Elements by Townrange for Racine County
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Q Seed Counts
Genesis Nursery Seed Count List data as of 15 March 2014 Beware ths Ides of March Species Lot/source Date entered Seeds/oz Acer rubrum jfnew 1/26/04 794 Acer saccharinum jfnew 1/26/04 111 Acer saccharinum aes10 5/4/12 400 Acer saccharum jfnew 1/26/04 563 Achillea filipendula applewood 3/10/04 174,375 Achillea filipendula everwilde 2011 12/13/10 175,000 Achillea lanulosa wns2001 4/2/02 165,516 Achillea lanulosa applewood 3/10/04 202,500 Achillea millefoilium achmilgo 2/9/06 166,912 Achillea millefoilium applewood 3/10/04 174,375 Achillea millefoilium achmil0san 9/21/02 179,022 Achillea millefoilium everwilde 2011 12/13/10 200,000 Achillea millefoilium occidentalis everwilde 2011 1/16/11 175,000 Achillea millefoilium rubra applewood 3/10/04 174,375 Achillea millefoilium rubra stocks 12/13/10 175,000 Achillea millefoilium rubra everwilde 2011 12/13/10 180,000 Acorus americanus acocalshi 6/10/05 5,553 Acorus americanus acocalsan 3/1/04 6,175 Acorus americanus prairiemoon 2/26/02 6,600 Acorus americanus everwilde 2011 1/16/11 6,800 Acorus americanus acoameroku 12/19/06 6,906 Acorus americanus jfnew 1/26/04 7,000 Acorus americanus aes 11/4/11 7,000 Acorus americanus acoamebat 11/18/11 9,260 Acorus americanus acocal02 1/10/02 11,853 Acorus calamus no lot no date zip, nada, zilch Actaea pachypoda everwilde 2011 12/13/10 5,000 Actaea pachypoda prairiemoon 10/3/13 5,200 Actaea rubra prairiemoon 10/3/13 4,450 Actaea rubra wns2001 4/2/02 34,000 Agalinus purpurea agapuuhiru 9/26/13 506,696 Agalinus tenuifolia agatenbat 12/7/11 144,036 Agalinus tenuifolia -
Species List For: Valley View Glades NA 418 Species
Species List for: Valley View Glades NA 418 Species Jefferson County Date Participants Location NA List NA Nomination and subsequent visits Jefferson County Glade Complex NA List from Gass, Wallace, Priddy, Chmielniak, T. Smith, Ladd & Glore, Bogler, MPF Hikes 9/24/80, 10/2/80, 7/10/85, 8/8/86, 6/2/87, 1986, and 5/92 WGNSS Lists Webster Groves Nature Study Society Fieldtrip Jefferson County Glade Complex Participants WGNSS Vascular Plant List maintained by Steve Turner Species Name (Synonym) Common Name Family COFC COFW Acalypha virginica Virginia copperleaf Euphorbiaceae 2 3 Acer rubrum var. undetermined red maple Sapindaceae 5 0 Acer saccharinum silver maple Sapindaceae 2 -3 Acer saccharum var. undetermined sugar maple Sapindaceae 5 3 Achillea millefolium yarrow Asteraceae/Anthemideae 1 3 Aesculus glabra var. undetermined Ohio buckeye Sapindaceae 5 -1 Agalinis skinneriana (Gerardia) midwestern gerardia Orobanchaceae 7 5 Agalinis tenuifolia (Gerardia, A. tenuifolia var. common gerardia Orobanchaceae 4 -3 macrophylla) Ageratina altissima var. altissima (Eupatorium rugosum) white snakeroot Asteraceae/Eupatorieae 2 3 Agrimonia pubescens downy agrimony Rosaceae 4 5 Agrimonia rostellata woodland agrimony Rosaceae 4 3 Allium canadense var. mobilense wild garlic Liliaceae 7 5 Allium canadense var. undetermined wild garlic Liliaceae 2 3 Allium cernuum wild onion Liliaceae 8 5 Allium stellatum wild onion Liliaceae 6 5 * Allium vineale field garlic Liliaceae 0 3 Ambrosia artemisiifolia common ragweed Asteraceae/Heliantheae 0 3 Ambrosia bidentata lanceleaf ragweed Asteraceae/Heliantheae 0 4 Ambrosia trifida giant ragweed Asteraceae/Heliantheae 0 -1 Amelanchier arborea var. arborea downy serviceberry Rosaceae 6 3 Amorpha canescens lead plant Fabaceae/Faboideae 8 5 Amphicarpaea bracteata hog peanut Fabaceae/Faboideae 4 0 Andropogon gerardii var. -
Barcoding the Asteraceae of Tennessee, Tribe Senecioneae
