46 results for family: Liliaceae.
| Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
| Liliaceae | Cardiocrinum | | | | |
| Liliaceae | Cardiocrinum cordatum | | Waif on ore piles. | Native of Japan. | |
| Liliaceae | Clintonia | Clintonia | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Clintonia borealis | Bluebead-lily, Yellow Clintonia | Spruce-fir forests, northern hardwood forests, less commonly in red oak forests, cool rocky seepages. | NL (Labrador) west to MB, south to NJ, PA, and n. IN, and in the mountains to w. NC, e. TN, and n. GA (Jones & Coile 1988). | 
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| Liliaceae | Clintonia umbellulata | Speckled Wood-lily, White Clintonia | Red oak and other oak forests, mesic to dry ridges and slopes, less commonly in northern hardwood forests, generally at lower elevations than C. borealis, though the two species can co-occur. | An Appalachian endemic: w. NY west to s. OH, south to n. GA (Jones & Coile 1988). | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium | Trout Lily, Fawn Lily, Dogtooth-violet | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium albidum | White Trout Lily, Blonde Lilian | Rich, mesic forests, over calcareous substrates or in very nutrient-rich alluvial soils. | S. ON west to MN, south to n. VA, n. AL, MS, MO, OK, and ne. TX. Reports from nw. GA are erroneous (M. Medley, 2019, pers. comm.). | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium americanum ssp. americanum | American Trout Lily | Moist bottomland or slope forests, especially over mafic or calcareous rocks. | NB west to ON and MN, south to sc. NC, c. TN, n. AR, and OK. GA records are apparently sight-records and lack specimens (R. Oliver, pers. comm.; 2024). | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium americanum ssp. harperi | Harper's Trout Lily | Moist forests. | Ne. TN and nc. TN south to extreme se. TN, nw. GA, and nc. AL. | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium dens-canis | | | | |
| Liliaceae | Erythronium mesochoreum | Prairie Trout-lily, Midland Fawn-lily | Prairies, dry woodlands. | S. IN, n. IL, IA, and e. NE south to se. MO, c. AR, and e. TX. | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium rostratum | Beaked Trout Lily | Moist bottomland or slope forests. | C. TN, MO, and se. KS, south to c. AL, wc. LA, se. OK, and ne. TX. | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium umbilicatum ssp. monostolum | Southern Appalachian Trout Lily | High elevation coves, slopes, and grassy balds, moist forests. | Ssp. monostolum is endemic to the high mountains of NC and TN; it approaches the VA border and should be sought, especially in the Grayson Highlands area. A puzzling population in n. AL may represent this taxon. There are apparently collections from n. GA (L. Chafin 217; 224; 244) representing this taxon (R. Oliver, pers. comm.; 2024). | 
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| Liliaceae | Erythronium umbilicatum ssp. umbilicatum | Dimpled Trout Lily | Moist bottomland or slope forests, or in rather dry upland habitats. | VA and e. WV south through NC, SC, and e. TN to c. GA, e. AL, and Panhandle FL. | 
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| Liliaceae | Liliaceae | Lily Family | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium | Lily | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium ×pseudograyi | | Bogs and seepages. | W. VA and w. NC. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium canadense | Canada Lily | Wet meadows, clearings, coves, seepages. | NB west to s. ON, south to NC, SC, GA, AL, and MS. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium candidum | | | | |
| Liliaceae | Lilium catesbyi | Pine Lily, Catesby's Lily, Leopard Lily | Pine savannas, sandhill seeps. | Se. NC south to s. FL and west to e. LA, on the Coastal Plain. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium formosanum | Formosa Lily | Roadsides. | Native of e. Asia. | |
| Liliaceae | Lilium grayi | Gray's Lily, Roan Lily | Bogs, seepages, grassy balds, moist forests, and wet meadows, at medium to high elevations. | A Southern Appalachian endemic: sw. VA, nw. NC, and ne. TN. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium iridollae | Panhandle Lily, Pot-o’-gold Lily | Bogs, acidic organic soils along small blackwater streams and drains. | Panhandle FL west to s. AL and s. MS. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium lancifolium | Tiger Lily | Roadsides, old homesites, disturbed areas, trash heaps. | Native of Asia. Reported for La Flore County, OK (Serviss, Campbell, & Fuller (2024). | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium longiflorum | Easter Lily, November Lily | Fields and other disturbed areas, persistent and rarely spreading from cultivation. | Native of e. Asia (s. Japan and Ryukyu Islands). | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium michauxii | Carolina Lily, Michaux’s Lily | Dry upland forests, ridges, slopes, and ridges. | S. VA, e. TN, n. AL, c. MS, and e. LA south to s. SC, Panhandle FL, s. AL, s. MS, s. LA, and e. TX. