Wild daffodil (Narcissus pseudonarcissus) flowers. Upper right: close-up of a single flower showing the bent stem behind the flower, the six yellow tepals, and the large central corona. Lower right, lower left: clusters of flowers on Wooded Island. Note the bent stems behind the flowers/buds and the large central corona. Upper left: a dense colony of wild daffodil on Wooded Island. Only one bloom is open, but you can see multiple stems with flower buds in all stages from the two elements vertically aligned to the distal section of the stem and bud bent over at right angles to the basal stem section.
Wild daffodil is just a daffodil that has escaped cultivation — the species is native to western Europe. Wild daffodil stems get up to 20″ tall; they are unbranched with a single flower at their apex. The leaves are basal, 8-20″ long, about 1/2″ wide, flat, and blue-green in color. The stem and flower bud are initially aligned, but the upper part of the stem becomes plastic for a short period, deforming to reorient the upper part of the stem (and the bud) to a position perpendicular to most of the stem. Each flower consists of a conical basal section (think “calyx”) with six spreading, yellow lobes (equivalent to tepals). Where the lobes/tepals bend backwards, a tubular, yellow, crinkled corona perpendicular to the tepals surrounds the reproductive structures (six stamens and a single style with a three-lobed stigma). Fruits are rarely produced. The corona is relatively longer and bigger in diameter in wild daffodil than it is in poet’s daffodil. Keep pets (and small children) away from wild daffodil — if ingested, it induces severe vomiting.
A dense colony of wild daffodil (Narcissus pseudonarcissus) surrounded by striped squill on Wooded Island. Only one bloom is open, but you can see multiple stems with flower buds in all stages from the two elements vertically aligned to the distal section of the stem and bud bent over at right angles to the basal stem section.
Wild daffodil is just a daffodil that has escaped cultivation — the species is native to western Europe. Wild daffodil stems get up to 20″ tall; they are unbranched with a single flower at their apex. The leaves are basal, 8-20″ long, about 1/2″ wide, flat, and blue-green in color. The stem and flower bud are initially aligned, but the upper part of the stem becomes plastic for a short period, deforming to reorient the upper part of the stem (and the bud) to a position perpendicular to most of the stem. Each flower consists of a conical basal section (think “calyx”) with six spreading, yellow lobes (equivalent to tepals). Where the lobes/tepals bend backwards, a tubular, yellow, crinkled corona perpendicular to the tepals surrounds the reproductive structures (six stamens and a single style with a three-lobed stigma). Fruits are rarely produced. The corona is relatively longer and bigger in diameter in wild daffodil than it is in poet’s daffodil. Keep pets (and small children) away from wild daffodil — if ingested, it induces severe vomiting.
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