Trees & Shrubs
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Cornaceae – Dogwood Family Cornus Florida Flowering Dogwood
Cornaceae – dogwood family Cornus florida flowering dogwood Sight ID characteristics Vegetative Features: • Leaf: 2 1/2-5" long, simple, opposite, deciduous, elliptical to ovate with arcuate venation and an entire margin. • Bark: broken into small brown-black plates on mature trees. • Form: usually as several wide-spreading branches with a low dense crown – opposite branching gives candelabra form. • Reproductive Features: • Few, small, perfect, 4-parted flowers with inferior ovaries arranged in heads subtended by 4 notched, showy, white-pink bracts. • Fruits are oval shaped drupes in heads of 5-6, red at maturity, with oval grooved stone. 123 NOTES AND SKETCHES 124 Cornaceae – dogwood family Cornus nuttallii Pacific dogwood Sight ID characteristics Vegetative Features: • Leaf: 2 1/2-4 1/2" long, simple, opposite, deciduous, ovate- elliptical with arcuate venation, margin may be sparsely toothed or entire. • Bark: dark and broken into small plates at maturity. • Form: straight trunk and narrow crown in forested conditions, many-trunked and bushy in open. • Reproductive Features: • Many yellowish-green, small, perfect, 4-parted flowers with inferior ovaries arranged in dense in heads, subtended by 4-7 showy white- pink, petal-like bracts - not notched at the apex. • Fruits are drupes in heads of 30-40, red at maturity and they have smooth stones. 125 NOTES AND SKETCHES 126 Cornaceae – dogwood family Cornus sericea red-osier dogwood Sight ID characteristics Vegetative Features: • Leaf: 2-4" long, simple, opposite, deciduous and somewhat narrow ovate-lanceolate with entire margin. • Twig: bright red, sometimes green splotched with red, white pith. • Bark: red to green with numerous lenticels; later developing larger cracks and splits and turning light brown. -
Shrub List for Brighton 2010
Shrub List For Brighton 2010 Large Shrubs 10’ -20’ Tall by 6’ – 25’ wide Acer ginnala Amur Maple Acer tataricum Tatarian Maple (better than Amur Maple) Acer grandidentatum Bigtooth Maple Amelanchier alnifolia Saskatoon Serviceberry Amelanchier canadensis Shadblow Serviceberry Caragana arborescens Siberian Peashrub Cercocarpus ledifolius Mountain Mahogany Cotoneaster lucidus Peking Cotoneaster Cowania mexicana Quince Bush, Cliffrose Crataefus ambigua Russian Hawthorn Forestiera neomexicana New Mexican Privet Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Juniperus species Juniper Kolkwitzia amabilis Beauty Bush Pinus mugo Mugo Pine species Prunus americana American Plum Prunus virginiana ‘Shubert’ Canada Red Chokecherry Ptelea trifoliata Wafer Ash or Hop tree Quercus gambelii Gambel Oak Rhus typhina Staghorn Sumac Robinia neomexicana New Mexico Locust Sambucus species Elders Shepherdia argentea Buffaloberry Syringa vulgaris Common Lilac Viburnum lantana Wayfaring Tree, Viburnum Medium Size Shrubs >10’ high by >8’ wide Amorpha fruticosa False Indigo Atriplex canescens Fourwing Saltbush Buddleia davidii Butterfly Bush Cercocarpus montanus Mountain Mahogany Chamaebatiaria millefolium Fernbush Chrysothamnus nauseosus Rubber Rabbitbrush Cornus sericea Redtwig Dogwood Cotinus coggygria Smoke Tree Cotoneaster species Cotoneaster Cytisus scoparius ‘Moonlight’ Moonlight Broom Euonymus alatus Burning Bush Forsythia x intermedia Forsythia Hibiscus syriacus Rose-of-Sharon Juniperus species Juniper Ligustrum vulgare Privet Lonicera species Honeysuckle Mahonia aquifolium Oregon Grape Holly Philadelphus species Mockorange Pyracantha coccinea Firethorn Physocarpus opulifolius Common Ninebark Prunus besseyi Western Sand Cherry Pyracantha coccinea species Firethorn Rhamnus frangula Glossy Buckthorn Ribes species Currant Sambucus species Elder Spiraea x vanhouttei Vanhouttei Spirea Symphoricarpos albus Snowberry Syringa meyeri „Palibin‟ Dwarf Korean Lilac Syringa patula „Miss Kim‟ Dwarf Lilac Viburnum species (dozens of different types) Small Size Shrubs > 5’ tall by >6. -
Flower Power
