Lilies & Irises


This group includes any herbaceous monocot that has prominent flowers in which the flower parts are in two whorls. Monocots have one seed leaf compared to two in dicotyledons. Mature plants are recognised by parallel longitudinal veins in their often narrow leaves and by having flowers parts in threes or multiples of three.

Identification is largely on differences in flower parts, the number of flowers borne at each part of the stem from which a leaf is attached or on the form of basal leaves. Ideally records for lilies and irises should include close-up photographs of the flowers and basal leaves and a shot that shows flower arrangement along the stem.


Lilies & Irises

Announcements

7 Mar 2025

Since 1 Jan 2025, NatureMapr 44% of all sightings uploaded were NSW based, while 43% were from the ACT.The remaining 13% were from other states, with VIC coming in third at 5%.Strictly speaking, 67% o...


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Discussion

Darcy wrote:
2 hrs ago
G'day @Brouhaha you need to fix the GPS location of this sighting.

Unidentified Lily or Iris
Mike wrote:
Yesterday
There are too many Aloe species and cultivars to make species identification possible.

Aloe sp.
Tapirlord wrote:
Yesterday
An aloe

Aloe sp.
marcycad wrote:
6 Mar 2025
Yes, the very similar X. latifolia is not known to occur south of Woy Woy, NSW.

Xanthorrhoea arborea
plants wrote:
2 Mar 2025
Not trad. Looks like Pollia crispata, but there is no sale on the photos.

Dianella tasmanica
802,156 sightings of 21,665 species from 13,550 contributors
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