WTU Herbarium Specimen Label Data
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Benton County Prairie Species Habitat Conservation Plan
BENTON COUNTY PRAIRIE SPECIES HABITAT CONSERVATION PLAN DECEMBER 2010 For more information, please contact: Benton County Natural Areas & Parks Department 360 SW Avery Ave. Corvallis, Oregon 97333-1192 Phone: 541.766.6871 - Fax: 541.766.6891 http://www.co.benton.or.us/parks/hcp This document was prepared for Benton County by staff at the Institute for Applied Ecology: Tom Kaye Carolyn Menke Michelle Michaud Rachel Schwindt Lori Wisehart The Institute for Applied Ecology is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization whose mission is to conserve native ecosystems through restoration, research, and education. P.O. Box 2855 Corvallis, OR 97339-2855 (541) 753-3099 www.appliedeco.org Suggested Citation: Benton County. 2010. Prairie Species Habitat Conservation Plan. 160 pp plus appendices. www.co.benton.or.us/parks/hcp Front cover photos, top to bottom: Kincaid’s lupine, photo by Tom Kaye Nelson’s checkermallow, photo by Tom Kaye Fender’s blue butterfly, photo by Cheryl Schultz Peacock larkspur, photo by Lori Wisehart Bradshaw’s lomatium, photo by Tom Kaye Taylor’s checkerspot, photo by Dana Ross Willamette daisy, photo by Tom Kaye Benton County Prairie Species HCP Preamble The Benton County Prairie Species Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) was initiated to bring Benton County’s activities on its own lands into compliance with the Federal and State Endangered Species Acts. Federal law requires a non-federal landowner who wishes to conduct activities that may harm (“take”) threatened or endangered wildlife on their land to obtain an incidental take permit from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. State law requires a non-federal public landowner who wishes to conduct activities that may harm threatened or endangered plants to obtain a permit from the Oregon Department of Agriculture. -
Vegetation Classification and Mapping Project Report
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Lewis and Clark National Historic Park Vegetation Classification and Mapping Project Report Natural Resource Report NPS/NCCN/NRR—2012/597 ON THE COVER Benson Beach, Cape Disappointment State Park Photograph by: Lindsey Koepke Wise Lewis and Clark National Historic Park Vegetation Classification and Mapping Project Report Natural Resource Report NPS/NCCN/NRR—2012/597 James S. Kagan, Eric M. Nielsen, Matthew D. Noone, Jason C. van Warmerdam, and Lindsey K. Wise Oregon Biodiversity Information Center Institute for Natural Resources – Portland Portland State University P.O. Box 751 Portland, OR 97207 Gwen Kittel NatureServe 4001 Discovery Dr., Suite 2110 Boulder, CO 80303 Catharine Copass National Park Service North Coast and Cascades Network Olympic National Park 600 E. Park Avenue Port Angeles, WA 98362 December 2012 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science office in Fort Collins, Colorado, publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics. These reports are of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Report Series is used to disseminate high-priority, current natural resource management information with managerial application. The series targets a general, diverse audience, and may contain NPS policy considerations or address sensitive issues of management applicability. All manuscripts in the series receive the appropriate level of peer review to ensure that the information is scientifically credible, technically accurate, appropriately written for the intended audience, and designed and published in a professional manner. -
Nuclear Genes, Matk and the Phylogeny of the Poales
Zurich Open Repository and Archive University of Zurich Main Library Strickhofstrasse 39 CH-8057 Zurich www.zora.uzh.ch Year: 2018 Nuclear genes, matK and the phylogeny of the Poales Hochbach, Anne ; Linder, H Peter ; Röser, Martin Abstract: Phylogenetic relationships within the monocot order Poales have been well studied, but sev- eral unrelated questions remain. These include the relationships among the basal families in the order, family delimitations within the restiid clade, and the search for nuclear single-copy gene loci to test the relationships based on chloroplast loci. To this end two nuclear loci (PhyB, Topo6) were explored both at the ordinal level, and within the Bromeliaceae and the