| Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes atamasco | Common Atamasco-lily | Bottomland forests and adjacent road shoulders, wet meadows, sometimes in upland forests over mafic rocks. | Se. and sc. Virginia south to n. Florida, west to s. Mississippi. | ![]() (c) Cressler, Alan M. |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes bifida | Oxblood-lily | Persistent from horticultural use. | Native of South America (Uruguay, ne. Argentina, s. Brazil, and Paraguay). | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes candida | Fall Rain-lily | Cultivated, persistent or spreading from cultivation. | Native of South America. | ![]() (c) Cressler, Alan M. |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes chlorosolen | Brazos Rain-Lily, Evening Rain-Lily, Cebolleta | Prairies and other moist to dry habitats. | Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, s. Kansas, n. Texas, and s. New Mexico south into Mexico. | ![]() (c) Campos, Aidan |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes citrina | Yellow Zephyr-lily, Citron Rain-lily | Disturbed areas, waif from horticultural use. | Native of Central America and the West Indies. | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes drummondii | Ceboletta | Prairies, rocky areas, eastwards in disturbed areas such as lawns. | Louisiana and Texas south into Mexico (Coahuila, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí). | ![]() (c) Cressler, Alan M. |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes insularum | Island Zephyrlily | Disturbed areas, waif from horticultural use. | Native of West Indies. | ![]() (c) Gapp, Wes - CC-BY |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes jonesii | Jones's Rain-Lily | Low, sandy loam, open fields, swales, ditches, coastal bends. | Endemic to se. and s. Texas (Bee, Cameron, Goliad, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, and Vistoria counties) | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes longifolia | ||||
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes minuta | Pink Rain-lily | Disturbed areas. | Native of Mexico. | ![]() (c) Diamond, Alvin - CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes pulchella | Showy Zephyr-lily, Golden Zephyr-lily, Yellow Rain-lily | Low areas, especially in seasonally or intermittently flooded areas | Texas south to ne. Mexico (Nuevo León, Tamaulipas). | ![]() (c) Sommer, Rich - CC-BY |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes refugiensis | Refugio Zephyr-Lily | In open swales in prairies, on "tight sandy loam" (Carr 2016). | Endemic in se. Texas (Goliad, Refugio, and San Patricio counties). | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes robusta | Copperlily | Lawns, disturbed areas, waif from horticultural use. | Native of Brazil. | ![]() (c) Powell, Eric M - CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes rosea | Cuban Zephyrlily | Lawns, disturbed areas, persistent from horticultural use. | Native of the West Indies and Central America. | ![]() (c) Meeus, Sofie - CC0 |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes simpsonii | Florida Atamasco-lily, Red-margined Atamasco-lily | Dry to dry-mesic sandy soils (usually with admixture of shell hash) of coastal fringe sandhills or mainland maritime forests, usually associated with Quercus hemisphaerica, on barrier islands or within about 10 km of the ocean (NC, SC), pine flatwoods (FL, GA). | Se. North Carolina (Brunswick and Columbus counties) and ne. South Carolina (Horry and Georgetown counties); s. Georgia, c. and s. peninsular Florida. Populations further west along the Gulf Coast (such as s. Mississippi) may be introduced. | ![]() (c) Sorrie, Bruce A. - CC-BY |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes smallii | Small's Rain-Lily | Low areas. | Endemic to s. Texas (Cameron County), apparently not seen since the 1940s. | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes traubii | Traub's Rain-Lily | Prairies. | Se. Texas (including (Aransas, Brazoria, Colorado, Galveston and Refugio counties); possibly also in ne. Mexico. | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes treatiae | Wet savannas. | S. Georgia (Jones & Coile 1998) south to c. peninsular Florida. | ![]() (c) Ward, Scott G - CC-BY | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Zephyranthes tubispatha | Rio Grande Copperlily | Road shoulders, lawns, disturbed areas. | Native of s. Brazil and maybe also s. North America, where it was also found early, in Texas. Reported for Coastal Plain of Alabama (Woods & Diamond 2006), Georgia (Carter, Baker, & Morris 2009), Mississippi (Barbour 2017), and Florida. | ![]() (c) Clark, Laura - CC-BY |