Schilling, E.E. and A. Floden. 2014. Barcoding the Asteraceae of Tennessee, tribe Senecioneae. Phytoneuron 2014-34: 1–5. Published 14 March 2014. ISSN 2153 733X BARCODING THE ASTERACEAE OF TENNESSEE, TRIBE SENECIONEAE EDWARD E. SCHILLING AND AARON FLODEN Herbarium TENN Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee 37996 [email protected]; [email protected] ABSTRACT Results from barcoding studies of tribe Senecioneae for the Tennessee flora using data from the nuclear ribosomal ITS marker region are presented and include first complete reports of this marker for 3 of the 15 species of these tribes that occur in the state. Sequence data from the ITS region separated all Tennessee species of Arnoglossum , Erechtites , Hasteola , and Rugelia (all of which are native) from one another and from other, non-Tennessee congeners. In contrast, many of the species of Packera , both from the state and from other parts of the southeastern USA, had basically identical ITS sequences. The contrast in the distinctiveness of Arnoglossum species compared to those of Packera suggests the two genera have had different histories of introduction and diversification in southeastern North America. Tribe Senecioneae is one of the largest in Asteraceae and with a worldwide distribution has had the opportunity to diversify in many different regions. The boundaries and circumscription of the tribe have, however, changed over the past few decades, and its generic level circumscription is still being settled (Nordenstam et al. 2009; Pelser et al. 2007, 2010). Notable is the problem of the circumscription of the huge Senecio (ca. 1000 species), but changes have also affected other genera from the southeastern USA, most notably the recognition of Arnoglossum and Hasteola as distinct from Cacalia (Anderson 1974). -
Floristic Quality Assessment Report
FLORISTIC QUALITY ASSESSMENT IN INDIANA: THE CONCEPT, USE, AND DEVELOPMENT OF COEFFICIENTS OF CONSERVATISM Tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) the State tree of Indiana June 2004 Final Report for ARN A305-4-53 EPA Wetland Program Development Grant CD975586-01 Prepared by: Paul E. Rothrock, Ph.D. Taylor University Upland, IN 46989-1001 Introduction Since the early nineteenth century the Indiana landscape has undergone a massive transformation (Jackson 1997). In the pre-settlement period, Indiana was an almost unbroken blanket of forests, prairies, and wetlands. Much of the land was cleared, plowed, or drained for lumber, the raising of crops, and a range of urban and industrial activities. Indiana’s native biota is now restricted to relatively small and often isolated tracts across the State. This fragmentation and reduction of the State’s biological diversity has challenged Hoosiers to look carefully at how to monitor further changes within our remnant natural communities and how to effectively conserve and even restore many of these valuable places within our State. To meet this monitoring, conservation, and restoration challenge, one needs to develop a variety of appropriate analytical tools. Ideally these techniques should be simple to learn and apply, give consistent results between different observers, and be repeatable. Floristic Assessment, which includes metrics such as the Floristic Quality Index (FQI) and Mean C values, has gained wide acceptance among environmental scientists and decision-makers, land stewards, and restoration ecologists in Indiana’s neighboring states and regions: Illinois (Taft et al. 1997), Michigan (Herman et al. 1996), Missouri (Ladd 1996), and Wisconsin (Bernthal 2003) as well as northern Ohio (Andreas 1993) and southern Ontario (Oldham et al. -
Don Robinson State Park Species Count: 544
Trip Report for: Don Robinson State Park Species Count: 544 Date: Multiple Visits Jefferson County Agency: MODNR Location: LaBarque Creek Watershed - Vascular Plants Participants: Nels Holmberg, WGNSS, MONPS, Justin Thomas, George Yatskievych This list was compiled by Nels Holmbeg over a period of > 10 years Species Name (Synonym) Common Name Family COFC COFW Acalypha gracilens slender three-seeded mercury Euphorbiaceae 3 5 Acalypha monococca (A. gracilescens var. monococca) one-seeded mercury Euphorbiaceae 3 5 Acalypha rhomboidea rhombic copperleaf Euphorbiaceae 1 3 Acalypha virginica Virginia copperleaf Euphorbiaceae 2 3 Acer rubrum var. undetermined red maple Sapindaceae 5 0 Acer saccharinum silver maple Sapindaceae 2 -3 Achillea millefolium yarrow Asteraceae/Anthemideae 1 3 Actaea pachypoda white baneberry Ranunculaceae 8 5 Adiantum pedatum var. pedatum northern maidenhair fern Pteridaceae Fern/Ally 6 1 Agalinis tenuifolia (Gerardia, A. tenuifolia var. common gerardia Orobanchaceae 4 -3 macrophylla) Ageratina altissima var. altissima (Eupatorium rugosum) white snakeroot Asteraceae/Eupatorieae 2 3 Agrimonia parviflora swamp agrimony Rosaceae 