Plant List by Scientific Names
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Riverside State Park
Provisonal Report Rare Plant and Vegetation Survey of Riverside State Park Pacific Biodiversity Institute 2 Provisonal Report Rare Plant and Vegetation Survey of Riverside State Park Peter H. Morrison [email protected] George Wooten [email protected] Juliet Rhodes [email protected] Robin O’Quinn, Ph.D. [email protected] Hans M. Smith IV [email protected] January 2009 Pacific Biodiversity Institute P.O. Box 298 Winthrop, Washington 98862 509-996-2490 Recommended Citation Morrison, P.H., G. Wooten, J. Rhodes, R. O’Quinn and H.M. Smith IV, 2008. Provisional Report: Rare Plant and Vegetation Survey of Riverside State Park. Pacific Biodiversity Institute, Winthrop, Washington. 433 p. Acknowledgements Diana Hackenburg and Alexis Monetta assisted with entering and checking the data we collected into databases. The photographs in this report were taken by Peter Morrison, Robin O’Quinn, Geroge Wooten, and Diana Hackenburg. Project Funding This project was funded by the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission. 3 Executive Summary Pacific Biodiversity Institute (PBI) conducted a rare plant and vegetation survey of Riverside State Park (RSP) for the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission (WSPRC). RSP is located in Spokane County, Washington. A large portion of the park is located within the City of Spokane. RSP extends along both sides of the Spokane River and includes upland areas on the basalt plateau above the river terraces. The park also includes the lower portion of the Little Spokane River and adjacent uplands. The park contains numerous trails, campgrounds and other recreational facilities. The park receives a tremendous amount of recreational use from the nearby population. -
Vascular Plant List Whatcom County Whatcom County. Whatcom County, WA
Vascular Plant List Whatcom County Whatcom County. Whatcom County, WA. List covers plants found in Whatcom County. Combination of plant lists of areas within Whatcom County, made by various observers over several years, with numerous additions by Jim Duemmel. Plants collected in Whatcom County found in the UW and WSU herbariums have been added to the list. 1175 spp., 223 introduced. Prepared by Don Knoke 2004. These lists represent the work of different WNPS members over the years. Their accuracy has not been verified by the Washington Native Plant Society. We offer these lists to individuals as a tool to enhance the enjoyment and study of native plants. * - Introduced Scientific Name Common Name Family Name Abies amabilis Pacific silver fir Pinaceae Abies grandis Grand fir Pinaceae Abies lasiocarpa Sub-alpine fir Pinaceae Abies procera Noble fir Pinaceae Acer circinatum Vine maple Aceraceae Acer glabrum Douglas maple Aceraceae Acer macrophyllum Big-leaf maple Aceraceae Achillea millefolium Yarrow Asteraceae Achlys triphylla Vanilla leaf Berberidaceae Aconitum columbianum Monkshood Ranunculaceae Actaea rubra Baneberry Ranunculaceae Adenocaulon bicolor Pathfinder Asteraceae Adiantum pedatum Maidenhair fern Polypodiaceae Agoseris aurantiaca Orange agoseris Asteraceae Agoseris glauca Mountain agoseris Asteraceae Agropyron caninum Bearded wheatgrass Poaceae Agropyron repens* Quack grass Poaceae Agropyron spicatum Blue-bunch wheatgrass Poaceae Agrostemma githago* Common corncockle Caryophyllaceae Agrostis alba* Red top Poaceae Agrostis exarata* -
Washington Flora Checklist a Checklist of the Vascular Plants of Washington State Hosted by the University of Washington Herbarium
Washington Flora Checklist A checklist of the Vascular Plants of Washington State Hosted by the University of Washington Herbarium The Washington Flora Checklist aims to be a complete list of the native and naturalized vascular plants of Washington State, with current classifications, nomenclature and synonymy. The checklist currently contains 3,929 terminal taxa (species, subspecies, and varieties). Taxa included in the checklist: * Native taxa whether extant, extirpated, or extinct. * Exotic taxa that are naturalized, escaped from cultivation, or persisting wild. * Waifs (e.g., ballast plants, escaped crop plants) and other scarcely collected exotics. * Interspecific hybrids that are frequent or self-maintaining. * Some unnamed taxa in the process of being described. Family classifications follow APG IV for angiosperms, PPG I (J. Syst. Evol. 54:563?603. 2016.) for pteridophytes, and Christenhusz et al. (Phytotaxa 19:55?70. 2011.) for gymnosperms, with a few exceptions. Nomenclature and synonymy at the rank of genus and below follows the 2nd Edition of the Flora of the Pacific Northwest except where superceded by new information. Accepted names are indicated with blue font; synonyms with black font. Native species and infraspecies are marked with boldface font. Please note: This is a working checklist, continuously updated. Use it at your discretion. Created from the Washington Flora Checklist Database on September 17th, 2018 at 9:47pm PST. Available online at http://biology.burke.washington.edu/waflora/checklist.php Comments and questions should be addressed to the checklist administrators: David Giblin ([email protected]) Peter Zika ([email protected]) Suggested citation: Weinmann, F., P.F. Zika, D.E. Giblin, B. -
