Maianthemum trifolium (Three-leaf Solomon's-seal, three-leaf Solomon's-plume, threeleaf false lily of the valley, smilacine trifoliée) is a species of flowering plant that is associated with extremely wet environments and is native to Canada and the northeastern United States as well as St. Pierre and Miquelon and Asia (Siberia).[3]
Description
It is a herbaceousperennial plant growing erect, 10–25cm (4–10in) tall. It grows off spreading sympodialrhizomes with roots found only at nodes. New plants produce two petiolate foliage leaves the first year,[4] then a flowering shoot the second year with 2-4 sessile leaves.
Leaves
Fertile plants have 2-4 alternate leaves that are elliptic, 5–12cm (1.97–4.72in) long and 2.5–4cm (1–1+1⁄2in) broad.[3] Leaf bases are narrowly tapered and tips pointed.
Flowering clusters
5 to 15 flowers are produced on a simple raceme5–10cm (2–4in) long. There is only one flower per node, set on a 1–3mm (0.04–0.12in) long pedicel.
Flowers and fruits
Flowers are trimerous, that is, flower parts are in groups of three. Each flower has 6 white tepals2–4mm (0.08–0.16in) long. Fruits are berries4–6mm (0.16–0.24in) wide, mottled with fine red spots when young, maturing to red. Berries contain 1-3 small, rounded seeds. Flowering is May to June, berries remain on plants into September.[3]
Distribution
Found in all Canadian provinces and territories and in the US in some northeastern states (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin). Also found in St. Pierre and Miquelon and Asia (Siberia).[3]
Habitat and ecology
Maianthemum trifolium often forms dense patches in wet forests, sphagnum bogs and other wetlands and is sometimes considered to be aquatic.[3]