Native and Not Invasive
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(Cruciferae) – Mustard Family
BRASSICACEAE (CRUCIFERAE) – MUSTARD FAMILY Plant: herbs mostly, annual to perennial, sometimes shrubs; sap sometimes peppery Stem: Root: Leaves: mostly simple but sometimes pinnately divided; alternate, rarely opposite or whorled; no stipules Flowers: mostly perfect, mostly regular (actinomorphic); 4 sepals, 4 petals often forming a cross; 6 stamens with usually 2 outer ones shorter than the inner 4; ovary superior, mostly 2 fused carpels, 1 to many ovules, 1 pistil Fruit: seed pods, often used in classification, many are slender and long (Silique), some broad (Silicle) – see morphology slide Other: a large family, many garden plants such as turnip, radish, and cabbage, also some spices; often termed the Cruciferae family; Dicotyledons Group Genera: 350+ genera; 40+ locally WARNING – family descriptions are only a layman’s guide and should not be used as definitive Flower Morphology in the Brassicaceae (Mustard Family) - flower with 4 sepals, 4 petals (often like a cross, sometimes split or lobed), commonly small, often white or yellow, distinctive fruiting structures often important for ID 2 types of fruiting pods: in addition, fruits may be circular, flattened or angled in cross-section Silicle - (usually <2.5x long as wide), 2-valved with septum (replum) Silique - (usually >2.5x long as wide), 2- valved with septum (replum) Flowers, Many Genera BRASSICACEAE (CRUCIFERAE) – MUSTARD FAMILY Sanddune [Western] Wallflower; Erysimum capitatum (Douglas ex Hook.) Greene var. capitatum Wormseed Wallflower [Mustard]; Erysimum cheiranthoides L. (Introduced) Spreading Wallflower [Treacle Mustard]; Erysimum repandum L. (Introduced) Dame’s Rocket [Dame’s Violet]; Hesperis matronalis L. (Introduced) Purple [Violet] Rocket; Iodanthus pinnatifidus (Michx.) Steud. Michaux's Gladecress; Leavenworthia uniflora (Michx.) Britton [Cow; Field] Cress [Peppergrass]; Lepidium campestre L.) Ait. -
Planting Planner
what seeds to sow BRIZA MEDIA Planting ‘GOLDEN BEE’ I love quaking grasses and this selection has a golden tint to the planner seedheads as they age. SLP†. Height (H) 60cm. Sow (S) Best The best seeds to sown in situ in spring. Period of interest (P) sow for 2015 May – September. Winter is the perfect time for studying seed catalogues and planning what to grow. Leading designer Sarah Price gives us a sneak peek of her list WORDS SARAH PRICE PERSICARIA ORIENTALIS Definitely a plant for the back of the border, this tall, multi-branched annual has dramatic, long, deep pink, drooping plumes. Popular in the Victorian era. HA. H 1.8m. S Best sown fresh in autumn. CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: JASON INGRAM X2; STEFFEN HAUSER / GARDEN WORLD IMAGES; NICHOLAS APPLEBY / GARDEN WORLD IMAGES / GARDEN WORLD APPLEBY NICHOLAS IMAGES; / GARDEN WORLD HAUSER X2; STEFFEN INGRAM JASON TOP: FROM CLOCKWISE Can also be sown in early spring. his year my cash-strapped local authority P Late summer to autumn. Twas flooded with unlikely letters of love and appreciation after it set verges and roundabouts alive with a blaze of LATHYRUS annual colour instead of the usual regimented bedding. VERNUS ‘FILIGREE’ It’s proof that broadcasting a packet, or in this case Low-growing, bucketfuls, of mixed seed can have mood-enhancing bushy, hardy effects. It’s not all about live-fast-die-young annuals. perennial sweet pea, Many of my favourite plants are hardy biennials, which invaluable for its take two years to flower, set seed and die, while others are early, purple-blue hardy herbaceous perennials that will live for years. -
Plant Life MagillS Encyclopedia of Science