5 -1 Agrimonia pubescens downy agrimony Rosaceae 4 5 Agrimonia rostellata woodland agrimony Rosaceae 4 3 Agrostis perennans upland bent Poaceae/Aveneae 3 1 * Ailanthus altissima tree-of-heaven Simaroubaceae 0 5 * Ajuga reptans carpet bugle Lamiaceae 0 5 Allium canadense var. undetermined wild garlic Liliaceae 2 3 Allium stellatum wild onion Liliaceae 6 5 * Allium vineale field garlic Liliaceae 0 3 Ambrosia artemisiifolia common ragweed Asteraceae/Heliantheae 0 3 Ambrosia bidentata lanceleaf ragweed Asteraceae/Heliantheae 0 4 Amelanchier arborea var. arborea downy serviceberry Rosaceae 6 3 Amorpha canescens lead plant Fabaceae/Faboideae 8 5 Amphicarpaea bracteata hog peanut Fabaceae/Faboideae 4 0 Andropogon gerardii var. -
Species List
Species List for: Vilander Bluff NA 211 Species Crawford County Date Participants Location NA List NA Nomination - 1993 A disjoint part of Onondaga Cave State Park The Vascular Plant list was from the Natural Area Nomination WGNSS Lists Webster Groves Nature Study Society Fieldtrip A disjoint part of Onondaga Cave State Park Participants WGNSS Vascular Plant List maintained by Steve Turner Species Name (Synonym) Common Name Family COFC COFW Acer negundo var. undetermined box elder Sapindaceae 1 0 Acer saccharinum silver maple Sapindaceae 2 -3 Acer saccharum var. undetermined sugar maple Sapindaceae 5 3 Achillea millefolium yarrow Asteraceae/Anthemideae 1 3 Actaea racemosa (Cimicifuga) black cohosh Ranunculaceae 7 5 Adiantum pedatum var. pedatum northern maidenhair fern Pteridaceae Fern/Ally 6 1 Aesculus glabra var. undetermined Ohio buckeye Sapindaceae 5 -1 Ageratina altissima var. altissima (Eupatorium rugosum) white snakeroot Asteraceae/Eupatorieae 2 3 Agrimonia rostellata woodland agrimony Rosaceae 4 3 Allium canadense var. canadense wild garlic Liliaceae 2 3 Allium stellatum wild onion Liliaceae 6 5 Amelanchier arborea var. arborea downy serviceberry Rosaceae 6 3 Amphicarpaea bracteata hog peanut Fabaceae/Faboideae 4 0 Andropogon gerardii var. undetermined big bluestem Poaceae/Andropogoneae 5 1 Anemone virginiana var. virginiana thimbleweed Ranunculaceae 4 5 Antennaria parlinii var. undetermined (A. plantaginifolia) plainleaf pussytoes Asteraceae/Gnaphalieae 5 5 Aquilegia canadensis columbine Ranunculaceae 6 1 Arabis hirsuta var. undetermined -
Plant Species List Wylie Tract Clymer
Plant Check List Clymer/Wylie Survey Conducted on June 4, 2015 Total = 70 Species Grasses 14 Native or Date 1st Warm Season Perennial Family Name Scientific Name Common Name Introduced Observed or Cool Season or Annual Gramineae (Poaceae) Bromus japonicus Japanese Brome Introduced 6/4/2015 Cool Season Annual Gramineae (Poaceae) Bromus unioloides Rescuegrass Introduced 6/4/2015 Cool Season Annual Gramineae (Poaceae) Chasmanhium latifolium Creek Oats, Inland Sea Oats Native 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Elymus canadensis Canada Wildrye Native 6/4/2015 Cool Season Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Elymus virginicus Virginia Wildrye Native 6/4/2015 Cool Season Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Lolium perenne Ryegrass Introduced 6/4/2015 Cool Season Annual Gramineae (Poaceae) Panicum virgatum Switch Grass Native 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Paspalum dilitatum Dallas Grass Introduced 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Schizachyrium scoparium Little Bluestem Native 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Setaria geniulata Knotroot bristlegrass Native 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Sorghum halepense Johnsongrass Introduced 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Sporobolus compositus Meadow dropseed Naïve 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Stipa leucotricha Texas Wintergrass Native 6/4/2015 Cool Season Perennial Gramineae (Poaceae) Tripsacum dactyloides Eastern gamagrass Naïve 6/4/2015 Warm Perennial Sedges 2 Family Name Cyperaceae (Sedges) Cyperus setigerus Umbrella sedge Native 6/4/2015 -
Illustration Sources