FLOWER POWER IDAHO BOTANICAL GARDEN WHAT IS A FLOWER? INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVE: When students finish this project, they will have gained respect for the beauty of flowers and appreciate their ecological and practical importance. INTRODUCTION Dear Teacher, The Idaho Botanical Garden is an outdoor learning environment. We want to make your visit comfortable and enjoyable, and ask that your students are dressed appropriately for the weather and have water, especially in the warm weather months. TERMS Angiosperms: Flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed in a fruit. Anthers: The boxlike structures at the top of stamens, where pollen is produced. Botanical garden: A place where plants are collected and displayed for scientific, educational and artistic purposes. Fertilization: The union of male sperm cells and female egg cells. Filament: The stalk of the stamen. Flower: The reproductive structure of an angiosperm. Fruit: A ripened ovary conaining seeds. Nectar: The sweet liquid produced by flowers to attract pollinators. Ovary: The hollow compartment at the base of the pistil which contains ovules. It develops into a fruit containing seeds. Ovules: The structures in a flower ovary that can develop into seeds. Pistil: The female part of a flower; stigma, style, and ovary. Pollen: A yellow, powder-like material containing sperm cells. Pollen tubes: Tubes that carry sperm cells from the stigma into the ovary. Pollination: The process of pollen coming together with the stigma of a flower. Pollinators: Animals which carry pollen from one flower to another. Seed: A structure containing a baby plant and its food supply, which is surrounded by a protective seed coat. -
Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................................1 CREATING A WILDLIFE FRIENDLY YARD ......................................................................2 With Plant Variety Comes Wildlife Diversity...............................................................2 Existing Yards....................................................................................................2 Native Plants ......................................................................................................3 Why Choose Organic Fertilizers?......................................................................3 Butterfly Gardens...............................................................................................3 Fall Flower Garden Maintenance.......................................................................3 Water Availability..............................................................................................4 Bird Feeders...................................................................................................................4 Provide Grit to Assist with Digestion ................................................................5 Unwelcome Visitors at Your Feeders? ..............................................................5 Attracting Hummingbirds ..................................................................................5 Cleaning Bird Feeders........................................................................................6 -
Native Or Suitable Plants City of Mccall
Native or Suitable Plants City of McCall The following list of plants is presented to assist the developer, business owner, or homeowner in selecting plants for landscaping. The list is by no means complete, but is a recommended selection of plants which are either native or have been successfully introduced to our area. Successful landscaping, however, requires much more than just the selection of plants. Unless you have some experience, it is suggested than you employ the services of a trained or otherwise experienced landscaper, arborist, or forester. For best results it is recommended that careful consideration be made in purchasing the plants from the local nurseries (i.e. Cascade, McCall, and New Meadows). Plants brought in from the Treasure Valley may not survive our local weather conditions, microsites, and higher elevations. Timing can also be a serious consideration as the plants may have already broken dormancy and can be damaged by our late frosts. Appendix B SELECTED IDAHO NATIVE PLANTS SUITABLE FOR VALLEY COUNTY GROWING CONDITIONS Trees & Shrubs Acer circinatum (Vine Maple). Shrub or small tree 15-20' tall, Pacific Northwest native. Bright scarlet-orange fall foliage. Excellent ornamental. Alnus incana (Mountain Alder). A large shrub, useful for mid to high elevation riparian plantings. Good plant for stream bank shelter and stabilization. Nitrogen fixing root system. Alnus sinuata (Sitka Alder). A shrub, 6-1 5' tall. Grows well on moist slopes or stream banks. Excellent shrub for erosion control and riparian restoration. Nitrogen fixing root system. Amelanchier alnifolia (Serviceberry). One of the earlier shrubs to blossom out in the spring. -
