22. Calochortus greenei S. Watson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts. 14: 264. 1879. Greene’s mariposa-lily Stems usually branching, 1–3 dm. Leaves: basal persistent,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is a Flora? Peter Hovenkamp. What is not a Flora? Labwork/ecology paper Species selection on non-taxonomic criteria No identification tool Character.
Advertisements

IPNI & PhytoKeys Integration Nicky Nicolson (RBG Kew)
What is IBSE questioning?. Session Objectives To undertake an IBSE teacher training activity. To develop our IBSE questioning skills.
Foliar Indicators of Age in Louisiana Native Dwarf Palmetto Plants
Herbaria, Voucher Specimens, and YOUR research. Outline Herbaria What are they? The Intermountain Herbarium  Voucher specimens What are they? Why make.
Herbaria and Database Systems Michael G. Simpson.
National Herbarium of New South Wales Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust, Sydney New South Wales Flora Online Karen Wilson and Gary Chapple.
PlantCollections A Community Solution An Institute of Museum and Library Services National Leadership Grant Building Digital Resources.
Disasters and Human Factors Literature Nestor L Osorio Northern Illinois University.
Field Botany – Spring Course Website
Prioritising species for seed collection Dr Paul P. Smith, MSBP Co-ordinator southern Africa & Madagascar Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, United Kingdom.
n U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service National Plant Data Team (NPDT) NRCS: A repository of plant data P lant L ist.
Lamiaceae “Mint Family” By:Jaclyn Kuklock Monarda fistulosa Scutellaria Over 240 genera 6,500 species.
Brassicaceae (Cruciferae) Mustard Family ca. 420 genera />4100 species Lepidium (pepper grass, whitetop) Sisymbrium (London rocket) Brassica (cole crops)
PolemoniaceaE The Phlox Family.
Portulacaceae The Purslane Family Alex Stalboerger.
Fourth Annual Summit | Feb | Tucson, AZ Scratchpads for community involvement for natural history collections Dr Dimitris Koureas Biodiversity.
| 1| 1 eContentplus Stencil Final Conference, Kassel 1. December 2012 Sonia Hetzner
Utah Flora BOT2100 Lecture 7 Angiosperm Families III Including: Fabaceae Apiaceae Onagraceae Malvaceae.
Flora of North America North of Mexico Jay A. Raveill University of Central Missouri Jay A. Raveill University of Central Missouri.
Utah Flora BOT2100 Lecture 4 Monocots Including: Agavaceae Liliaceae Poaceae (Graminae)
Ecological Relationships Module 8D Summer All of you will be able to:  collect data to investigate a question about a habitat using appropriate.
Plains or Broadleaf Cottonwood Populus sargentii The Plains or broadleaf cottonwood is also the largest broadleaf tree of Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming.
Animal Species Database of China JI, Li-Qiang Institute of Zoology, CAS Beijing, China CODATA, 2006, Beijing.
Field Work, Herbaria, Databases, Floras, and Monographs for Plant Systematics Spring 2014.
Chestnut Phenotypes. Collecting samples in nature What is the goal? How do you identify those specimens you want from everything else that looks similar.
Utah Flora BOT2100 Lecture 5 Dicots I Including: Ranunculaceae Hydrophyllaceae Boraginaceae.
Ground-Truthing the Habitat Inventory for the Fraser River: Status Report and Lessons Learned March 2007 Fraser River Estuary Management Program.
Teacher Rare for a women to obtain a degree and become a teacher Researcher Bibliographer Professional interests Taxonomy Morphology Published.
 Herbs, shrubs, woody vines or trees  Leaves opposite or whorled, simple, stipulate; stipules sometimes indistinguishable from leaves in plants with.
An Introduction to Biological Descriptions Kevin Thiele Western Australian Herbarium Department of Environment and Conservation TDWG2008 Fremantle, Western.
Tiliaceae The Linden Family Ashlyn Kuklock. Tiliaceae… -Are trees, shrubs, or rarely herbs -Contain 50 genera and 450 species that are characterized by.
70-73 genera 400 species Tropics to subtropics, few temperate Shrubs or wood vines (less commonly trees). Leaves alternate, simple, estipulate. Dioecios.
Blue Beech Carpinus caroliniana. Classification KingdomPlantaePlants SubkingdomTracheobiontaVascular plants SuperdivisionSpermatophytaSeed plants DivisionMagnoliophytaFlowering.
plant leaves stem roots flower seeds Secondary vocabulary
Background The negative environmental and economic effects of invasive plant species are now widely appreciated. However, just 100 years ago, exotic plant.
 The Salicaceae consists of only two genera, Salix (willow) and Populus (aspen, poplar, and cottonwood.  The family is mostly north temperate in its.
Caesarweed Urena lobata (L.) Malvaceae. Biology Native to central/south AmericaNative to central/south America Accidentally introduced (unknown)Accidentally.
