In
cedar glades of
middle Tennessee,
S. parvula flowers, sets seed, and forms moniliform
tubers in May and early June, after which the aerial shoots die back by late June. The species persists through both seeds and tubers. Most seeds are dormant when mature but afterripen during summer and typically
germinate in late summer or autumn, producing overwintering
rosettes. The tubers each bear a
terminal bud that gives rise to a new
shoot. In favorable conditions, some shoots may emerge in late summer and complete flowering and fruiting in autumn, but most emerge in autumn and overwinter as rosettes before flowering the following spring. == Taxonomy ==