Landscaping with Native Plants by Stephen L
SHORT-SEASON, HIGH-ALTITUDE GARDENING BULLETIN 862 Landscaping with native plants by Stephen L. Love, Kathy Noble, Jo Ann Robbins, Bob Wilson, and Tony McCammon INTRODUCTION There are many reasons to consider a native plant landscape in Idaho’s short- season, high-altitude regions, including water savings, decreased mainte- nance, healthy and adapted plants, and a desire to create a local theme CONTENTS around your home. Most plants sold for landscaping are native to the eastern Introduction . 1 United States and the moist climates of Europe. They require acid soils, con- The concept of native . 3 stant moisture, and humid air to survive and remain attractive. Most also Landscaping Principles for Native Plant Gardens . 3 require a longer growing season than we have available in the harshest cli- Establishing Native Landscapes and Gardens . 4 mates of Idaho. Choosing to landscape with these unadapted plants means Designing a Dry High-Desert Landscape . 5 Designing a Modified High-Desert Landscape . 6 accepting the work and problems of constantly recreating a suitable artificial Designing a High-Elevation Mountain Landscape . 6 environment. Native plants will help create a landscape that is more “com- Designing a Northern Idaho Mountain/Valley fortable” in the climates and soils that surround us, and will reduce the Landscape . 8 resources necessary to maintain the landscape. Finding Sources of Native Plants . 21 The single major factor that influences Idaho’s short-season, high-altitude climates is limited summer moisture. Snow and rainfall are relatively abun- dant in the winter, but for 3 to 4 months beginning in June, we receive only a YOU ARE A SHORT-SEASON, few inches of rain. -
2009 Data Summary
USA‐NPN Technical Series 2010‐002 USA National Phenology Network 2009 Data Summary Theresa M. Crimmins1, Alyssa H. Rosemartin2, Kathryn A. Thomas3, R. Lee Marsh4, Ellen G. Denny5, Jake F. Weltzin6 1Partnerships & Outreach Coordinator, USA‐NPN National Coordinating Office; University of Arizona 2Information Technology & Communications Coordinator, USA‐NPN National Coordinating Office; University of Arizona 3Science Associate, USA‐NPN National Coordinating Office; US Geological Survey Southwest Biological Science Center 4Applications Programmer, USA‐NPN National Coordinating Office; University of Arizona 5Monitoring Design & Data Coordinator, USA‐NPN National Coordinating Office; Northeast Regional Phenology Network 6Executive Director, USA‐NPN National Coordinating Office; US Geological Survey Suggested citation: Crimmins, T.M., A.H. Rosemartin, K.A. Thomas, R.L. Marsh, E.G. Denny, J.F. Weltzin. 2010. USA National Phenology Network 2009 Data Summary. USA‐NPN Technical Series 2010‐002. www.usanpn.org. USA National Phenology Network 2009 Data Summary 2 Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. Although this report is in the public domain, permission must be secured from the individual copyright owners to reproduce any copyrighted material contained within this report. USA National Phenology Network 2009 Data Summary 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT .......................................................................................................................................... -
Kamiak Butte