restiid clade. First, a plastid reference tree was inferred based on matK, using 140 taxa covering all APG IV families of Poales, and analyzed using parsimony, maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods. The trees inferred from matK closely approach the published phylogeny based on whole-plastome sequencing. Of the two nuclear loci, Topo6 supported a congruent, but much less resolved phylogeny. By contrast, PhyB indicated different phylo- genetic relationships, with, inter alia, Mayacaceae and Typhaceae sister to Poaceae, and Flagellariaceae in a basally branching position within the Poales. Within the restiid clade the differences between the three markers appear less serious. The Anarthria clade is first diverging in all analyses, followed by Restionoideae, Sporadanthoideae, Centrolepidoideae and Leptocarpoideae in the matK and Topo6 data, but in the PhyB data Centrolepidoideae diverges next, followed by a paraphyletic Restionoideae with a clade consisting of the monophyletic Sporadanthoideae and Leptocarpoideae nested within them. The Bromeliaceae phylogeny obtained from Topo6 is insufficiently sampled to make reliable statements, but indicates a good starting point for further investigations. -
Phylogenetic Relationships of Monocots Based on the Highly Informative Plastid Gene Ndhf Thomas J
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Volume 22 | Issue 1 Article 4 2006 Phylogenetic Relationships of Monocots Based on the Highly Informative Plastid Gene ndhF Thomas J. Givnish University of Wisconsin-Madison J. Chris Pires University of Wisconsin-Madison; University of Missouri Sean W. Graham University of British Columbia Marc A. McPherson University of Alberta; Duke University Linda M. Prince Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Gardens See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso Part of the Botany Commons Recommended Citation Givnish, Thomas J.; Pires, J. Chris; Graham, Sean W.; McPherson, Marc A.; Prince, Linda M.; Patterson, Thomas B.; Rai, Hardeep S.; Roalson, Eric H.; Evans, Timothy M.; Hahn, William J.; Millam, Kendra C.; Meerow, Alan W.; Molvray, Mia; Kores, Paul J.; O'Brien, Heath W.; Hall, Jocelyn C.; Kress, W. John; and Sytsma, Kenneth J. (2006) "Phylogenetic Relationships of Monocots Based on the Highly Informative Plastid Gene ndhF," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol. 22: Iss. 1, Article 4. Available at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol22/iss1/4 Phylogenetic Relationships of Monocots Based on the Highly Informative Plastid Gene ndhF Authors Thomas J. Givnish, J. Chris Pires, Sean W. Graham, Marc A. McPherson, Linda M. Prince, Thomas B. Patterson, Hardeep S. Rai, Eric H. Roalson, Timothy M. Evans, William J. Hahn, Kendra C. Millam, Alan W. Meerow, Mia Molvray, Paul J. Kores, Heath W. O'Brien, Jocelyn C. Hall, W. John Kress, and Kenneth J. Sytsma This article is available in Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol22/iss1/ 4 Aliso 22, pp. -
An Introduction to the Botanical Type Specimen Register
SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY NUMBER 12 An Introduction to the Botanical Type Specimen Register Stanwyn G. Shetler with Mary Jane Petrini, Constance Graham Carley, M. J. Harvey, Larry E. Morse, Thomas E. Kopfler, and Collaborators SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS City of Washington 1973 ABSTRACT Shetler, Stanwyn G., with Mary Jane Petrini, Constance Graham Carley, M. J. Harvey, Larry E. Morse, Thomas E. Kopfler, and Collaborators. An Introduc- tion to the Botanical Type Specimen Register. Srnithsonian Contributions to Botany, number 12, 186 pages, 3 figures, frontispiece, 1973.--In the first part, the development of a computer-based system for storing and retrieving infonna- tion about botanical type specimens is described from its pilot stage to its present operational stage. The concept, purpose, and scope are explained, and the operational procedures are outlined. Ways of using and contributing to this computerized register of types, both in the short-run and in the longrun, are proposed. A statistical summary of the content of the Type Register as of 30 September 1972 is given. Over 13,000 specimens representing more than 10,000 taxa have been registered. The second part consists of a Catalog of more than' 1,000 specimens representing over 600 taxa of the genus Carex (Cyperaceae), which are deposited in ten major American herbaria, and the Catalog is cross- indexed five different ways: by author, publication date, collector, country, and herbarium. An introduction summarizes the preparation and editing of the Catalog. This Carex Catalog represents the first published installment of the Type Register and as such is intended to serve as an example. -
