region of Siberia.[1][2]
It can grow to 60 cm (23.5 in) tall, usually with one flower at the top, but sometimes with as many as five. The leaves are mostly in whorls, with 4-7 leaves per node, each up to 10 cm long but rarely more than 10 mm across. The flowers are pendent, nodding, bell-shaped, white or pale yellow, sometimes with purple spots.[2][3][4][5]
It formerly included the variety Fritillaria verticillata var. thunbergii - now called Fritillaria thunbergii.[1]