MAGILLS ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE PLANT LIFE MAGILLS ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE PLANT LIFE Volume 4 Sustainable Forestry–Zygomycetes Indexes Editor Bryan D. Ness, Ph.D. Pacific Union College, Department of Biology Project Editor Christina J. Moose Salem Press, Inc. Pasadena, California Hackensack, New Jersey Editor in Chief: Dawn P. Dawson Managing Editor: Christina J. Moose Photograph Editor: Philip Bader Manuscript Editor: Elizabeth Ferry Slocum Production Editor: Joyce I. Buchea Assistant Editor: Andrea E. Miller Page Design and Graphics: James Hutson Research Supervisor: Jeffry Jensen Layout: William Zimmerman Acquisitions Editor: Mark Rehn Illustrator: Kimberly L. Dawson Kurnizki Copyright © 2003, by Salem Press, Inc. All rights in this book are reserved. No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner what- soever or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy,recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information address the publisher, Salem Press, Inc., P.O. Box 50062, Pasadena, California 91115. Some of the updated and revised essays in this work originally appeared in Magill’s Survey of Science: Life Science (1991), Magill’s Survey of Science: Life Science, Supplement (1998), Natural Resources (1998), Encyclopedia of Genetics (1999), Encyclopedia of Environmental Issues (2000), World Geography (2001), and Earth Science (2001). ∞ The paper used in these volumes conforms to the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, Z39.48-1992 (R1997). Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Magill’s encyclopedia of science : plant life / edited by Bryan D. -
Floerkea Proserpinacoides Willdenow False Mermaid-Weed
New England Plant Conservation Program Floerkea proserpinacoides Willdenow False Mermaid-weed Conservation and Research Plan for New England Prepared by: William H. Moorhead III Consulting Botanist Litchfield, Connecticut and Elizabeth J. Farnsworth Senior Research Ecologist New England Wild Flower Society Framingham, Massachusetts For: New England Wild Flower Society 180 Hemenway Road Framingham, MA 01701 508/877-7630 e-mail: [email protected] • website: www.newfs.org Approved, Regional Advisory Council, December 2003 1 SUMMARY Floerkea proserpinacoides Willdenow, false mermaid-weed, is an herbaceous annual and the only member of the Limnanthaceae in New England. The species has a disjunct but widespread range throughout North America, with eastern and western segregates separated by the Great Plains. In the east, it ranges from Nova Scotia south to Louisiana and west to Minnesota and Missouri. In the west, it ranges from British Columbia to California, east to Utah and Colorado. Although regarded as Globally Secure (G5), national ranks of N? in Canada and the United States indicate some uncertainly about its true conservation status in North America. It is listed as rare (S1 or S2) in 20% of the states and provinces in which it occurs. Floerkea is known from only 11 sites total in New England: three historic sites in Vermont (where it is ranked SH), one historic population in Massachusetts (where it is ranked SX), and four extant and three historic localities in Connecticut (where it is ranked S1, Endangered). The Flora Conservanda: New England ranks it as a Division 2 (Regionally Rare) taxon. Floerkea inhabits open or forested floodplains, riverside seeps, and limestone cliffs in New England, and more generally moist alluvial soils, mesic forests, springy woods, and streamside meadows throughout its range. -
PLANT LIST for POLLINATORS Part 1 – a Concise List of Suggested Garden Plants That Are Attractive to Pollinating Insects
THE ACTION PLAN FOR POLLINATORS SUGGESTED PLANT LIST FOR POLLINATORS Part 1 – A concise list of suggested garden plants that are attractive to pollinating insects This is a list of suggested garden plants. We have only selected flowers which are garden- worthy, easily obtainable, well-known, and widely acknowledged as being attractive to pollinating insects. In some case we have given extra comments about garden- worthiness. This is intended as a clear and concise short list to help gardeners; it is not intended to be comprehensive and we have avoided suggesting plants which are difficult to grow or obtain, or whose benefit to pollinators is still a matter for debate. We have omitted several plants that are considered to have invasive potential, and have qualified some others on the list with comments advising readers how to avoid invasive forms. PLANT ANGELICA (Angelica species). Attractive to a range of insects, especially hoverflies and solitary bees. AUBRETIA (Aubrieta deltoides hybrids). An important early nectar for insects coming out of hibernation. BELLFLOWER (Campanula species and cultivars). Forage for bumblebees and some solitary bees. BETONY (Stachys officinalis). Attractive to bumblebees. Butterfly Conversation’s Awarded the Royal Horticultural Top Butterflys Society’s ‘Award of Garden Nectar Plants. Merit’. PLANT BIRD’S FOOT TREFOIL (Lotus corniculatus). Larval food plant for Common Blue, Dingy Skipper and several moths. Also an important pollen source for bumblebees. Can be grown in gravel or planted in a lawn that is mowed with blades set high during the flowering period. BOWLES’ WALLFLOWER (Erysimum Bowles Mauve). Mauve perennial wallflower, long season nectar for butterflies, moths and many bee species. -
