Triteleia ixioides is a perennial, herbaceous,
monocotyledon plant growing from an underground
corm. The plant produces one or two grass-like,
linear leaves about long by wide that emerge from the top of the corm in early spring. Like an onion, the leaves have a
keel (longitudinal ridge) on the underside and a channel on the upper side with straight margins and a smooth surface. In mature plants, the leaves are followed by production of a stiff, cylindrical
scape (flower stalk) that is tall, diameter, and is mostly smooth although sometimes
scabrous at the base. At the top of the scape are several thin green bracts that enclose the developing buds. As the flowers emerge these membranes peel back and shrivel. The flowers are borne in an
umbel (like an onion flower), with each on a slightly upcurved
pedicel long (up to in subspecies
cookii) connected to the top of the scape. As with all
Triteleia species, each flower has six
tepals (three in an outer
whorl and three in an inner whorl) that are fused into a
perianth tube at the base but then separate into distinct lobes surrounding the mouth of the flower.
Triteleia ixioides flowers range from straw-colored to golden yellow (or very occasionally white flushed with purple), with the colors of the upper and lower tepal surfaces similar. Each lobe has a distinct single
midvein, which is generally brown or purple (or occasionally green). Flowers are long overall. The perianth tube is relatively short () with an
acute base. (
Triteleia dudleyi is a similar, but less common species from high elevations in the Sierra Nevada that has a much longer tube with a rounded base.) The six free tepal lobes are long and are generally perpendicular to the tube but may range from
ascending to
reflexed. Inside the flower, the
stamen filaments provide the primary identifying character separating
Triteleia ixioides from related species, and distinguishing among the five described subspecies. Each stamen is attached to the corresponding tepal at the same height, but they alternate between short filaments (attached to the outer whorl of tepals) and long filaments (attached to the inner whorl). The filaments are dilated (broad) and flattened and each has a forked pair of
apical appendages that extend above the anther attachment. The appendages on the three longer filaments are pointed and conspicuous. The
anthers are long and may be colored white, cream, yellow or blue. Anther color was at one time used as a character to identify some subspecies, but is no longer regarded as a reliable guide. The
ovary is longer that the
stipe supporting it. Fertilized flowers form ovoid, capsular fruits that are
loculicidally dehiscent (i.e. they split vertically down the center of each of the three chambers when ripe). The seeds are black and somewhat spherical with a ridge on one side. The seed surface has relatively large irregularly distributed pits and at a finer scale is
granulate or granulate–
reticulate (i.e. bumpy with elements of a net-like arrangement). The
seed coat has a crust.
Triteleia ixioides exhibits a considerable amount of
polyploidy and reported
chromosome numbers are 2n = 10, 14, 16, 24, 32, 40, 42, 50. ==Taxonomy and phylogeny==