Native Plant & Service Directory

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Native Plant & Service Directory Florida’s Real Green Industry™ / Fall 2012+2013 / WHOLESALE Native Plant & Service Directory Growing, Planting and Restoring Real Florida Lake Istokpoga 4 by Clyde Butcher Plant availability listings: 12 Growers: 7 Nursery & Landscape Products: 10 Landscape professionals: 31 Environmental professionals: 30 Plant Real Florida: 32 Award-winning growers: 50 Common to botanical names: 69 April 4-5, 2013 / Kissimmee, Florida: 40 the Native Plant Show www.FloridaNativeNurseries.org DPI Reg #04719348 4 Wholesale Native Plant & Service Directory Fall 2012-2013 / 26th Anniversary About Our Cover Photo: Springer Lake Istokpoga 4 This dramatic image of a Bald Environmental THE NATIVE PLANT SHOW Cypress tree is the work of Clyde Butcher, a April 4-5, 2013 / Kissimmee, Florida renowned art photographer often referred to as “Florida's Ansel Adams.” Butcher specializes in stunning, large-scale black and white photo 40 Florida’s expanding native plants industry prints that capture the richness and majesty of Showcasing Florida’s diversity of native plants and growers, plus Real Florida landscapes. His talent is a gift to our FANN’s professional education series for landscape architects, state and he expands on it with a gracious gen - designers, installers and maintenance professionals. / erosity to Florida's conservation movement. 49 Show sponsors FANN is deeply honored that Mr. Butcher per - mitted us to use his image on the cover of our directory. More info: www.ClydeButcher.com 50 Mike Kenton Wholesale Native Plant & Service Directory Awards of Recognition Publisher Presented to Brightman Logan in 2011, and Nancy FANN Bissett in 2012, for outstanding contributions to Florida Association of Native Nurseries the native plant industry. / 50 About the Award / Florida’s Real Green Industry™ 51 Recognizing longtime members All Native Flora JCM 52 Remembering The Senator www.FloridaNativeNurseries.org Photos: Peg Urban www.PlantRealFlorida.org 32 Plant Real Florida www.TheNativePlantShow.com Native plants and trees you should know / 32 Silkgrass Pityopsis graminifolia , Florida Pennyroyal Piloblephis rigida / 34 Garberia Garberia heterophylla , American Beautberry Callicarpa americana , Black Cherry Prunus serotina / 36 Plant more trees, Cypress Taxodium species / 45 Shiny Blueberry Vaccinium Myrsinites , Twinflower Contact Dyschoriste oblongifolia , Silkgrass Pityopsis graminifolia / 46 Buttonbush Cameron Donaldson, Executive Director FANN Cephalanthus occidentalis , Creeping Charlie Phyla nodiflora , Blue-stem Palmetto PO Box 972, Melbourne FL 32902-0972 Sabal minor / 48 Helmet Skullcap Scutellaria integrifolia / 76 Pineland Heliotrope Phone 321-917-1960 Heliotropium polyphyllum / 77 Willow Bustic Sideroxylon salicifolium / 78 Horizontal Fax 815-927-0128 Cocoplum Chrysobalanus icaco 'Horizontal' / 79 Florida Tetrazygia or West Indian Email [email protected] Lilac Tetrazygia bicolor The Florida Association of Native Nurseries provides listings and advertising as submitted by its members and advertisers for informational purposes only, and 52 Florida Native Plant Partnership / 68 FANN online + print shall not be held responsible for the results of any busi - ness conducted with the member firms or advertisers. Acceptance of advertising implies neither approval nor endorsement. FANN does not endorse or assume liabil - Professionals ity for the contents of this publication nor is FANN Wholesale Nurseries and Growers ................................................................................................7 responsible for any errors. Associate Members Environmental Consultants (Management, Mitigation, Restoration) ....................30 Unless otherwise indicated, all text written by Cameron Donaldson. © 2012-2013 by the Florida Association of Native Nurseries Landscape Professionals (Architects, Designers, Installers, Maintenance) ........31 and Cameron Donaldson, Just Cause Media. Allied Members and Supporters Trade: Fertilizer, Media and Mulch ...........................................................................................10 Non-Profit Support ...........................................................................................................................10 Native Plant Availability About Our Plant Listings ..................................................................................................................11 Common to Botanical Name Cross Reference ....................................................................69 Florida Native Plant Listings .........................................................................................................12 Policy Message from FANN ...........................................................................................................................5 Mission, Vision and Board of Directors ......................................................................................5 Publication FANN: Proud Part of Index to Advertisers ..........................................................................................................................10 Florida Agriculture Printed on paper with recycled content. a Message 5 from FANN FANN Florida Association Showcasing Florida’s Native Plant Industry of Native Nurseries BUSY LANDSCAPE PROFESSIONALS love the idea of finding all the native plants and expertise Board of Directors they need in one place. FANN loves showcasing the incredible diversity of native plants and John Sibley and Terry Godts growers that our niche industry now offers. And as the demand for native plants increases, CO-P RESIDENTS who better to educate industry professionals than the native plant professionals from FANN? Roger Triplett, VICE PRESIDENT Jenny Evans, TREASURER To meet this need, FANN is hosting Florida’s first-ever, all-native trade show, The Native Bruce Turley, SECRETARY Plant Show, Thursday and Friday, April 4-5, 2013, at the Osceola Heritage Park Exhibition Jerry Fritz, PAST PRESIDENT Building in Kissimmee. This centrally located facility offers easy access, affordability, no cost Nancy Bissett, DIRECTOR AT LARGE parking, and comfortable professional space for specialized shows like ours. Drive in, step out Tom Heitzman, DIRECTOR AT LARGE and do business. Eddie McKeithen, DIRECTOR AT LARGE OOKING FOR BEAUTIFUL NATIVE PLANTS Angela Patchunka, DIRECTOR AT LARGE L ? You’ll see hundreds of native plants ready for gar - Tony Yacovetti, DIRECTOR AT LARGE den center shelves and the finest landscapes. Meet the growers and learn how to best culti - Executive Director vate, use and maintain native plants for profit and sustainability. Cameron ‘Cammie’ Donaldson LOOKING FOR CEU S? Registered landscape architects and certified designers, installers, Mission