Identity
Unique IDELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.150574
Element CodePMLIL20140
Record TypeSPECIES
ClassificationSpecies
Classification StatusStandard
Name CategoryVascular Plant
IUCNLeast concern
Endemicendemic to a single nation
KingdomPlantae
PhylumAnthophyta
ClassMonocotyledoneae
OrderLiliales
FamilyMelanthiaceae
GenusTrillium
Other Common Namesfurrowed wakerobin (EN) Furrowed Wakerobin (EN)
Concept ReferenceKartesz, J.T. 1994. A synonymized checklist of the vascular flora of the United States, Canada, and Greenland. 2nd edition. 2 vols. Timber Press, Portland, OR.
Conservation Status
Rank Method Rank calculation - Biotics v2
Review Date2019-11-13
Change Date1994-11-03
Edition Date2019-11-13
Edition AuthorsTreher (2019)
Threat ImpactMedium
Range Extent20,000-200,000 square km (about 8000-80,000 square miles)
Number of Occurrences81 to >300
Rank ReasonsTrillium sulcatum occurs primarily on the Cumberland Plateau in southern West Virginia, southwestern Virginia, northwestern North Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and eastern Kentucky. It is common in large parts of its range and rare at the southern periphery. It is likely impacted by threats common to most Trillium: white-tailed deer browse, wild hog damage, and competition with invasive species. Population size, number of occurrences, and trends are not known.
Range Extent CommentsTrillium sulcatum occurs primarily on the Cumberland Plateau in southern West Virginia, southwestern Virginia, northwestern North Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and eastern Kentucky. It is absent from the Great Smoky Mountains and the southern Blue Ridge Mountains (Case and Case 1997, FNA 2002a, Weakley 2015).
Occurrences CommentsThis species is described as locally abundant on the Cumberland Plateau (Case and Case 1997). It is uncommon in Alabama and Georgia, the states at the southern periphery of its range. In Tennessee, it is common on the Eastern Highland Rim, Ridge and Valley, and Unakas physiographic provinces (Tennessee Flora Committee 2015). It is described as frequent in Kentucky (Jones 2005). In Virginia, the species is frequent to locally common in the southwestern mountains and rare on the Piedmont (Virginia Botanical Associates 2019). The exact number of occurrences is not known but it is in the hundreds (SEINet 2019).
Threat Impact CommentsCommon threats to this species likely include herbivory by White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus), uprooting of rhizomes and habitat destruction by Wild Hogs (Sus scrofa), and competition from invasive plant species.
This species is expected to be effected by deer browse, like other Trillium. White-tailed Deer were found to "significantly reduced relative leaf area (a measure of growth) for all species, reduced the probability of subadult transitions to reproductives, and increased the probability of nonemergence" of plants study sites and this trend is expected to play out in areas where deer browse is intense (Leege et al. 2010).
For other species of Trillium occurring in the southeastern U.S.A., non-native hogs damage populations by rooting and digging in the soil, uprooting the rhizomes. This species is likely impacted as well.
Non-native species outcompete and displace the native flora but are believed to limit flowering and thus reproduction of this species. Invasive species that likely occur at sites for this species include Ligustrum sinense, Lonicera japonica, Microstegium vimineum, Elaeagnus pungens, Elaeagnus umbellata, Rosa multiflora, Melia azedarach, and Pueraria montana.
Wild harvesting for medicinal use, the commercial horticulture trade, or for personal use in home gardens by wildflower enthusiasts is not a documented threat to the species. This could change in the future and the potential for this threat should be monitored.