Gagea serotina, synonym Lloydia serotina, is an Arctic–alpine flowering plant of the lily family.[2] It is widespread across the mountainous parts of western North America, from Alaska to New Mexico, and in Europe is found in the Alps and Carpathians, as well as in Great Britain. It is also native to much of Central Asia, Siberia, China, Nepal, Mongolia, Korea and Japan.[1][3]
Species of flowering plant in the family Liliaceae
Ornithogalum bracteatum Torr. [1827], illegitimate homonym not Thunb. [1794]
Gagea bracteata Schult. & Schult.f.
Lloydia striata (Willd.) Sweet
Nectarobothrium striatum (Willd.) Ledeb.
Nectarobothrium redowskianum Cham.
Lloydia sicula A.Huet
It was originally known as mountain spiderwort, but is now known in Great Britain as the Snowdon lily, or in Welsh as brwynddail y mynydd (meaning "rush-leaves of the mountain").[4] In North America, it is called the common alplily. It is also known as Snowdon alplily.[5]
Description
Side view of Gagea serotina flower showing purple veins
For most of the year, the plant is visible only as long, curving, stiff, grass-like leaves, often protruding through cushions of other plants. The flowers appear from June onwards (despite the name serotina, meaning "late-flowering"), and are borne at the end of long stalks. The flowers themselves are white, with purple or reddish veins along the tepals.[6][7][8]
In Great Britain, G.serotina is an ice age relict, only found on a few inaccessible sites in Snowdonia National Park, Cwm Idwal being one such site, and seems to have developed in isolation since the glacial period. Although the total Welsh population may number fewer than 100 bulbs, the Welsh plants are genetically distinct from other populations of the same species, and are more diverse than those found in the Alps.[9]
While their inaccessibility protects the plants to a certain degree against grazing by sheep and trampling by hikers, they are likely to suffer under climate change, and it is believed that G. serotina will be the first plant to become extinct in Britain as a result of global warming. Plans are therefore being considered to introduce the plant to sites in Scotland, where it may survive in the longer term.[10]
It became a protected species in the UK in 1975 under the Conservation of Wild Creatures and Wild Plants Act.[11]
Taxonomy
The genus Lloydia was formerly considered distinct from Gagea, this species being called Lloydia serotina.[12] All the species of Lloydia are now included in Gagea.[13][14]
Robin Gwyndaf (2006). The Mountain Man. A portrayal of Evan Roberts, Capel Curig, rockman, botanist and conservationist. Capel Curig: Friends of St. Julitta's Church. ISBN0-9552995-0-0.
Lee, Sangtae; Chang, Kae Sun, eds. (2015). English Names for Korean Native Plants(PDF). Pocheon: Korea National Arboretum. p.524. ISBN978-89-97450-98-5. Retrieved 14 March 2019– via Korea Forest Service.
John Bellenden Ker Gawler. 1816. Quarterly Journal of Science and the Arts. London. 1: 180, Gagea serotina
Heinrich Gottlieb Ludwig Reichenbach. 1830. Flora Germanica Excursoria 102, as Lloydia serotina
B. Jones, C. Gliddon & J. E. G. Good (2001). "The conservation of variation in geographically peripheral populations: Lloydia serotina (Liliaceae) in Britain". Biological Conservation. 101 (2): 147–156. doi:10.1016/S0006-3207(01)00055-6.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
T. G. Tutin; V. H. Heywood; N. A. Burges; D. M. Moore; D. H. Valentine; S. M. Walters; D. A. Webb, eds. (1980). Flora Europaea. Vol.5. Cambridge University Press. p.25. ISBN978-0-521-20108-7.
"Lloydia". World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 2014-01-09.
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