Waterton Lakes National Park • Common Name(Order Family Genus Species)
Waterton Lakes National Park Flora • Common Name(Order Family Genus species) Monocotyledons • Arrow-grass, Marsh (Najadales Juncaginaceae Triglochin palustris) • Arrow-grass, Seaside (Najadales Juncaginaceae Triglochin maritima) • Arrowhead, Northern (Alismatales Alismataceae Sagittaria cuneata) • Asphodel, Sticky False (Liliales Liliaceae Triantha glutinosa) • Barley, Foxtail (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Hordeum jubatum) • Bear-grass (Liliales Liliaceae Xerophyllum tenax) • Bentgrass, Alpine (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Podagrostis humilis) • Bentgrass, Creeping (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Agrostis stolonifera) • Bentgrass, Green (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Calamagrostis stricta) • Bentgrass, Spike (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Agrostis exarata) • Bluegrass, Alpine (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa alpina) • Bluegrass, Annual (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa annua) • Bluegrass, Arctic (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa arctica) • Bluegrass, Plains (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa arida) • Bluegrass, Bulbous (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa bulbosa) • Bluegrass, Canada (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa compressa) • Bluegrass, Cusick's (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa cusickii) • Bluegrass, Fendler's (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa fendleriana) • Bluegrass, Glaucous (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa glauca) • Bluegrass, Inland (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa interior) • Bluegrass, Fowl (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa palustris) • Bluegrass, Patterson's (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa pattersonii) • Bluegrass, Kentucky (Poales Poaceae/Gramineae Poa pratensis) • Bluegrass, Sandberg's (Poales -
Cypripedium Montanum Douglas Ex Lindley (Mountain Lady's Slipper): a Technical Conservation Assessment
Cypripedium montanum Douglas ex Lindley (mountain lady’s slipper): A Technical Conservation Assessment Prepared for the USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region, Species Conservation Project February 21, 2007 Nan C. Vance, Ph.D. Pacific Northwest Research Station 3200 SW Jefferson Way Corvallis, OR 97331 Peer Review Administered by Center for Plant Conservation Vance, N.C. (2007, February 21). Cypripedium montanum Douglas ex Lindley (mountain lady’s slipper): a technical conservation assessment. [Online]. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region. Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/r2/projects/scp/assessments/cypripediummontanum.pdf [date of access]. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This project was funded in part by USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region, and Pacific Northwest Research Station, and by Kelsey Creek Laboratories, Issaquah, WA. Many thanks to Greg Karow, Forester, Bighorn National Forest who provided the essential and necessary site and population data for this assessment and Tucker Galloway whose dedicated field work provided important new information. Another important source of information is the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, and I appreciate the excellent cooperation of Bonnie Heidel, Botanist, and Tessa Ducher, Database Specialist. I would also like to express my gratitude to Cathy Seibert, collections manager at the Montana State Herbarium, Peter Bernhardt, Professor of Botany at Saint Louis University, Dan Luoma and Joyce Eberhart, mycologists at Oregon State University, Roger and Jane Smith of Kelsey Creek Laboratories, and Julie Knorr, Botanist on the Klamath National Forest, for their help and information. I am grateful to David Anderson for his advice and for generously allowing me to use an assessment he authored as a model and guide. -
A Second Annotated Checklist of Vascular Plants in Wells Gray Provincial Park and Vicinity, British Columbia, Canada
A second annotated checklist of vascular plants in Wells Gray Provincial Park and vicinity, British Columbia, Canada Version 1: April, 2011 Curtis R. Björk1 and Trevor Goward2 ENLICHENED CONSULTING LTD. Box 131, Clearwater, BC, V0E 1N0, Canada [email protected], [email protected] Vascular Plants in Wells Gray SUMMARY Wells Gray Provincial Park is a vast wilderness preserve situated in the mountains and highlands of south-central British Columbia. The first major floristic study of the vascular plants of Wells Gray and its vicinity was published in 1965 by Leena Hämet-Ahti, who documented 550 taxa, including a first Canadian record of Carex praeceptorium. The present study contributes nearly 500 additional taxa documented by us between 1976 and 2010 in connection with our personal explorations of