APPENDIX ONE ILLUSTRATION SOURCES REF. CODE ABR Abrams, L. 1923–1960. Illustrated flora of the Pacific states. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA. ADD Addisonia. 1916–1964. New York Botanical Garden, New York. Reprinted with permission from Addisonia, vol. 18, plate 579, Copyright © 1933, The New York Botanical Garden. ANDAnderson, E. and Woodson, R.E. 1935. The species of Tradescantia indigenous to the United States. Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Cambridge, MA. Reprinted with permission of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. ANN Hollingworth A. 2005. Original illustrations. Published herein by the Botanical Research Institute of Texas, Fort Worth. Artist: Anne Hollingworth. ANO Anonymous. 1821. Medical botany. E. Cox and Sons, London. ARM Annual Rep. Missouri Bot. Gard. 1889–1912. Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. BA1 Bailey, L.H. 1914–1917. The standard cyclopedia of horticulture. The Macmillan Company, New York. BA2 Bailey, L.H. and Bailey, E.Z. 1976. Hortus third: A concise dictionary of plants cultivated in the United States and Canada. Revised and expanded by the staff of the Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium. Cornell University. Macmillan Publishing Company, New York. Reprinted with permission from William Crepet and the L.H. Bailey Hortorium. Cornell University. BA3 Bailey, L.H. 1900–1902. Cyclopedia of American horticulture. Macmillan Publishing Company, New York. BB2 Britton, N.L. and Brown, A. 1913. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British posses- sions. Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York. BEA Beal, E.O. and Thieret, J.W. 1986. Aquatic and wetland plants of Kentucky. Kentucky Nature Preserves Commission, Frankfort. Reprinted with permission of Kentucky State Nature Preserves Commission. -
Journal of the Oklahoma Native Plant Society, Volume 9, December 2009
4 Oklahoma Native Plant Record Volume 9, December 2009 VASCULAR PLANTS OF SOUTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA FROM THE SANS BOIS TO THE KIAMICHI MOUNTAINS Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 1969 Francis Hobart Means, Jr. Midwest City, Oklahoma Current Email Address: [email protected] The author grew up in the prairie region of Kay County where he learned to appreciate proper management of the soil and the native grass flora. After graduation from college, he moved to Eastern Oklahoma State College where he took a position as Instructor in Botany and Agronomy. In the course of conducting botany field trips and working with local residents on their plant problems, the author became increasingly interested in the flora of that area and of the State of Oklahoma. This led to an extensive study of the northern portion of the Oauchita Highlands with collections currently numbering approximately 4,200. The specimens have been processed according to standard herbarium procedures. The first set has been placed in the Herbarium of Oklahoma State University with the second set going to Eastern Oklahoma State College at Wilburton. Editor’s note: The original species list included habitat characteristics and collection notes. These are omitted here but are available in the dissertation housed at the Edmon-Low Library at OSU or in digital form by request to the editor. [SS] PHYSICAL FEATURES Winding Stair Mountain ranges. A second large valley lies across the southern part of Location and Area Latimer and LeFlore counties between the The area studied is located primarily in Winding Stair and Kiamichi mountain the Ouachita Highlands of eastern ranges. -
Vegetation Classification and Mapping of Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve Project Report
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Program Center Vegetation Classification and Mapping of Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve Project Report Natural Resource Report NRR/HTLN/NRR—2011/346 ON THE COVER Tallgrass prairie landscape at the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve; view of stone school with wild rye (Elymus canadensis), wild alfalfa (Psoralidium tenuifolium), and blacksamson echinacea (Echinacea angustifolia) seedheads in the foreground. Photograph by: Kelly Kindscher USGS-NPS Vegetation Mapping Program Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve Vegetation Classification and Mapping of Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve Project Report Natural Resource Report NRR/HTLN/NRR—2011/346 Kelly Kindscher1* Hayley Kilroy1 Jennifer Delisle1 Quinn Long1 Hillary Loring1 Kevin Dobbs2 Jim Drake3 1Kansas Natural Heritage Inventory Kansas Biological Survey University of Kansas 2101 Constant Ave. Lawrence, KS 66047 2Kansas Applied Remote Sensing Program Kansas Biological Survey University of Kansas 2101 Constant Ave. Lawrence, KS 66047 3NatureServe P.O. Box 9354 St. Paul, MN 55109 *contact [email protected] April 2011 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Program Center Fort Collins, Colorado USGS-NPS Vegetation Mapping Program Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve 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 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. -
Tennessee Natural Heritage Program Rare Species Observations for Tennessee Counties 2009
Tennessee Natural Heritage Program Rare Species Observations For Tennessee Counties This document provides lists of rare species known to occur within each of Tennessee's counties. If you are viewing the list in its original digital format and you have an internet connection, you may click the scientific names to search the NatureServe Explorer Encyclopedia of Life for more detailed species information. The following lists were last updated in July 2009 and are based on rare species observations stored in the Tennessee Natural Heritage Biotics Database maintained by the TDEC Natural Heritage Program. For definitions of ranks and protective status, or for instructions on obtaining a site specific project review, please visit our website: http://state.tn.us/environment/na/data.shtml If you need assistance using the lists or interpreting data, feel free to contact us: Natural Heritage Program Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation 7th Floor L&C Annex 401 Church Street Nashville, Tennessee 37243 (615) 532-0431 The lists provided are intended for use as planning tools. Because many areas of the state have not been searched for rare species, the lists should not be used to determine the absence of rare species. The lists are best used in conjunction with field visits to identify the types of rare species habitat that may be present at a given location. For projects that are located near county boundaries or are in areas of the state that have been under-surveyed (particularly in western Tennessee), we recommend that you check rare species lists for adjacent counties or watersheds as well. -
Final Dissertation Front Matter
Copyright by Taylor Sultan Quedensley 2012 The Dissertation Committee for Taylor Sultan Quedensley Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: MOLECULAR SYSTEMATICS OF THE MEXICAN TUSSILAGINIOID GROUP (ASTERACEAE: SENECIONEAE) Committee: Beryl Simpson Co-Supervisor Robert Jansen Co-Supervisor C. Randall Linder David Hillis James Mauseth MOLECULAR SYSTEMATICS OF THE MEXICAN TUSSILAGINIOID GENERA (ASTERACEAE: SENECIONEAE) by Taylor Sultan Quedensley B.S. Agr. Sci., M.S. Biology Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philospohy The University of Texas at Austin August 2012 Dedication This dissertation is dedicated to Don Mahoney and Dennis Breedlove. Their love for plants has inspired me for many years. Acknowledgements I am so grateful to Bob Jansen and Beryl Simpson for enabling me to be a botanist at The University of Texas at Austin and to pursue my academic and career goals. I thank Mario Véliz (Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala) for his support in the field and for the use of the BIGU Herbarium. In Mexico, I thank Jose Luis Villaseñor (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Jose Angel Villareal (Universidad Autónoma Agraria Antonio Narro), M. Socorro González-Elizondo (Instituto Politécnico Nacional), and Mario Ishiki (Colegio de la Frontera Sur) for assistance with fieldwork and specimen transport and export. I am grateful to Timmy Buxton (Cabrillo College) for his assistance in the field during multiple collecting trips. I also thank Taylor Nyberg and Nicholas Wilhelm (The University of Texas at Austin) for assistance with laboratory components of this project, and Thomas Payne (CIMMYT) for providing lodging during research visits to Mexico City.