Proceedings of a Conference on Native Plant Restoration and Management on Public Lands in the Pacific Northwest
Proceedings of a Conference on Native Plant Restoration and Management on Public Lands in the Pacific Northwest: Rare Plants, Invasive Species and Ecosystem Management LaSells Stewart Center, Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon Feb. 11-13, 2003 Edited and compiled by Thomas N. Kaye, Melanie Gisler, and Rob Fiegener A symposium co-sponsored by: USDI Bureau of Land Management, Institute for Applied Ecology, USDA Forest Service, Native Plant Society of Oregon Proceedings of a Conference on Native Plant Restoration and Management on Public Lands in the Pacific Northwest: Rare Plants, Invasive Species, and Ecosystem Management , Corvallis, Oregon, Feb. 11-13, 2003 Preface: Native plant conservation is a multi-disciplinary field and its success requires an integrated approach. Plant restoration and management on public lands in the Pacific Northwest face many challenges but also present opportunities for cooperative projects, research, on-the- ground action, and community outreach. On February 11-13, 2003, 300 people joined together for a symposium on native plant management in the Pacific Northwest to share information and discuss experiences. Topics covered rare and endangered species conservation and reintroduction, invasive plants, species and habitat restoration, ecosystems, and policy. The meeting featured talks by experts in these fields, and the audience included biologists, land managers, non-profit organizations, and the general public. Michael Way, a member of the International Team for the Millennium Seed Bank Project from the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew, was our keynote speaker. Mr. Way is the International Coordinator for the Americas and is responsible for the development of seed conservation projects with partners in Mexico, Chile, and the USA. -
YEAR 2005 CAREX COST SHARE FINAL REPORT for the EUGENE DISTRICT BUREAU of LAND MANAGEMENT
YEAR 2005 CAREX COST SHARE FINAL REPORT for the EUGENE DISTRICT BUREAU of LAND MANAGEMENT Submitted by the CAREX WORKING GROUP December 2005 Carex Inventory of Eugene District BLM December 2005 Table of Contents PROJECT COMPONENTS .............................................................. p. 1 REVIEW OF CURRENT SPECIAL STATUS TAXA ........................................... p. 1 POTENTIAL ADDITIONAL SPECIAL STATUS TAXA .......................................... p. 4 SITE SURVEYS ....................................................................... p. 5 CYPERACEAE HERBARIUM ANNOTATIONS AND COLLECTIONS ............................. p. 6 RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ADDITIONAL INVENTORY AND STUDY ............................ p. 8 APPENDIX A: Individual Site Reports and Plant Lists ........................................ p. 10 APPENDIX B: Site topo maps and aerials ................................................. p. 66 APPENDIX C: Photos ................................................................. p. 81 Cover photo: Carex lenticularis var. limnophila, from Heceta Dunes ACEC. Carex Working Group Carex Inventory of Eugene District BLM December 2005 Year 2005 Carex Cost Share Final Report Carex Working Group 20 December 2005 PROJECT COMPONENTS The Eugene District BLM (BLM) contracted with the Carex Working Group (CWG) to accomplish the following tasks (paraphrased): 1 A review of the known Carex Special Status taxa, including history, taxonomy, recent sightings, and habitat descriptions. 2 Inventory Carex species at approximately 12 sites, -
Climatic Niche Estimation, Trait Evolution and Species Richness in North