the Clearwater Valley. The vascular flora of Wells Gray Park and vicinity now stands at 1046 taxa, including 881 native species and 165 species introduced from Eurasia and other portions of British Columbia. Wells Gray Park is notable both for the presence of numerous taxa (45) at or near the northern limits of their range, as well as for an unexpectedly high number of taxa (43) accorded conservation status by the British Columbia Conservation Data Centre. Antennaria corymbosa has its only known Canadian locality within Wells Gray, while five additional species reported here are known in Canada from fewer than six localities. About a dozen unknown, possibly undescribed taxa have also been detected. Botanical inventory has thus far been confined to the southern portions of Wells Gray. Future studies in northern half of the park will certainly greatly increase our knowledge of the biological diversity safeguarded in this magnificent wilderness preserve. -
Annual Report 2020–2021 the Great Unknown Ruby Burns Contents from Recollections
ANNUAL REPORT 2020–2021 The Great Unknown Ruby Burns CONTENTS from ReCollections 3 Director’s Report 5 Education and Outreach 6 Volunteers 7 Partnerships 9 Marketing, Communications, and Events 10 Evaluations 11 Exhibits and Design 13 Collections and Research 13 Cowan Tetrapod Collection 16 Marine Invertebrate Collection 17 Herbarium 19 Spencer Entomological Collection 21 Fish Collection 23 Fossil Collection 24 Administration 25 Operations 26 Donors 27 Publications and Presentations Beaty Biodiversity Museum Annual Report – 1 BEATY BIODIVERSITY MUSEUM 2020–2021 10 YEARS 9,968 VISITORS 49 ONLINE BEATY@HOME LIVESTREAMS 1,001 PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS Blossom Forth Margaret Lin from ReCollections 2,987 NEW SPECIMENS DIRECTor’S REPORT Director’s message What a year! On March 17, 2020 UBC campus On a happier note than global pandemics, we Derek Tan closed due to COVID-19, and that meant closing reached an important milestone this year: our tenth the Beaty Biodiversity Museum, and also halting our anniversary. So much has happened in these ten years, on-site research, curation, education, and outreach with biodiversity science at UBC leaping forward, that work as staff were directed to work from home. At we are already bursting at the seams. So we have been the same time schools closed throughout BC. Our excited to begin planning this year for the expansion Education and Outreach team immediately swung of the Beaty Biodiversity Centre (the building that into action to support teachers online. Our team houses both the Beaty Biodiversity Museum and the made an amazing pivot to online outreach throwing a Biodiversity Research Centre). The success of both potential lifeline to biology teachers throughout the these units has led to critical space pressures. -
Vascular Plants Species Checklist
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Crater Lake National Park (CRLA) Species Checklist This species list is a work in progress. It represents information currently in the NPSpecies data system and records are continually being added or updated by National Park Service staff. To report an error or make a suggestion, go to https://irma.nps.gov/npspecies/suggest. Scientific Name Common Name Vascular Plants Alismatales/Araceae [ ] Lemna minor duckweed [ ] * Lysichiton americanus skunk cabbage Alismatales/Potamogetonaceae [ ] Potamogeton pusillus var. tenuissimus Berchtold's pondweed Alismatales/Tofieldiaceae [ ] Tofieldia glutinosa Tofieldia [ ] * Tofieldia occidentalis Apiales/Apiaceae [ ] Angelica genuflexa bentleaf or kneeling angelica [ ] Heracleum lanatum Cow Parsnip [ ] Ligusticum grayi Gray's Licoriceroot, Gray's lovage, Lovage [ ] Lomatium martindalei coast range lomatium, few-fruited lomatium, Martindale's lomatium [ ] Lomatium nudicaule barestem lomatium, pestle parsnip [ ] Lomatium triternatum nineleaf biscuitroot [ ] Osmorhiza berteroi Mountain Sweet Cicely [ ] Osmorhiza depauperata blunt- fruited sweet cicely [ ] Osmorhiza purpurea purple sweet cicely, Sweet Cicely [ ] Oxypolis occidentalis Western Oxypolis, western sweet cicely [ ] Sanicula graveolens northern sanicle, Sierra sanicle [ ] Sphenosciadium capitellatum Swamp Whiteheads, swamp white-heads, woolly-head parsnip Apiales/Araliaceae [ ] Oplopanax horridus Devil's Club Asparagales/Amaryllidaceae [ ] Allium amplectens slim-leaf onion [ ] * Allium geyeri -
Appendix 6. Pre-Construction Rare Plant Surveys
