Erythronium americanum
Erythronium americanum is a delicate, spring ephemeral wildflower native to eastern North American woodlands, producing a single nodding, reflexed yellow lily bloom above a pair of beautifully mottled leaves before disappearing underground for the rest of the year. It symbolizes transience, spring renewal, and the precious, fleeting beauty of the natural world.
Liliaceae (Lily family)
Early spring (March to May); one of the first woodland wildflowers to bloom; flowers for approximately two weeks before the foliage yellows and the plant goes fully dormant

Similar flowers: yellow globe lilys and morning glorys also share similar meanings.
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Visit Full StorePartial to full shade; requires dappled woodland shade; blooms before the tree canopy leafs out in spring and goes dormant as shade deepens; does not tolerate direct summer sun
Consistent moisture required; does not tolerate drought; soil must remain evenly moist even when the plant is dormant underground in summer; absolutely drought intolerant
Moist, Humus-rich, Well-drained, Acidic to neutral (pH 4.5-6.5), Loamy woodland soil
Plant corms in late summer or early autumn, at least 4 inches (10 cm) deep; keep corms moist from purchase until planting as they deteriorate rapidly if allowed to dry out
Choose a site with moist, humus-rich, acidic woodland soil under deciduous trees; the site must retain moisture through summer even when the plant is dormant
Interplant with late-emerging perennials such as hostas, ferns, or astilbes to fill the gap left when plants go dormant in late spring or early summer
Allow self-seeding colonies to develop undisturbed over many years; trout lilies are slow to establish and individual plants may not flower for 5-7 years after a seed germinates
Never collect wild plants or corms; purchase only nursery-propagated stock and avoid disturbing established wild colonies
Disclaimer: Information provided is for educational purposes only. Consult healthcare professionals before using any plant medicinally.
A spring ephemeral is a plant that completes its entire above-ground life cycle in a very short window of early spring, before the surrounding deciduous trees leaf out and cast deep shade. Erythronium americanum is a classic spring ephemeral: it emerges, blooms, sets seed, and disappears back below ground, all within 6-8 weeks in early spring, leaving no trace above ground for the rest of the year.
This is very common with Erythronium americanum. Young plants grown from seed produce only a single mottled leaf for many years before they are mature enough to produce the pair of leaves that signals flowering readiness, which typically takes 5-7 or more years. A colony of trout lilies may contain many more juvenile single-leaf plants than flowering adults. This slow maturation is one reason wild colonies are so precious and why plants should never be collected from the wild.
Trout lilies are spring ephemerals that time their growth cycle to exploit the brief window of bright light and warmth on the forest floor before the tree canopy closes. Once the surrounding trees leaf out and cast deep shade, the plant cannot photosynthesize effectively, so it completes its seed set and withdraws all its resources back into the underground corm to wait until the following spring. The soil remains moist and the corm survives underground until the next year.
Yes, if you can provide the right conditions: a position under deciduous trees with moist, humus-rich, acidic woodland soil that never dries out, even in summer. The corms must be planted fresh in late summer or early autumn and kept consistently moist. Establishing a colony takes patience, as plants are slow to mature, but once settled they naturalize and spread slowly to form beautiful woodland carpets over many years.
The genus name Erythronium comes from the Greek erythros, meaning red, a reference not to E. americanum's yellow flowers but to the red-flowered European species Erythronium dens-canis (dog's tooth violet), which was the first species described and named when Linnaeus established the genus. The species name americanum simply means of America, indicating its North American origin.
Discover other flowers with similar meanings, characteristics, or cultural significance.

Calochortus amabilis
Yellow Globe Lily is a charming native California bulb with nodding, globe-shaped golden flowers that resemble delicate fairy lanterns. This spring ephemeral brings enchanting beauty to woodland gardens.

Ipomoea purpurea (and other spp.)
Morning Glory is a climbing vine famous for its trumpet-shaped flowers that open with the dawn and close by afternoon. These enchanting blooms symbolize love, affection, and the fleeting nature of life and beauty.

Erythronium spp. (incl. E. americanum, E. dens-canis)
Erythronium, commonly called Trout Lily or Fawn Lily, is a graceful spring woodland bulb bearing nodding, reflexed blooms in yellow, white, pink, or purple. It symbolizes transience, renewal, and the quiet joy of early spring.