[This taxon will be assessed for treatment in volume 3 of Flora of Oregon, which is not yet published.]
With its small cup-shaped flowers and fringed petals, fringe-cup is a perfumey supplement to any woodland garden. Perennial foliage grows in clusters of fuzzy scalloped leaves and supports two-foot wands of creamy pink or green flowers. This flowering groundcover is perfect for hummingbird lovers and flower arrangers alike, and thrives in drier, shady gardens.
as described under Tellima grandiflora
Leaves: stipules sheathing, greenish, ca. 5 mm, mem-branous; petiole 3-30 cm; blade 3.5-10 cm, ultimate margins ciliate. Inflorescences 40-90 cm, densely stipitate-glandular or glandular-hispid; bracts subtending pedicels scalelike. Flowers: hypanthium campanulate to widely urceolate, 4.5-9 mm, stipitate-glandular; sepals erect, elliptic, 1-3 mm, apex acute; petals erect proximally, spreading to reflexed distally, obovate, 5-7-lobed, 3-7 mm, lobes usually linear; stamens included, 0.8-1 mm; filaments 0.5 mm; styles included, 1-1.5 mm. Capsules ovoid, 7-8 mm. Seeds 100-150, 0.8-1 mm. 2n = 14.Flowering Apr-Jul. Moist forests, thickets, meadows, rocky slopes, often near streams; 0-2000 m; B.C.; Alaska, Calif., Idaho, Mont., Oreg., Wash.Tellima grandiflora is found in moist, shaded sites from Alaska and British Columbia to California south of San Francisco. It resembles species of Mitella in its finely pinnatifid petals but is distinguished from most of them by the two to three conspicuous, alternate, cauline leaves in Tellima. It is distinguished from M. caulescens by the latter´s basipetalous anthesis.