Climatic niche estimation, trait evolution and species richness in North American Carex (Cyperaceae) by Jocelyn E. Pender, B.Sc. (Hons.) Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies University of Ottawa In partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in the Ottawa Carleton Institute of Biology © Jocelyn E. Pender, Ottawa, Canada, 2016 Supervisor: Dr. Julian Starr Committee Members: Dr. Tyler Smith Dr. Risa Sargent (Fall 2013 - Winter 2015) Dr. Stéphane Aris-Brosou (Fall 2015 - present) ii Abstract With close to 2100 species, the flowering plant genus Carex (Cyperaceae; sedges) is an example of an evolutionary radiation. Despite its potential for use as a model taxon in evolutionary studies, the diversification of sedges remains largely unexplored. This thesis realizes the potential of Carex as an evolutionary model group by using it to ask questions about species richness patterns. More specifically, it seeks to determine the relationship, if any, between rates of trait evolution and species richness. This tests the hypothesis that organisms with increased abilities to evolve new traits, speciate more rapidly. Morphological and ecological (habitat and climatic niche) traits are modelled on a nearly complete regional (North America north of Mexico) phylogeny and rates of trait evolution are compared among non-nested sister groups. However, before trait evolution is modelled, this work evaluates the sensitivity of climatic niche estimates to underlying distribution datasets. It tests the agreement of niche estimates derived from the commonly used online repository GBIF (the Global Biodiversity Information Facility) and county-level distributions via BONAP (the Biota of North America Program). -
ANEXO I Flora Vascular De Isla Mocha
ANEXO I Flora Vascular de Isla Mocha (por Karl Reiche, 1903) A continuación se presenta las especies registradas por Karl Reiche durante la expedición del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural a comienzo del siglo XX. Se ha actualizado el nomnbre de las taxa y su distribución, en base a distintas fuentes de información: - The Plant List www.plantlist.org - Trópicos de The Kew Gardens - Enciclopedia de la Flora Chilena www.florachilena.cl - Instituto de Botánica Darwinion El orden de los taxones se llevó a cabó según The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group III (APG 2009): “An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants” (excepto las especies fuera de las Angiospermas – las Pterydophytas). Orden Familia Especie Distribución MAGNOLIIDS Canellales Winteraceae Drimys winteri J.R.Forst. & G.Forst. nativa Laurales Atherospermataceae Laurelia sempervirens Tul. nativa Laurales Lauraceae Persea lingue (Ruiz & Pav.) Nees / (Miers ex nativa Bertero) Nees Laurales Monimiaceae Peumus boldus Mol. nativa EUDICOTS - Saxifragaceae / Francoa sonchifolia Cav. endémica Melianthaceae Proteales Proteaceae Gevuina avellana Mol. nativa Ranunculales Ranunculaceae Ranunculus acaulis DC. nativa Ranunculales Ranunculaceae Ranunculus minutiflorus Bert. ex Phil. nativa CORE EUDICOTS Gunnerales Gunneraceae Gunnera tinctoria (Mol.) Mirb. nativa Saxifragales Crassulaceae Crassula tillaea Lest.-Garl adventicia Saxifragales Grossulariaceae Ribes punctatum Ruiz & Pav. nativa Saxifragales Saxifragaceae Chrysosplenium valdivicum Hook. nativa Asterids Cornales Loasaceae Loasa acanthifolia Lam. nativa Cornales Loasaceae Loasa acerifolia Dombey ex Juss. nativa Cornales Hydrangeaceae Hydrangea serratifolia (Hook. & Arn.) Phil.f. nativa Ericales Primulaceae Anagallis alternifolia Cav. nativa Campanulids Apiales Apiaceae Ammi visnaga (L.) Lam. adventicia Apiales Apiaceae Apium australe Thouars nativa Apiales Apiaceae Centella asiatica (L.) Urb. -
Vascular Plant Inventory of Ebey's
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Program Center Vascular Plant Inventory of Ebey’s Landing National Historical Reserve Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCCN/NRTR—2010/346 ON THE COVER Photo looking south from the Prairie Overlook across the mosaic of farm fields, prairie, and forests in EBLA. Photo courtesy of National Park Service. Vascular Plant Inventory of Ebey’s Landing National Historical Reserve Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCCN/NRTR—2010/346 Regina M. Rochefort North Cascades National Park Service Complex 810 State Route 20 Sedro-Woolley, Washington 98284 June 2010 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Program Center Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Program Center publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Technical Report Series is used to disseminate results of scientific studies in the physical, biological, and social sciences for both the advancement of science and the achievement of the National Park Service mission. The series provides contributors with a forum for displaying comprehensive data that are often deleted from journals because of page limitations. All manuscripts in the series receive the appropriate level of peer review to ensure that the information is scientifically credible, technically accurate, appropriately written for the intended audience, and designed and published in a professional manner. This report received informal peer review by subject-matter experts who were not directly involved in the collection, analysis, or reporting of the data. -
