All species are prerennial, but most are herbaceous (not having a woody stem) and die back, after flowering or fruiting, to underground bulbs, corms, or rhizomes. New plants form from bulb division or sprout from seeds, but usually do not begin flowering until about the fourth year, after the bulb has developed sufficiently. The flowers have 3 petals and 3 sepals, often very similar (in which they are referred to as perianth segments: you needed to know that, I'm sure.) There are typically 6 stamens. The fruit is either dry and cracking at maturity or fleshy in certain species - it is divided into 3 segments. There are few exceptions to the above general description. |
Chlorogalum pomeridianum |
Fritillaria affinis |
Smilacine stellata |
Trillium ovatum |
Fritillaria affinis Flowers: Purple-brown with green spots (sometimes green-yellow with brown spots!), six pointed petals, hanging bell like, about one inch long. Blooms: February - April Leaves: Narrow, long, in whorls of 3 -5 around upper stem. Fruit/Seeds: ?? Location: Dry trails, Hazelnut Trail in San Pedro Valley Park, San Pedro Mountain road at higher elevations in sheltered canyons on the Pacifica side. Status: Native - Common. |
Photo by Bill and Barbara VanderWerf |
450x600 JPEG - 40K Photo by Bill and Barbara VanderWerf |
Further description & Comment: 1 -3 ft tall. A most striking plant when you can find it - you need to look carefully as it tends to fade in the background because of its brownish color. Bill and Barbara were fortunate to find the plant in these pictures standing so clear by itself. |
Scoliopus bigelovii
: Flowers: Three down-turned greenish sepals with pronounced purple veins, three up-turned purple petals; one flower per thread-like sprawling stem; foul odor. Blooms: February - April. Leaves: Broadly oblong, glossy green with purple spots, 4 - 6 inches long; two, sometimes three per plant; upright or flat on ground. Fruit/Seeds: ?? Location: Damp, shady trails. Hazelnut trail in San Pedro Valley County Park. Status: Native - Common. |
Scoliopus bigelovii 600x450 JPEG - 32K |
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Further description & Comment: 3 - 6 inches tall: It's scary looking, it grows in dark, damp places, it has a foul odor, and you usually stumble across them and scare yourself when looking for the more serene Trillium. What more excitement do you want from a plant? After "Forked Toothed Ookow", "Fetid Adder's Tongue" is my second favorite plant name on Montara Mountain. |
Smilacine racemosa
var amplexicaulis: Flowers: Creamy white, sometimes tinged pink; six petals, tiny, in dense branch clusters at top of stem, often in pyramidal formation. Blooms: March - April Leaves: Bright green, 3 - 6 inches long, semi-clasping, alternating along stem; parallel-veined, pointed ovals with wavy edges. Fruit/Seeds: Small berries developing from the flowers, beginning yellow, then turning green, finally red. May - July. Location: Damp, shady slopes along trails throughout the mountain. Status: Native - Common. |
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Further description & Comment: 1 - 3 feet tall, single stems that grow each year from a ground-level network of creeping rhizomes and succulent rootlets. The main difference between Smilacine racemosa (Fat/False Solomon's Seal) and Smilacine stellata (Slim/Starry Solomon's Seal) is apparent (I hope) in the pictures: one's fat and the other's slim. There are, of course, substantial differences in the leaves, flowers, habitats and general plant structures of the two species, but in the field it is the chunkiness and slimness that immediately distinguishes the two. | ||
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The roots of both species, but primarily Smilacine racemosa, are used in herbal medicines as anti-imflammatories and astringents. The fresh chopped root, cooked with honey, makes an excellent cough syrup. Fresh Smilacine root, ground up with a rock, can be an effective and soothing field poultice for stings, bites, burns, and small localized Poison Oak or Stinging Nettle - Stinging Phacelia rashes. Can't work any worse than Mugwort. |
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