Opening buds (above) and open flowers (below) of spring crocus (Crocus vernus). The orange anthers and the frilly, three-lobed style are visible in the lower images.
Spring crocus (Crocus vernus) is native to alpine regions of Europe, but widely escaped from domestic gardens in the U.S. Given its early blooming and the flowers’ short duration, it probably qualifies as a “spring ephemeral.” The plant is short (4-6″) but blooms before most other plants emerge. the leaves are 3-6″ long and less than 1/4″ wide, dark green with a distinctive silver-white medial stripe. Flowers are up to 6″ tall, bell-shaped, 1-1.5″ wide with six white to purple tepals in two overlapping whorls of three; the stamens are white with long yellow or orange anthers, the styles are yellow-orange, three-lobed, with a fringe of narrow processes. You’ll know it when you see it.
Color variants of spring crocus (Crocus vernus) on Wooded Island.
Spring crocus (Crocus vernus) is native to alpine regions of Europe, but widely escaped from domestic gardens in the U.S. Given its early blooming and the flowers’ short duration, it probably qualifies as a “spring ephemeral.” The plant is short (4-6″) but blooms before most other plants emerge. The leaves are 3-6″ long and less than 1/4″ wide, dark green with a distinctive silver-white medial stripe. Flowers are up to 6″ tall, bell-shaped, 1-1.5″ wide with six white to purple tepals in two overlapping whorls of three; the stamens are white with long yellow or orange anthers, the styles are yellow-orange, three-lobed, with a fringe of narrow processes. You’ll know it when you see it.
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