Kenton Chambers and the Annual Species of Microseris
KALMIOPSIS Journal of the Native Plant Society of Oregon Castilleja chambersii Egger and Meinke A, habit; B, flowering stem to show leaf and size; C, bracts; D, calyx with its corolla; E, variability in calyces; F, seed with closeup of wall. ISSN 1055-419X Volume 8, 2001 EDITORIAL KALMIOPSIS Secrets can be difficult to keep, especially for as long as two Journal of the Native Plant Society of Oregon, ©2001 years, but we hope that this issue of Kalmiopsis surprises the individual that we as NPSO members are all proud to EDITORS claim as one of our own, Ken Chambers. From front cover Cindy Roché, PhD through the appendices, every page is dedicated to his honor. Linda Ann Vorobik, PhD Conceived at the time of Ken’s seventieth birthday, this Festschrift is the work of many individuals, whom Aaron EDITORIAL BOARD Liston acknowledges in his introduction. However, Ken’s stature as a botanist and as a person is no secret, as noted on Stuart Garrett, MD the Certificate of Merit presented to him by the Botanical Susan Kephart, PhD Society of America in August 1990: Rhoda M. Love, PhD “Eminent biosystematist, internationally recognized for his studies of various genera of Asteraceae; a pioneer in the NPSO Web PAG E development of plant conservation in Oregon; and stimu- http://www.NPSOregon.org lating teacher who has inspired many students to become botanists.” MEMBERSHIP Membership in the Native Plant Society of Oregon is open to all. Membership applications, renewals and changes of address (include old address and zip code) should be sent to the NPSO Membership Chair, Jan Dobak, 2584 NW Savier St., Portland, OR 97210-2412 Student $12; Regular $18; Family $24; Sustaining $50; Patron $100; Life Member $500 Subscription Only (Bulletin and Kalmiopsis) $18 CONTACT INFORMATION KALMIOPSIS EDITORS: Cindy Roché, 109 Meadow View Dr., Medford, OR 97504, [email protected] & Linda Ann Vorobik, P.O. -
CLASSIFICATION of NATIVE VEGETATION of OREGON – January 2004 James S. Kagan, John A. Christy, Michael P. Murray, and Jonathan
CLASSIFICATION OF NATIVE VEGETATION OF OREGON – January 2004 James S. Kagan, John A. Christy, Michael P. Murray, and Jonathan A. Titus: Oregon Natural Heritage Information Center This classification lists the native plant associations known to occur in Oregon, and includes both successional and climax vegetation types that were an important part of the presettlement landscape of Oregon. It serves as an index to the diversity, distribution and relative rarity of the state's native plant associations, and as a guide to their literature. Plant assocations are listed by scientific name, followed by common name and acronym. Listings include the global and state rank of each association, the ecoregion in which it occurs, its status as wetland or upland, and references describing the association. A bibliography lists all cited references. The classification is presented in a spreadsheet format, but can also be imported into a database format. Published and unpublished reports were the primary sources for the classification. Descriptions supported by quantitative data were used whenever possible. Publications from other states or provinces in the Pacific Northwest were used for associations known to occur in, but not described from Oregon. Sampling methods and concepts of species and associations differ greatly among researchers. To accommodate variation occurring in the field, some associations have been lumped The associations correspond to those listed in the National Vegetation Classification System (NVCS) of Anderson et al. 1998 and Grossman et al. 1998. The NVCS is a hierarchical classification designed to standardize vegetation classification in the United States. It employs a nested system of seven higher-order physiognomic ranks, derived from previous classifications by UNESCO (1973) and Driscoll et al.