Checklist of Plants from Kamiak Butte (List alphabetical by genera within major groups) Ferns Cheilanthes gracillima lace lip-fern Cystopteris fragilis brittle bladder-fern Polypodium hesperium polypody Polystichum munitum swordfern Pteridium aquilinum bracken fern; brake fern Conifers Abies grandis grand fir Larix occidentalis western larch Pinus ponderosa ponderosa pine Pseudotsuga menziesii Douglas fir Flowering plants Acer negundo box elder Achillea millefolium yarrow Agoseris heterophylla false dandelion Alyssum alyssoides alyssum Amelanchier alnifolia serviceberry Anaphalis margaritacea pearly-everlasting Anemone piperi windflower Antennaria luzuloides woodrush pussytoes Antennaria microphylla rosy pussytoes Antennaria racemosa raceme pussytoes Anthemis cotula mayweed, chamomile Apocynum androsaemifolium spreading dogbane Arabis sparsiflora sicklepod rockcress Arctostaphylos uva-ursi bearberry, kinnikinnik Arenaria congesta ballhead sandwort Arenaria microphylla bigleaf sandwort Arnica cordifolia heart-leaf arnica Artemisia absinthium wormwood Aster conspicuus showy aster Aster occidentalis western mountain aster Astragalus arrectus Palouse milkvetch Astragalus canadensis Canadian milkvetch Athysanus pusillus sandweed Balsamorhiza sagittata arrowleaf balsamroot Barbarea orthoceras American watercress Berberis repens creeping Oregon grape Besseya rubra red besseya Bromus brizaeformis rattlesnake grass Bromus carinatus California brome Bromus japonicus Japanese brome Bromus tectorum downy cheatgrass Bromus vulgaris Columbia brome -
Sierran Steppe – Mixed Forest 6
Selecting Plants for Pollinators A Regional Guide for Farmers, Land Managers, and Gardeners In the Sierran Steppe Mixed Forest Coniferous Forest Alpine Meadow Province Including Parts of California and NAPPC and Oregon Table of CONTENTS Why Support Pollinators? 4 Getting Started 5 Sierran Steppe – Mixed Forest 6 Meet the Pollinators 8 Plant Traits 10 Developing Plantings 12 Farms 13 Public Lands 14 Home Landscapes 15 Bloom Periods 16 Plants That Attract Pollinators 18 Habitat Hints 20 Checklist 22 This is one of several guides for different regions in the United Resources and Feedback 23 States. We welcome your feedback to assist us in making the future guides useful. Please contact us at [email protected] Cover: Trinity County, California mountains and meadow courtesy Marguerite Meyer 2 Selecting Plants for Pollinators Selecting Plants for Pollinators A Regional Guide for Farmers, Land Managers, and Gardeners In the Ecological Region of the Sierran Steppe Mixed Forest Coniferous Forest Alpine Meadow Province Including Parts of California and Oregon a nappc and Pollinator Partnership™ Publication This guide was funded by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the C.S. Fund, the Plant Conservation Alliance, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Bureau of Land Management with oversight by the Pollinator Partnership™ (www.pollinator.org), in support of the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign (NAPPC–www.nappc.org). Sierran Steppe – Mixed Forest – Coniferous Forest – Alpine Meadow Province 3 Why support pollinators? IN THE I R 1996 BOOK , THE FORGOTTEN POLL I NATORS , Buchmann and Nabhan estimated that animal pollinators are needed for the reproduction “ Farming feeds of 90% of flowering plants and one third of human food crops. -
City of Leander Preferred Plant List
CITY OF LEANDER PREFERRED PLANT LIST Shade Trees Cenizo/Texas Sage/Autumn Sage (Salvia Arizona Cypress Greggii) Bur Oak Cotoneaster Cedar Elm Primrose Jasmine Chinquapin Oak Escarpment Live Oak Small Lacey Oak Dwarf Chinese Holly Monterey Oak Dwarf Palmetto Pecan Dwarf Yaupon Holly Pistachio (Chinese or Texas) Texas Sotol Red Oak Yucca Texas Ash Texas Red Oak Deciduous Shrubs Western Soapberry Large Flowering Senna Ornamental Trees Fragrant Sumac American Smoke Tree Sage Anacacho Orchid Tree Skull Cap Carolina Buckthorn Chitalpa Small Crape Myrtle Bamboo Muhly Desert Willow Big Muhly Escarpment Black Cherry Black Dalea Eve’s Necklace Deer Muhly Evergreen Sumac Flame Acanthus Goldenball Lead Tree Gulf Muhly Kidneywood Inland Sea Oats Mexican Buckeye Lantana Mexican Plum Mexican Feather Grass Possumhaw Holly Mountain Sage Red Buckeye Sideoats Grama Rough Leaf Dogwood Wooly Butterfly Bush Rusty Blackhaw Viburnum Yellow Bells Texas Mountain Laurel (evergreen) Texas Persimmon Groundcovers Texas Pistache (evergreen) Artemisia Texas Redbud Asian Jasmine Yaupon Holly (evergreen) Aztec Grass Creeping Germander Evergreen Shrubs Frog Fruit (deciduous) Large Gregg Dalea (deciduous) Abelia Liriope Agarita Meadow Sedge Agave Monkey Grass Burford Holly Mountain Pea (deciduous) Bush Germander Oregano Trailing Rosemary All Cultivars which achieved at least 80% recovery after 60 days without precipitation or rainfall EXHIBIT B 11/22/2006 11/22/2006 Cultivar Species % Recovery Stat. Grouping Uniformity Celebration Bermudagrass 100.0 a 9.00 a Grimes EXP Bermudagrass 100.0 a 9.00 a Common Bermuda Bermudagrass 98.8 ab 9.00 a GN1 Bermudagrass 98.8 ab 9.00 a Tifway 419 Bermudagrass 98.8 ab 9.00 a Tex Turf Bermudagrass 97.5 ab 9.00 a TifSport Bermudagrass 97.5 ab 9.00 a Buffalograss Buffalograss 95.0 abc 9.00 a Floratam Saint Augustine 88.8 abcd 8.50 a Source: Chalmers, et. -