. “The Borage Family” (aka: Forget-Me-Not Family) Jennifer Ringgold.
Calico Flower Aristolochia littoralis syn. A. elegans (Parodi) Aristolochiaceae.
White Flowered Wandering Jew Tradescantia fluminensis (Vell.) Commelinaceae.
Coral Ardisia Ardisia crenata (Sims) Myrsinaceae.
Primulaceae The Primrose Family.
 Botany Unit. Plant Systematics  Basic process in plant taxonomy  Cataloging  Identifying  Classifying.
Corylus americana Walt.
Puncture Vine Tribulus cistoides (L.) Zygophyllaceae.
Flowering heads have from 8 to 30 (average 12) blue to lavender, or white, ray flowers that surround a central cluster of dark lavender disc flowers. Involucres.
By: Josh Carlson uid/images/11b.jpg.
PLANTS. Plants Language Arts BOOKS: The Carrot Seed; Pumpkin, Pumpkin; Pearl Plants a Tree; The Giving Tree; Trees ACTIVITIES: 1. Write a sequence of.
Flowers and Fruits
Mexican Petunia Ruellia brittoniana (Leonard) Acanthaceae.
Ecological Risk Assessment of Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) in Connecticut A review of published floras and approximately 2000 herbarium specimens at.
Plant Heritage Conserving Cultivated Plants Plant Conservation and National Plant Collections.
The perfect plant for the rain garden…
Solanaceae Nightshade Family ca. 90 genera /2600 species
RCN Development of an Online Database to Enhance the Conservation of SGCN Invertebrates in the Northeastern Region James W. Fetzner Jr. & John.
Iridaceae “The Iris Family”
Recording wildlife and Bioblitzes
Andropogon virginicus A threat to the EPPO region
A threat to the EPPO region
A threat to the EPPO region
Ambrosia confertiflora A threat to the EPPO region
Cardiospermum grandiflorum A threat to the EPPO region
A threat to the EPPO region
A threat to the EPPO region
BOTANICAL NAME ZINNIA ELEGANS.
Field Work, Herbaria, Databases, Floras,
IEEE Transactions Journals Scopus Viewpoint
Interactive Keys for Plant Identification
Mr. Green’s Homeroom 6-4 SEED BOMBS.
Presentation transcript:

22. Calochortus greenei S. Watson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts. 14: Greene’s mariposa-lily Stems usually branching, 1–3 dm. Leaves: basal persistent, ca. 2 dm; blade glabrous adaxially. Inflorescences 1–5-flowered. Flowers erect; perianth open, campanulate; sepals 25–30 mm; petals purplish, with darker purple abaxial crescent distal to gland, 30–40 mm, not ciliate at base, ± hairy; glands deeply depressed, bordered proximally by wide ciliate membrane, distally by short hairs. Capsules erect, 3-winged, ellipsoid, 20–25 mm. Seeds irregular. Flowering mid summer. Shrubby hillsides, open woodlands, dry soils and slopes; of conservation concern; m; Calif., Oreg. Peggy Fiedler was the author of the FNA treatment of Calochortus for Volume 26. Flora of North America— authoritative information on names, descriptions, distributions, habitats, and taxonomic problems. WHAT are we doing? We are making information on the plants of North America available in a series of books and online. Total series: 30 volumes Target completion:2012 Published to date: 15 volumes covering 141 families, 1412 genera, and 8778 species. Volumes 1—5, 8, 18—27 have been published. Included: All native and naturalized vascular plants and bryophytes in North America north of Mexico, including Greenland. Contents of published volumes, and completed manuscripts in future volumes, are available at and through efloras.org. Other online resources for North American plants link to FNA content. Examples are USDA PLANTS and Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center. WHO is doing the work? Project team: botanists Authors, reviewers, editors work at home institutions. Lead editorial centers located at Missouri Botanical Garden, Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, University of Montreal, University of Kansas. Bibliographic center is at the Hunt Institute; nomenclatural center is at Harvard University. WHERE does the information come from? Authors review previous literature, examine specimens, draw on their own research and field knowledge. More than 70 regional reviewers check for local accuracy. PUBLISHED by Oxford University Press, U. S. Order from Use promo code for discount. Information on more than 1000 taxa of conservation concern provided to date. WHO uses Flora of North America? FNA is used as a reliable source for the correct name to use for a species, for comparative descriptions, and for general distributions. It is used especially by non- botanists and frequently is cited in papers on pollinators, invasive plants, biogeography, and conservation. FNA provides the most comprehensive information on non- native species in North America. FNA stimulates research and publication of findings. Many species that are rare and have been known about for a long time are finally published so they can be included in FNA. Publication of an FNA volume provides the context to evaluate and publish new distribution records. Since 2000 more than 350 new North American plant taxa have been described, many as a result of FNA work. NO other work or online reference provides names, literature, descriptions, and identification keys for these plants throughout their range in North America.