Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Specimen Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
    • Exsiccati Search
  • Images
    • Image Library
    • Search Images
  • Inventories
    • State Floras
    • Kentucky Flora
  • Dynamic Tools
    • Dynamic Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
Sarracenia flava L.  
Family: Sarraceniaceae
Yellow Pitcherplant
Sarracenia flava image
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
T. Lawrence Mellichamp, Frederick W. Case in Flora of North America (vol. 8)
Plants forming dense clumps; rhizomes 1-2.5 cm diam. Pitchers marcescent, appearing after the first flowers, producing 1 flush of pitchers in spring through early summer, erect, yellowish green throughout, often with dark red blotches on neck, dark red veins on distal portions of tube and hood, or whole tube heavily suffused bronze or purplish red, without white areolae, 25-90(-100) cm, thick, firm, surfaces glabrous, wings 0.5-1(-2) cm wide; orifice broadly ovate, 2-7(-8) cm diam., rim green, flaring and loosely revolute, often with prominent, everted indentation immediately distal to wing forming spout over wing; hood recurved adaxially, held well beyond and covering orifice, yellow-green, red-veined or suffused with bronze-red, without white areolae, orbiculate-reniform, not undulate, 3-10 × (3-)5-14 cm, ± as long as wide, proximal margins broadly cordate, opposite lobes reflexed abaxially, touching or nearly touching, neck (often red-blotched or red-veined), constricted, 1-3 cm, margins revolute, apiculum (2-)3-12(-18) mm, adaxial surface glabrous. Phyllodia 2-4(-5), erect, oblanciform, (8-)12-30 × 1-3 cm. Scapes 15-60 cm, shorter than pitchers; bracts 1-2 cm. Flowers strongly ill-scented; sepals yellowish green, 3-5 × 2-3.5 cm; petals yellow, distal portion ovate to narrowly elliptic, 5-8.5 × 3-4 cm, margins entire; style disc yellow-green, 6-8 cm diam. Capsules 1.4-2 cm diam. Seeds 1.8-2.5 mm. 2n = 26. Flowering Mar-Apr. Wet pine savannas and flatwoods, peat-based Carolina bays, pond-cypress swamps, bogs, pineland seepage slopes, streamhead ecotones, baygalls, titi thickets; 0-300 m; Ala., Fla., Ga., N.C., S.C., Va., Wash. Sarracenia flava ranges from the southeastern coastal plain of Virginia and isolated piedmont localities in North Carolina through the coastal plain of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and the western Florida panhandle mostly near and west of the Ochlockonee River and west just into southeastern Alabama, with isolated sites in northeastern Florida. It is naturalized in Skagit County, Washington. Sarracenia flava is a striking plant, often forming large stands, at least historically. It is much less common with the advent of drainage and changing land use. It has one main flush of pitchers in spring to early summer. It is quite variable over its range with regard to vein patterns and markings on the pitchers, and at least seven varieties have been formally named (see D. E. Schnell 2002).

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Lvs erect, 3-8 dm, slender, gradually widened distally and widest at the summit, the wing seldom as much as 1 cm wide, the hood depressed-ovate and raised on a stipe-like base; scapes to 1 m; fls 8-10 cm wide, the pet yellow; 2n=26. Sandy bogs and wet pine-lands; se. Va. to n. Fla. and s. Ala. May. A hybrid with no. 1 [Sarracenia purpurea L.] is S. أatesbaei Elliott.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Sarracenia flava
Open Interactive Map
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Sarracenia flava image
Click to Display
100 Initial Images
- - - - -
View All Images
The National Science Foundation
This project made possible by National Science Foundation Award 1410069
Powered by Symbiota.