Summary[edit] Description: English: Two trout lilies (Erythronium americanum) blooming, on woods floor above streambank, showing the dark-red stamens, recurved yellow petals, and the characteristic pair of gray-green and brownish speckled leaves (trout-like). Also called dog-tooth violet, from the shape of the bulb, but is not a violet. Duke Forest Korstian Division, Durham North Carolina. Date: 24 February 2013, 14:41:48. Source: Own work. Author: Dcrjsr. Camera location35° 59′ 38.7″ N, 79° 00′ 51.4″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 35.994083; -79.014278.
Summary[edit] Description: Erythronium pusaterii (Kaweah Lakes fawnlily). Southern Sierra Nevada, California. Date: 26 June 2010, 08:32. Source: Erythronium pusaterii. Author: John Game. . Description: British photographer. Work period: after 1965. Work location: United States, Australia, Polynesia, Fiji, United Kingdom, Switzerland. John Game from Berkeley, United States.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum) blooming in the Squaw Run valley, Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania. Date: 18 April 2015, 14:12:32. Source: Own work. Author: Cbaile19.
Description: Erythronium umbilicatum 20100313.1 US, SC, near Augusta, Savannah River Bluffs. Date: 13 March 2010, 07:21. Source: Dimpled Trout Lily Uploaded by Magnus Manske. Author: Jason Hollinger.
Summary[edit] Description: Erythronium grandiflorum. Family: Liliaceae (commonly known as the lily family). The eye-catching glacier lily blooms just after the snow melts. This gorgoeous flower grows in open forest and moist meadows; montane to subalpine zones. Date: 8 June 2014, 18:02. Source: Glacier Lily. Author: Forest Service Northern Region from Missoula, MT, USA. Camera location45° 52′ 44.03″ N, 110° 59′ 52.6″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 45.878897; -110.997945.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Trout lily (Erythronium americanum), fruits and leaves. Duke Forest Korstian Division, Durham, North Carolina USA. Date: 18 March 2012. Source: Own work. Author: Dcrjsr.
Erythronium californicum—California fawn lily. Grows in the wild from Del Norte County south to Sonoma and Lake Counties. Photographed at Regional Parks Botanic Garden located in Tilden Regional Park near Berkeley, CA.
Summary[edit] Description: English: A native white fawn lily growing in the Opal Creek Wilderness area. Date: 6 September 2006 (original upload date). Source: Own work. Author: Nickpdx.