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium michiganense | Michigan Lily | Wet prairies and calcareous hardwood flatwoods. | ON and MN south to e. TN, KY, nw. GA, AL, AR, and e. OK. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium philadelphicum var. andinum | Western Wood Lily | Prairies and woodlands. | Var. andinum is more western, ranging from QC, OH, MN, and BC south to OH, IN, IL, MO, w. TX, and NM. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium philadelphicum var. philadelphicum | Eastern Wood Lily, Appalachian Wood Lily | Grassy balds, moist to wet meadows (especially in thin soils over rock), open woodlands, limestone barrens. | The species ranges from ME west to BC, south to NC, nw. GA (Jones & Coile 1988), KY, IL, IA, NE, and NM. Var. philadelphicum is eastern and mainly Appalachian, ranging from ME and s. ON south to NC, GA, and KY. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium philippinense | Philippine Lily | Roadsides, disturbed areas, escaped from cultivation. | Native of the Philippines. This species is introduced at various locations in the Southeast, including FL and LA (Kartesz 1999), and has been documented from Richmond Co. NC (B.A. Sorrie, pers. comm.). | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium pyrophilum | Sandhill Bog Lily, Fire Lily | Peaty sandhill seepage bogs in the fall-line Sandhills, streamhead canebrakes. | Fall-line Sandhills region of NC, SC, and e. GA. Material from ne. NC and se. VA is controversial as to identity (W. Wall, pers. comm., 2016). Newly discovered material in GA appears to be L. pyrophilum. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium regale | Royal Lily | | Native of e. Asia. | 
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| Liliaceae | Lilium superbum | Turk's-cap Lily, Lily-royal, Superb Lily | Cove forests and moist forests, moist ravines, blackwater stream swamps, Coastal Plain bogs. | MA and s. NY south to ne. NC, Panhandle FL, and c. MS, southward primarily in the Appalachians, but extending across the Piedmont to the Coastal Plain of VA and ne. NC, and with a similarly odd extension south of the southern terminus of the Appalachians into the Coastal Plain of GA, w. FL, AL, and MS. | 
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| Liliaceae | Medeola | Indian Cucumber-root | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Medeola virginiana | Indian Cucumber-root | Moist forests, usually with acidic soils. | QC and ON west to MN, south to GA, Panhandle FL, and LA. | 
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| Liliaceae | Prosartes | Fairybells, Mandarin | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Prosartes lanuginosa | Yellow Mandarin, Yellow Fairybells | Deciduous forests, especially coves. | Primarily an Appalachian species: NY and s. ON south to n. GA (Jones & Coile 1988) and AL; disjunct in the Interior Highlands of AR. | 
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| Liliaceae | Prosartes maculata | Spotted Mandarin, Nodding Mandarin | Nutrient-rich deciduous forests, especially cove forests. | S. WV and s. OH south to sw. NC, n. GA, ne. AL; disjunct in se. MI. | 
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| Liliaceae | Streptopus | Twisted-stalk | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Streptopus amplexifolius | White Mandarin, Pagoda-bells | Moist forests and seepages at high elevations. | The species is circumboreal, the range fragmented. | 
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| Liliaceae | Streptopus lanceolatus var. lanceolatus | Eastern Rose Mandarin, Eastern Twisted-stalk, Rosybells, Scootberry, Liverberry, Rose-Bellwort | Moist forests at high elevations, especially spruce-fir and northern hardwoods forests. | S. NL (Labrador) west to MI, south to NJ and PA, and in the mountains to w. NC, e. TN, and ne. GA. | 
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| Liliaceae | Tricyrtis | Toad Lily | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Tricyrtis hirta | Toad Lily | Disturbed areas, persistent or weakly spread from horticultural use. | Native of e. Asia. | 
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| Liliaceae | Tulipa | Tulip | | | 
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| Liliaceae | Tulipa gesneriana | Didier's Tulip | Disturbed areas. | Native of w. Turkey. | 
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| Liliaceae | Tulipa sylvestris | Tulip, Dutch-lily | Very commonly cultivated, occasionally persistent or weakly naturalized. | Native of w. Asia. "Occasionally naturalized in moist meadows, fields and roadsides" in se. PA (Rhoads & Block 2007) and MD (Kartesz 1999). | 
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