Lycoris is a genus of 13–20 species of flowering plants in the family Amaryllidaceae, subfamily Amaryllidoideae.[3] They are native to eastern and southern Asia in China, Japan, southern Korea, northern Vietnam, northern Laos, northern Thailand, northern Burma, Nepal, northern Pakistan, Afghanistan, and eastern Iran. They were imported into North Carolina and now grow wild. In English they are also called hurricane lilies or cluster amaryllis. The genus shares the English name spider lily with two other related genera.[4][5][6]

Lycoris
Lycoris radiata
a species with long stamens
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Amaryllidaceae
Subfamily: Amaryllidoideae
Tribe: Lycorideae
Genus: Lycoris
Herb.[1]
Synonyms[2]
  • Pleurastis Raf.
  • Orexis Salisb.
Lycoris sanguinea, a species with short stamens
Lycoris and butterfly (Papilio xuthus) in Japan
Lycoris × albiflora in Chiba, Japan

Description

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They are bulb-producing perennial plants. The leaves are long and slender, 30–60 cm long and only 0.5–2 cm broad. The scape is erect, 30–70 cm tall, bearing a terminal umbel of four to eight flowers, which can be white, yellow, orange, or red. The flowers divide into two types, those with very long, filamentous stamens two or three times as long as the tepals (subgenus Lycoris; e.g. Lycoris radiata), and those with shorter stamens not much longer than the tepals (subgenus Symmanthus Traub & Moldenke; e.g. Lycoris sanguinea). The fruit is a three-valved capsule containing several black seeds. Many of the species are sterile, reproducing only vegetatively, and are probably of hybrid origin; several additional known hybrids occur.[4][5][7]

Selected species

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As of April 2015, the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families recognizes 22 species and one hybrid:[2]

  1. Lycoris albiflora Koidz. (treated as the hybrid L. × albiflora by some sources) – white spider lily - Jiangsu, Korea, Kyushu
  2. Lycoris anhuiensis Y.Xu & G.J.Fan - Anhui, Jiangsu
  3. Lycoris argentea Worsley - Myanmar
  4. Lycoris aurea (L'Hér.) Herb. (syn. Nerine aurea) – golden spider lily - China, Japan incl Ryukyu Is, Indochina, Taiwan
  5. Lycoris caldwellii Traub – magic lily - Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Zhejiang
  6. Lycoris chinensis Traub – yellow surprise lily - Henan, Jiangsu, Shaanxi, Sichuan, Zhejiang, Korea
  7. Lycoris flavescens M.Kim & S.Lee - Korea
  8. Lycoris guangxiensis Y.Xu & G.J.Fan - Guangxi
  9. Lycoris haywardii Traub - Japan
  10. Lycoris houdyshelii Traub - Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Matsu Islands, Japan
  11. Lycoris incarnata Comes ex Sprenger – peppermint surprise lily - Hubei, Yunnan
  12. Lycoris josephinae Traub - Sichuan
  13. Lycoris koreana Nakai - Korea, †Japan
  14. Lycoris longituba Y.C.Hsu & G.J.Fan – long tube surprise lily - Jiangsu
  15. Lycoris radiata (L'Hér.) Herb. – spider lily, red spider lily - China, Korea, Japan, Matsu Islands, Nepal; naturalized in Seychelles and in scattered places in United States
  16. Lycoris rosea Traub & Moldenke - Jiangsu, Zhejiang
  17. Lycoris sanguinea Maxim. – orange spider lily - Japan
  18. Lycoris shaanxiensis Y.Xu & Z.B.Hu - Sichuan, Shaanxi
  19. Lycoris sprengeri Comes ex Baker – tie dye surprise lily - Anhui, Hubei, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Matsu Islands
  20. Lycoris squamigera Maxim. – naked lady, surprise lily, magic lily, resurrection lily - Jiangsu, Shandong, Zhejiang, Japan, Korea; naturalized in Ohio, Tennessee
  21. Lycoris straminea Lindl. - Jiangsu, Zhejiang
  22. Lycoris uydoensis M.Kim - Korea
formerly included[2]

A few names have been coined using the name Lycoris but referring to species now considered better suited to other genera (Griffinia and Ungernia). Here are links to help you find appropriate information.

Hybrids[2]

In phylogenetic analyses based on chloroplast genes, Hori et al. found that all species of Lycoris they examined were nested within L. radiata. They suggest that the species of Lycoris presently recognized may not be distinct.[8]

Cultivation and uses

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Lycoris are extensively cultivated as ornamental plants in China and Japan, and also in other warm temperate regions of the world. In Japan, they are widely used at the edges of rice paddy fields to provide a strip of bright flowers in the summer, and over 230 cultivars have been selected for garden use. They are locally naturalised in the southeastern United States, where they are often called hurricane flowers, due to their blooming period coinciding with the peak of hurricane season.[9] In China, people often use them as decorations in festivals or celebrations.

Legends

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Since these scarlet flowers usually bloom near cemeteries around the autumnal equinox, they are described in Chinese and Japanese translations of the Lotus Sutra as ominous flowers that grow in Diyu (also known as Hell), or pinyin: Huángquán (traditional Chinese: 黃泉; simplified Chinese: 黄泉), and guide the dead into the next reincarnation.

When the flowers of Lycoris bloom, their leaves would have fallen; when their leaves grow, the flowers would have wilted. This habit gave rise to various legends. A famous one is the legend of two elves: Mañju (曼珠; Mànzhū), who guarded the flower, and Saka (沙華; 沙华; Shāhuá), who guarded the leaves. Out of curiosity, they defied their fate of guarding the herb alone and managed to meet each other. At first sight, they fell in love with each other. God, exasperated by their waywardness, separated the miserable couple, and laid a curse on them as a punishment: the flowers of Mañju shall never meet the leaves of Saka again.

It was said that when the couple met after death in Diyu, they vowed to meet each other after reincarnation. However, neither of them could keep their word.

In commemoration of the couple, some call the herbs "mañjusaka" (曼珠沙華; 曼珠沙华), a compound of "mañju" and "saka", instead of their standard name, shísuàn (石蒜). The same kanji name is used in Japanese, where it is pronounced manju-shage.

Some other legends have it that when a person sees someone that they may never meet again, these flowers would bloom along the path. Perhaps because of these sorrowful legends, Japanese people often used these flowers in funerals. The common Japanese name for Lycoris, higanbana (彼岸花), is literally "higan (the far shore of the Sanzu River) flower", or a decorative flower of the afterlife in Sukhavati (極楽浄土, Gokuraku Jyōdo).

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Herbert, William. 1820. Botanical Magazine 47: page 5 in commentary to plate 2113 in English
  2. ^ a b c d Search for "Lycoris", World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, retrieved 2012-04-12
  3. ^ Stevens, P.F., Angiosperm Phylogeny Website: Asparagales: Amaryllidoideae
  4. ^ a b What is the Genus Lycoris?: Taxonomy Archived 2007-06-30 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Flora of China: Lycoris 石蒜属 shi suan shu
  6. ^ Germplasm Resources Information Network: Lycoris Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ What is the Genus Lycoris?: Species Evolution by Hybridization in the genus Lycoris Archived 2009-09-26 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Hori, TA; Hayashi, A; Sasanuma, T & Kurita, S (2006), "Genetic variations in the chloroplast genome and phylogenetic clustering of Lycoris species", Genes Genet. Syst., 81 (4): 243–253, doi:10.1266/ggs.81.243, PMID 17038796
  9. ^ "ENH1038/EP255: Hurricane Lilies, Lycoris Species, in Florida".
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