Appendix 6. Pre-construction Rare Plant Surveys INTERIM REPORT PRE-CONSTRUCTION RARE PLANT SURVEYS SITE C CLEAN ENERGY PROJECT PREPARED BY: EAGLE CAP CONSULTING LTD. 1103-240 70 SHAWVILLE BLVD. SE CALGARY, ALBERTA T2Y 2Z3 PREPARED FOR: BC HYDRO AND POWER AUTHORITY SUITE 600, 4 BENTALL CENTRE 1055 DUNSMUIR STREET PO BOX 49260 VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA NOVEMBER 11, 2017 INTERIM REPORT – PRECONSTRUCTION RARE PLANT SURVEYS – SITE C CLEAN ENERGY PROJECT Contents 1.0 Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 2 1.1 Background ................................................................................................................................... 2 1.2 Scope ............................................................................................................................................. 3 1.3 Areas Targeted for Pre-construction Surveys ............................................................................... 3 2.0 Methods ............................................................................................................................................ 4 2.1 Prefield Review ............................................................................................................................. 4 2.2 Field Survey ................................................................................................................................... 5 3.0 Results .............................................................................................................................................. -
Checklist of Montana Vascular Plants
Checklist of Montana Vascular Plants June 1, 2011 By Scott Mincemoyer Montana Natural Heritage Program Helena, MT This checklist of Montana vascular plants is organized by Division, Class and Family. Species are listed alphabetically within this hierarchy. Synonyms, if any, are listed below each species and are slightly indented from the main species list. The list is generally composed of species which have been documented in the state and are vouchered by a specimen collection deposited at a recognized herbaria. Additionally, some species are included on the list based on their presence in the state being reported in published and unpublished botanical literature or through data submitted to MTNHP. The checklist is made possible by the contributions of numerous botanists, natural resource professionals and plant enthusiasts throughout Montana’s history. Recent work by Peter Lesica on a revised Flora of Montana (Lesica 2011) has been invaluable for compiling this checklist as has Lavin and Seibert’s “Grasses of Montana” (2011). Additionally, published volumes of the Flora of North America (FNA 1993+) have also proved very beneficial during this process. The taxonomy and nomenclature used in this checklist relies heavily on these previously mentioned resources, but does not strictly follow anyone of them. The Checklist of Montana Vascular Plants can be viewed or downloaded from the Montana Natural Heritage Program’s website at: http://mtnhp.org/plants/default.asp This publication will be updated periodically with more frequent revisions anticipated initially due to the need for further review of the taxonomy and nomenclature of particular taxonomic groups (e.g. Arabis s.l ., Crataegus , Physaria ) and the need to clarify the presence or absence in the state of some species. -
National Park Service U.S
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Program Center Vascular Plant Inventory of North Cascades National Park Service Complex Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCCN/NRTR—2010/369 ON THE COVER Volunteers collect specimens near Easy Pass, North Cascades National Park, August 2003. Photograph courtesy of North Cascades National Park Service Complex. Vascular Plant Inventory of North Cascades National Park Service Complex Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCCN/NRTR—2010/369 Mignonne M. Bivin North Cascades National Park Service Complex 7280 Ranger Station Road Marblemount, WA 98267 Regina M. Rochefort North Cascades National Park Service Complex 810 State Route 20 Sedro Woolley, WA 98284 September 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. -
Introduction and Objectives
HABITAT CONSERVATION ASSESSMENT AND CONSERVATION STRATEGY THE LEMHI PENSTEMON Penstemon lemhiensis Introduction and Objectives ...................................................................................................... 3 Taxonomy and morphology....................................................................................................... 4 Taxonomy ........................................................................................................................4 General Non-technical Description ............................................................................... 4 Technical Description..................................................................................................... 5 Notes on Morphology, Biogeography, Phylogenetic History and Hybridizations .... 5 Collections....................................................................................................................... 6 Status ........................................................................................................................................... 8 Status ............................................................................................................................... 8 Distribution, Ownership and Population Size .............................................................. 9 Adequacy of Inventory.................................................................................................. 11 Research and Monitoring........................................................................................................