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Native Bulbs By Pamela Thomas
Try some of these unusual and noteworthy native geophytes, which are
suited to a variety of gardens.
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Photo credits: Western
trout lily by Michael S. Thompson; Dutchman’s breeches by David
Cavagnaro.
Using native plants in the landscape comes naturally to me after working
for several years as a horticulturist at Garden in the Woods,
headquarters of the New England Wild Flower Society, in Framingham,
Massachusetts. And although I still think of Dutch iris, daffodils, and
tulips as stalwarts of the spring garden, there are many less commonly
cultivated native North American bulbs well worth incorporating into
traditional bulb plantings, perennial beds, or woodland gardens.
Collectively termed
geophytes, bulbs are divided into various subcategories based on their
specialized root structures. These include corms—swollen underground
stems; true bulbs—modified leaves and scales usually with a papery
covering; tubers—a mass of modified stem tissue with several points of
growth; tuberous roots—swollen roots that serve as storage organs; and
rhizomes—subsurface, horizontal swollen stems.
The diversity among
North American bulbs is astounding. Here are a few of my favorites
organized by habitat type and blooming time. I have focused primarily on
eastern natives because my experience has been with them, but the chart
on page 21 describes intriguing bulbs native to western North America.
Woodland Species
Bloodroot (Sanguinaria
canadensis, USDA Hardiness Zones 3–9, AHS Heat Zones 9–1) is one of
those harbingers of spring for gardeners in the Northeast, blooming just
after skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus) and hepaticas (Anemone
acutiloba, A. americana; these were formerly in the genus Hepatica).
Like many spring-flowering plants in the eastern deciduous forest,
bloodroot rushes to complete its bloom cycle early to take advantage of
maximum light conditions before the woodland canopy leafs out. Flowers
appear in mid-April, preceded by a clasping pair of rounded, deeply
lobed leaves that fold down and apart to unveil a single flower stalk of
pure white, daisylike flowers with yellow centers. The flowers last only
a short while, but the attractive deep green leaves persist and make a
handsome low groundcover through the summer.
Bloodroot has a wide natural range from Nova Scotia to southern
Manitoba, south to Texas and Florida, where it grows in shade or partly
sunny conditions in moist woods, slopes, and floodplains.
Other
spring-flowering bulbs ideal for the eastern woodland garden are
Dutchman’s breeches (Dicentra cucullaria, Zones 4–8, 8–1) and squirrel
corn (Dicentra canadensis, Zones 4–8, 8–4). Dutchman’s breeches are
named for their mid-April flowers, which resemble white inverted
pantaloons.
Opening a week later,
squirrel corn’s pendant, white, bell-shaped flowers are similar to the
popular Asian bleeding heart (Dicentra spectabilis), and the Appalachian
wild bleeding heart (D. eximia) but are smaller and lack the red or pink
coloration. Their fragrance is reminiscent of lilacs. The common name is
derived from squirrels’ predilection for their tasty yellow, tear-shaped
bulblets.
Dutchman’s breeches’
natural range is wide: from Nova Scotia and eastern Quebec south to
Georgia, Arkansas, and Kansas, with a few disjunct western populations.
Squirrel corn occurs naturally from southern Maine and Quebec, south to
North Carolina, Tennessee, and Missouri. Both Dutchman’s breeches and
squirrel corn have lacy fernlike foliage and do well in cultivation with
shade or filtered light in moist, rich soils.
Another
eastern woodland ephemeral that blooms in spring is the yellow trout
lily (Erythronium americanum, Zones 3–9, 9–2). It represents one of 14
North American Erythronium species, many of them western in origin (for
western native bulbs, see page 21). This species is widely distributed
in moist woodland habitats from Nova Scotia and western Ontario south to
Georgia and Florida. Emerging from small corms, the three-inch-long,
elliptical green leaves are splotched brown in lovely batiklike
patterns. The leaves appear in April, followed by bright yellow,
solitary flowers whose petals curl backwards to reveal long,
salmon-colored anthers. The flower’s throat is sometimes brushed in a
burnt rust color. The bloom cycle is concurrent with trout fishing
season, an association that gave rise to the plant’s common name.
Other early May
bloomers in the woodland garden are the ephemeral spring beauties
Claytonia caroliniana and C. virginica (both Zones 4–9, 6–1). C.
caroliniana is found in woods and bottomlands from Quebec and Ontario
south to Georgia. Claytonia virginica is found in moist woods from Nova
Scotia to Minnesota, south to the mountains of Tennessee and Georgia.
Claytonia caroliniana begins blooming a week or so ahead of C. virginica,
but otherwise the two species are very similar with white to light pink,
five-petaled flowers—sometimes with pink venation—borne in racemes on
six- to eight-inch stems, with two to 15 blooms. Each flower is a half
inch across and has rounded petals.
Both species have
fleshy, succulent leaves characteristic of the portulaca family to which
they belong. The linear leaves are arranged in opposite pairs along the
stem around which they wrap. Claytonia caroliniana has a slightly wider
leaf than C. virginica and it narrows to a more distinct petiole. The
corms of spring beauties look like small hazelnuts with bumpy scales.
Both species go dormant by summer, but in their prime, they look
wonderful planted in large groups with bloodroot, Virginia bluebells (Mertensia
virginica), maidenhair fern (Adiantum pedatum), and squirrel corn.…
Bulbs for Wet Spots
Another little-known
plant I came to admire at Garden in the Woods is swamp pink (Helonias
bullata, Zones 5–9, 9–5). The plants I know receive half a day of sun,
and are growing at the edge of a pond, at first submerged in water, then
in a muddy substrate as the pond edge subsides a bit. The plant forms
rosettes of straplike foliage; its cold-tolerant maroon leaves give way
to a new flush of short, fresh green basal leaves in spring, that
lengthen over the growing season. A two-foot central flower stalk
resembling a small drumstick rises in May or June. The
elliptically-shaped flower ball displays pink tepals and lavender blue
anthers with a fragrance that wavers between clove and jasmine. After
several years, swamp pinks form multiple clumps. Divide them by gently
pulling apart the thick, fleshy rhizomes after the plants are finished
flowering. Swamp pinks are considered a threatened species in the wild,
so be sure to look for nursery-propagated divisions if you want to grow
this beautiful plant in your garden.
When the flowers of
most eastern woodland bulbs have faded, feather fleece, also called
eastern featherbells (Stenanthium gramineum, Zones 7–9, 9–7), comes into
its own with a fine, floral display from August through October. Blooms
open from bottom to top revealing a multitude of small, white, deeply
incised flowers, arranged in open panicles on two- to four-foot stems.
The lower sprays of drooping flowers lend a graceful, airy effect to the
plant. It grows best in a sunny position in moist acid soil; its natural
habitats include floodplain forests, moist woods, meadows, and coastal
plain bogs. Its native range lies from Pennsylvania into Virginia, West
Virginia, Alabama, and Texas.
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