WSHF Catalog
4/23/2021 Well-Sweep Herb Farm - (2021 Plant Listing) 1 Stock # Common Botanical HA Sun Uses Flower ColorHT When Price Acanthus Mollis (2Q); Bear's ACA030X Breech Acanthus mollis P6 FS - PS BF, DR, DT, FP Brown, Purple- 48 JL - AG 11.95 ACA010X Acanthus, Spiny (Qt.) Acanthus spinosus P5 FS - PS DR, DT, FP Brown, Purple- 30 AG - SP 9.80 Acanthus mollis ACA040X Acanthus, `Whitewater' (2Q) `Whitewater' TP PS - S BF, DR, DT, FP Pink & Cream 48 JL - AG 19.95 Achillea: Yarrow, ... BF, DR, DT, LB Achillea filipendulina ACH000X `Coronation Gold' (Qt.) `Coronation Gold' P3 FS CF, DF, FP Gold 36 JL - SP 8.80 Achillea ACH050X `Moonshine' (Qt.) `Moonshine' P3 FS CF, DF, FP Gold 24 JN - SP 9.45 Achillea millefolium ACH130X* `New Vintage Red' (Qt.) `New Vintage Red' P4 FS CF, DF, FP Red, Ruby- 15 JL - SP 9.45 Achillea millefolium Red; Gold ACH250X `Paprika' (Qt.) `Paprika' P3 FS - PS CF, DF, FP Center 24 JL - SP 9.80 Achillea `Saucy ACH807X `Saucy Seduction' (Qt.) Seduction' P4 FS CF, DF, FP Pink, Rose- 20 JL - SP 9.80 `The Pearl Superior' (Qt.); Achillea ptarmica ACH095X Sneezewort `The Pearl Superior' P3 FS DF, FP White; Double 16 JN - SP 8.80 Achillea tomentosa ACH120X Tomentosa, `Aurea' (Qt.) `Aurea' P3 FS FP, RG Yellow, Canary- 8 JN 8.80 ACH125X White (Qt.) Achillea millefolium P3 FS - PS DF, FP, M, NP White 18 JL - SP 8.80 Aconitum: Aconite, ... ; Monkshood (Avoid handling plant with bare hands - Leaves and roots are toxic.) DR, MT Aconitum x cammarum Blue; White ACO015X `Bicolor' (Qt.) `Bicolor' P4 PS CF, FP, WG Edge 36 AG - SP 10.50 ACO020X Blue (Qt.) Aconitum napellus P4 PS CF, FP, M, WG Blue, Deep- 36 AG - SP 9.80 ACO339X Fischeri (Qt.) Aconitum fischeri P4 PS CF, FP, LB, WG Blue, Lav.- 24 SP - OC 10.15 Acorus: Sweet Flag, .. -
Gardenergardener®
Theh American A n GARDENERGARDENER® The Magazine of the AAmerican Horticultural Societyy January / February 2016 New Plants for 2016 Broadleaved Evergreens for Small Gardens The Dwarf Tomato Project Grow Your Own Gourmet Mushrooms contents Volume 95, Number 1 . January / February 2016 FEATURES DEPARTMENTS 5 NOTES FROM RIVER FARM 6 MEMBERS’ FORUM 8 NEWS FROM THE AHS 2016 Seed Exchange catalog now available, upcoming travel destinations, registration open for America in Bloom beautifi cation contest, 70th annual Colonial Williamsburg Garden Symposium in April. 11 AHS MEMBERS MAKING A DIFFERENCE Dale Sievert. 40 HOMEGROWN HARVEST Love those leeks! page 400 42 GARDEN SOLUTIONS Understanding mycorrhizal fungi. BOOK REVIEWS page 18 44 The Seed Garden and Rescuing Eden. Special focus: Wild 12 NEW PLANTS FOR 2016 BY CHARLOTTE GERMANE gardening. From annuals and perennials to shrubs, vines, and vegetables, see which of this year’s introductions are worth trying in your garden. 46 GARDENER’S NOTEBOOK Link discovered between soil fungi and monarch 18 THE DWARF TOMATO PROJECT BY CRAIG LEHOULLIER butterfl y health, stinky A worldwide collaborative breeds diminutive plants that produce seeds trick dung beetles into dispersal role, regular-size, fl avorful tomatoes. Mt. Cuba tickseed trial results, researchers unravel how plants can survive extreme drought, grant for nascent public garden in 24 BEST SMALL BROADLEAVED EVERGREENS Delaware, Lady Bird Johnson Wildfl ower BY ANDREW BUNTING Center selects new president and CEO. These small to mid-size selections make a big impact in modest landscapes. 50 GREEN GARAGE Seed-starting products. 30 WEESIE SMITH BY ALLEN BUSH 52 TRAVELER’S GUIDE TO GARDENS Alabama gardener Weesie Smith championed pagepage 3030 Quarryhill Botanical Garden, California. -
Diversity of Wisconsin Rosids