Plant Native and Avoid Invasives 1-13-19
Plant Native and Avoid Invasives By Susan Camp My friend Cathy, who lives in eastern North Carolina, recently shared a photo of a huge, lushly beautiful Japanese wisteria (Wisteria floribunda) tree, the ground around it covered in lavender blossoms. You could almost smell the sweet fragrance. Cathy said she wishes she could have wisteria at her new house, as she had in Virginia, but since wisteria is non-native and invasive she won’t plant another one. I have good news for Cathy. A native wisteria (also spelled wistaria) exists: American or Atlantic wisteria (Wisteria frutescens). Unlike Japanese and Chinese wisteria (Wisteria sinensis), the American species is much less aggressive, although vines can grow to 15 to 40 feet in length. American wisteria will need regular pruning to maintain an attractive shape and control its size, but it will not consume your trees, pergola, or garage. American wisteria is a woody, deciduous, counterclockwise-twining vine, found in swampy woods and along stream banks in the southeastern United States from Virginia, south to Florida and west to Illinois and Texas. Kentucky wisteria (Wisteria frutescens var. macrostachya), a distinctive variety with more intense fragrance than American wisteria, also grows throughout the southeast. It may be classified as a separate species, depending on the source. Wisteria species perform well in USDA Hardiness Zones 5 to 9. They prefer well-drained, moist, acidic, moderately fertile soil in full sun to light shade. Flowering may decrease if grown in shaded areas. Unfortunately, wisterias don’t like to be transplanted, so consider the size and amount of greenery surrounding the spot you choose for planting to ensure they will get plenty of sunlight for years to come. -
Wisteria Sinensis Global Invasive Species Database (GISD)
FULL ACCOUNT FOR: Wisteria sinensis Wisteria sinensis System: Terrestrial Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Plantae Magnoliophyta Magnoliopsida Fabales Fabaceae Common name Chinese wisteria (English) Synonym Glycine sinensis , (Sims 1819) Kraunhia chinensis , (Greene 1892) Kraunhia floribunda , (Willd.) Taub. var. sinensis (Sims) Makino 1911 Kraunhia sinensis , (Sims) Makino 1910 Millettia chinensis , (Benth. 1852) Rehsonia sinensis , (Sims) Stritch 1984 Wisteria chinensis , DC. 1825 Wisteria chinensis , DC. var. albiflora (Lem.)W.Miller 1902 Wisteria sinensis , (Sims) Sweet var. albiflora Lem. 1858 Wisteria sinensis , (Sims) Sweet var. alba Lindl. 1849 Similar species Wisteria floribunda, Wisteria frutescens Summary Wisteria sinensis invades forest edges and disturbed areas, including riparian zones. It tolerates shade and a variety of soil types. In riparian areas, it spreads downstream as seeds float to new locations. Most infestations of natural habitats are escaped landscape plantings. Wisteria sinensis remains a popular ornamental in the nursery trade. view this species on IUCN Red List Species Description According to Martin (2002), Wisteria sinensis is a perennial vine that can live for 50 years or more and grows up to 38cm in diameter. The leaves are alternate and pinnately compound. They grow up to 30cm long and consist of 7-13 leaflets. The fragrant flowers are 1.27-2.5cm long and hang in clusters that sometimes exceed 40cm in length. Flowers are usually blue-violet, but other cultivars (which may be escaped plants) are white, purple, pink, and lavender. Flowers are usually produced from April to May (in the North American region). Seedpods are 10-15cm long, hairy, and brown; they are narrow at the base and have constrictions between the seeds.