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Habitat: Pine savannas, seepage bogs, pocosins. In the remote centers of peat domes and large peat-filled Carolina bays in NC, Sarracenia flava is sometimes very abundant, occasionally the dominant plant over areas exceeding several square kilometers
Narrowed base of the hood usually purple-spotted, its sides strongly rolled away from orifice, per Weakley's Flora (2022).
Scapes shorter than pitchers, per Weakley's Flora.
The drooping, bright lemon-yellow petals usually drop within a week or so, per Orchids, Carnivorous Plants, and Other Wildflowers of the Green Swamp, NC (Fowler, 2015).
Habitat: Seepage bogs, sandy shores of shallow streams
Resembles S. flava, but the pitchers pale green and petals yellowish-green, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Habitat: Sandhill seepage bogs, pocosins, wet savannas
Flowers grow singly atop leafless stems about as tall as the leaves, per Wildflowers of the Sandhills Region (Sorrie, 2011).
Leaves erect, 4-28" tall, reddish to greenish, with a rather small orifice, per Atlantic Coastal Plain Wildflowers (Nelson, 2006).
Hoods are held horizontal and held closely over the orifice, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Bogs, cataract seeps over bedrock
Flowers nod, and they have a large, rather flat, umbrella-shaped style, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Flowers have 5 incurved, deciduous, red-purple petals only 1" long, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Hoods are ascending, leaving the orifice exposed, per Weakley's Flora.
Summer pitchers narrow, elongate (avg 40-50cm), ~ 20x as long as mouth's width, per Weakley's Flora.
Scapes are about the same height as the pitchers, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Wet savannas
Pitchers and scapes less than 35cm tall, per Weakley's Flora.
Small white patches surrounded by reddish tissue decorate the hood, per Atlantic Coastal Plain Wildflowers (Nelson, 2006).
Hood arching horizontally over the orifice, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Mountain bogs, seepage bogs, cataract bogs
Hood lobes closely incurved, touching each other or nearly so, per Weakley's Flora.
Hairs lining the inner surface of the hood averaging 0.8-1.0mm long, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Bogs
Petals red to deep maroon, per Weakley's Flora (2012).
Pitchers greater than 3x long as broad, glabrous on the outer surface, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Wet pine savannas, sandhill seepage bogs, hillside seepage bogs
Leaf tip is an erect hood, the end of the leaf tube a thickened shiny lip, per Wildflowers of the Sandhills Region (Sorrie, 2011).
Leaves are short-tubular and "squat," with a broad wing lengthwise, per Wildflowers of the Sandhills Region (Sorrie, 2011).
Leaves lie horizontal but curve upward; erect hood doesn't cover mouth, per Guide to the Wildflowers of SC, 1st ed. (Porcher & Rayner, 2001).
Petals bright red, per Weakley's Flora.
Hairs lining the inner surface of the hood 1.5-3-mm long, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Wet pine savannas and seepage bogs
Pitchers mostly decumbent, not marked with white on the hood, per Weakley's Flora (2022).
Habitat: Wet pine savannas
Hood erect or ascending; a network of red venation surrounds white tissue, per Weakley's Flora.
Areas of white tissue all around summit of pitcher and throughout hood, per Weakley's Flora.
Habitat: Savannas, less commonly on floating peat mats
Petals maroon-red, obovate distally; style disc yellow-green w reddish margins, per Flora of North America.
Pitchers mostly decumbent; lateral wing of the pitcher very prominent, per Weakley's Flora (2022).
Hood of the pitcher globose; orifice formed by the fusion of the hood margins, per Weakley's Flora.
The hood almost covers the opening, per Wildflowers of the Eastern United States (Duncan & Duncan, 1999).