Diversity of Wisconsin Rosids . mustards, mallows, maples . **Brassicaceae - mustard family Large, complex family of mustard oil producing species (broccoli, brussel sprouts, cauliflower, kale, cabbage) **Brassicaceae - mustard family CA 4 CO 4 A 4+2 G (2) • Flowers “cross-like” with 4 petals - “Cruciferae” or “cross-bearing” •Common name is “cress” • 6 stamens with 2 outer ones shorter Cardamine concatenata - cut leaf toothwort Wisconsin has 28 native or introduced genera - many are spring flowering Herbs with alternate, often dissected leaves Cardamine pratensis - cuckoo flower **Brassicaceae - mustard family CA 4 CO 4 A 4+2 G (2) • 2 fused carpels separated by thin membrane – septum • Capsule that peels off the two outer carpel walls exposing the septum attached to the persistent replum **Brassicaceae - mustard family CA 4 CO 4 A 4+2 G (2) siliques silicles Fruits are called siliques or silicles based on how the fruit is flattened relative to the septum **Brassicaceae - mustard family Cardamine concatenata - cut leaf toothwort Common spring flowering woodland herbs Cardamine douglasii - purple spring cress **Brassicaceae - mustard family Arabidopsis lyrata - rock or sand cress (old Arabis) Common spring flowering woodland herbs Boechera laevigata - smooth rock cress (old Arabis) **Brassicaceae - mustard family Nasturtium officinale - water cress edible aquatic native with a mustard zing **Brassicaceae - mustard family Introduced or spreading Hesperis matronalis - Dame’s Barbarea vulgaris - yellow rocket rocket, winter cress **Brassicaceae -
Fragrant Annuals Fragrant Annuals
TheThe AmericanAmerican GARDENERGARDENER® TheThe MagazineMagazine ofof thethe AAmericanmerican HorticulturalHorticultural SocietySociety JanuaryJanuary // FebruaryFebruary 20112011 New Plants for 2011 Unusual Trees with Garden Potential The AHS’s River Farm: A Center of Horticulture Fragrant Annuals Legacies assume many forms hether making estate plans, considering W year-end giving, honoring a loved one or planting a tree, the legacies of tomorrow are created today. Please remember the American Horticultural Society when making your estate and charitable giving plans. Together we can leave a legacy of a greener, healthier, more beautiful America. For more information on including the AHS in your estate planning and charitable giving, or to make a gift to honor or remember a loved one, please contact Courtney Capstack at (703) 768-5700 ext. 127. Making America a Nation of Gardeners, a Land of Gardens contents Volume 90, Number 1 . January / February 2011 FEATURES DEPARTMENTS 5 NOTES FROM RIVER FARM 6 MEMBERS’ FORUM 8 NEWS FROM THE AHS 2011 Seed Exchange catalog online for AHS members, new AHS Travel Study Program destinations, AHS forms partnership with Northeast garden symposium, registration open for 10th annual America in Bloom Contest, 2011 EPCOT International Flower & Garden Festival, Colonial Williamsburg Garden Symposium, TGOA-MGCA garden photography competition opens. 40 GARDEN SOLUTIONS Plant expert Scott Aker offers a holistic approach to solving common problems. 42 HOMEGROWN HARVEST page 28 Easy-to-grow parsley. 44 GARDENER’S NOTEBOOK Enlightened ways to NEW PLANTS FOR 2011 BY JANE BERGER 12 control powdery mildew, Edible, compact, upright, and colorful are the themes of this beating bugs with plant year’s new plant introductions. -
SPRING WILDFLOWERS of OHIO Field Guide DIVISION of WILDLIFE 2 INTRODUCTION This Booklet Is Produced by the ODNR Division of Wildlife As a Free Publication
SPRING WILDFLOWERS OF OHIO field guide DIVISION OF WILDLIFE 2 INTRODUCTION This booklet is produced by the ODNR Division of Wildlife as a free publication. This booklet is not for resale. Any By Jim McCormac unauthorized reproduction is prohibited. All images within this booklet are copyrighted by the Division of Wild- life and it’s contributing artists and photographers. For additional information, please call 1-800-WILDLIFE. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) has a long history of promoting wildflower conservation and appreciation. ODNR’s landholdings include 21 state forests, 136 state nature preserves, 74 state parks, and 117 wildlife HOW TO USE THIS GUIDE areas. Collectively, these sites total nearly 600,000 acres Bloom Calendar Scientific Name (Scientific Name Pronunciation) Scientific Name and harbor some of the richest wildflower communities in MID MAR - MID APR Definition BLOOM: FEB MAR APR MAY JUN Ohio. In August of 1990, ODNR Division of Natural Areas and Sanguinaria canadensis (San-gwin-ar-ee-ah • can-ah-den-sis) Sanguinaria = blood, or bleeding • canadensis = of Canada Preserves (DNAP), published a wonderful publication entitled Common Name Bloodroot Ohio Wildflowers, with the tagline “Let Them Live in Your Eye Family Name POPPY FAMILY (Papaveraceae). 2 native Ohio species. DESCRIPTION: .CTIGUJQY[ƃQYGTYKVJPWOGTQWUYJKVGRGVCNU Not Die in Your Hand.” This booklet was authored by the GRJGOGTCNRGVCNUQHVGPHCNNKPIYKVJKPCFC[5KPINGNGCHGPYTCRU UVGOCVƃQYGTKPIVKOGGXGPVWCNN[GZRCPFUKPVQCNCTIGTQWPFGFNGCH YKVJNQDGFOCTIKPUCPFFGGRDCUCNUKPWU -
Dame's Rocket
1 Monthly Weed Post July 2016 Dame’s Rocket (Hesperis matronalis) (By Uriel Menalled, Undergraduate Student, Land Resources and Environmental Sciences Dept.) History: Dame’s rocket, also known as sweet rocket, mother-of-the-evening, or dame’s violet, is a showy, short-lived perennial forb native to Eurasia. It was introduced to North America in 1600 as an ornamental and continues to be mistaken as a wildflower. Since its introduction, dame’s rocket has been reported in all but eight states and Hawaii. Dame’s rocket is NOT a noxious weed in Montana. However, it is a noxious weed in CO, WI, IL, TN, NH, CT, and MA. Identification: Dame’s rocket forms rosettes during its first year of growth. The rosette stays green throughout winter with leaves up to 6 inches long. During the following spring, a 2-4’ tall erect flower stem emerges from the rosette. Stem leaves are 2-6” long, alternate, lance-shaped, and have serrated edges and pointed ends (top photo). The length and width of leaves decrease as one moves up the stem. Dame’s rocket flowers from mid-May through June. As a member of the Brassicaceae family, flowers have 4- petals arranged in a cross pattern (middle photo). Flowers are ¾ to 1” in diameter, range in color from purple to pink to white, and are very aromatic. As summer progresses, seedpods (siliques) develop that are 2-5” long and have faint hairs (bottom photo). Seedpods contain many dark brown seeds, and pods open in late summer to early fall. Dame’s rocket is often mistaken for phlox, however phlox species have 5 petals and opposite leaves. -
NAME of SPECIES: Hesperis Matronalis L
NAME OF SPECIES: Hesperis matronalis L. Synonyms: Common Name: Dame's Rocket, Dame's Violet A. CURRENT STATUS AND DISTRIBUTION I. In Wisconsin? 1. YES NO 2. Abundance: Widespread distribution in Wisconsin (1) 3. Geographic Range: Found in 27 counties in Wisconsin (1). 4. Habitat Invaded: Southern Lowland Forest Disturbed Areas Undisturbed Areas 5. Historical Status and Rate of Spread in Wisconsin: Earliest herbarium specimen was collected in 1919 in Sheboygan County (1). 6. Proportion of potential range occupied: Potential to expand. II. Invasive in Similar Climate 1. YES NO Zones Where (include trends): Invasive across temperate North America (2). III. Invasive in Similar Habitat 1. Upland Wetland Dune Prairie Aquatic Types Forest Grassland Bog Fen Swamp Marsh Lake Stream Other: Habitat margins, roadsides, railroad rights-of-way, disturbed ground and waste places, thickets, open woods, gardens (cultivated). IV. Habitat Effected 1. Soil types favored (e.g. sand, silt, clay, or combinations thereof, pH): Moist, well-drained soils (2). 2. Conservation significance of threatened habitats: Southern Lowland Forests provide habitat for threatened and endangered species of plants and birds. V. Native Habitat 1. List countries and native habitat types: Native to Europe (2) (3). VI. Legal Classification 1. Listed by government entities? Yes. Noxious in CO. Regulated in MA, CT. (4). 2. Illegal to sell? YES NO Notes: B. ESTABLISHMENT POTENTIAL AND LIFE HISTORY TRAITS I. Life History 1. Type of plant: Annual Biennial Monocarpic Perennial Herbaceous Perennial Vine Shrub Tree 2. Time to Maturity: Two growing seasons. 3. Length of Seed Viability: N/A 4. Methods of Reproduction: Asexual Sexual Please note abundance of propagules and and other important information: Prolific self-seeder (3).