maintenance crews and arborists have several classes to choose from over the course of a To lead Florida's horticulture and two-day seminar series and plenty of time to see the plants you’re learning about on the show landscape industry with native plant floor. production, education and marketing. LOOKING FOR INSPIRATION ? You’ll see wonderful plants new to you and perfect for beautiful, Vision authentic, and distinctive sustainable landscapes. And we’ll demonstrate how to use these The majority of Floridians will appre - ciate and understand the aesthetic, plants by “installing” award-winning landscape designs on the show floor. economic, ecological and cultural ben - Looking for suppliers and consultants you can rely on? Florida’s finest native plant efits of native plants and landscapes. growers will be available along with a select group of consultants, landscape professionals Native plants will be preferred and dominant, with ecosystem functions and allied product and service vendors. Network with specialized professionals who can add restored to most landscapes. FANN to your native plant knowledge and add value to your business. will remain the leading professional Interest in native plants is booming because of all the benefits these plants offer. Whether source for native plants and native landscape services, expertise and infor - your interest is Florida-friendly landscaping™ or sustainable landscaping in another southeast - mation. ern state, water or soil conservation, butterfly or bird gardening, ecological restoration, or an Membership authentic sense of place, we’ve got your solution. FANN welcomes nurseries, garden We know you’ll love our plants and what they can do for your bottom line, your customers, centers, landscape professionals and environmental consultants committed and the natural environment. Join us in Kissimmee next April and return to work with every - to the preservation, restoration, and thing you need to be successful with Florida native plants. sustainable use of Florida’s native If you’re growing native plants, you should exhibit at the show and join FANN. Become part plants and natural environment. Benefits, dues and application form of the sustainable landscape revolution sweeping the nation and the fastest growing segment online. of the nursery and landscape industry. More details page 40 of this directory and online at www.TheNativePlantShow.com. See you at Join us and be part The Native Plant Show of the solution for in Kissimmee, Florida on Florida’s Future. April 4-5, 2013. More info: TheNativePlantShow.com John Sibley Terry Godts FANN Co-President FANN Co-President 6 THE FLORIDA NATIVE PLANT INDUSTRY Wholesale Nurseries and Growers, Environmental Consultants and Landscape Professionals* The FANN Locator Map 00 FANN
Recommended publications
  • Florida Native Plant Society · Vol
    The Palmetto Quarterly Magazine of the Florida Native Plant Society · Vol. 14, No. 3 · Fall 1994 Toward a Working Definition of "Florida Native Plant" by David Pais For most purposes, the phrase "Florida native plant" refers to those species occurring within the state boundaries prior to European contact, according to best scientific and historical documentation. More specifically, it includes those species understood as indigenous, occurring in natural associations in habitats that existed prior to significant human impacts and alterations of the landscape. What is a native plant? This question specific geographical area or region prior to significant human impacts, is -which on the surface seems quite simple biogeographical region, which do not more precise in meaning. In one sense, -reveals, upon further examination, a greater directly correspond to political boundaries'. indigenous implies origination and be- degree of complexity than first imagined What has been called the European longing to a particular place. It also carries What we commonly understand as the Ecological Imperialism, marked by the the connotation of not having been meaning of native is 'born or naturally drastic alteration of the indigenous flora of introduced from elsewhere. For example, occurring in a specific area". However, it is the peninsula, occurred several centuries Hand Fern, Ophioglossuin palmatum, is in- not always possible to reduce the meaning before the establishment of statehood. digenous to Sabal Palm boots in low of native plant to a simple slogan or precise What is significant is not a date, but an subtropical hammocks; it doesn't belong date. Some definitions of a Florida native event - the radical transformation of the elsewhere.
    [Show full text]
  • "National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary."
    Intro 1996 National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands The Fish and Wildlife Service has prepared a National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary (1996 National List). The 1996 National List is a draft revision of the National List of Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1988 National Summary (Reed 1988) (1988 National List). The 1996 National List is provided to encourage additional public review and comments on the draft regional wetland indicator assignments. The 1996 National List reflects a significant amount of new information that has become available since 1988 on the wetland affinity of vascular plants. This new information has resulted from the extensive use of the 1988 National List in the field by individuals involved in wetland and other resource inventories, wetland identification and delineation, and wetland research. Interim Regional Interagency Review Panel (Regional Panel) changes in indicator status as well as additions and deletions to the 1988 National List were documented in Regional supplements. The National List was originally developed as an appendix to the Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats of the United States (Cowardin et al.1979) to aid in the consistent application of this classification system for wetlands in the field.. The 1996 National List also was developed to aid in determining the presence of hydrophytic vegetation in the Clean Water Act Section 404 wetland regulatory program and in the implementation of the swampbuster provisions of the Food Security Act. While not required by law or regulation, the Fish and Wildlife Service is making the 1996 National List available for review and comment.
    [Show full text]
  • The Vascular Plants of Massachusetts
    The Vascular Plants of Massachusetts: The Vascular Plants of Massachusetts: A County Checklist • First Revision Melissa Dow Cullina, Bryan Connolly, Bruce Sorrie and Paul Somers Somers Bruce Sorrie and Paul Connolly, Bryan Cullina, Melissa Dow Revision • First A County Checklist Plants of Massachusetts: Vascular The A County Checklist First Revision Melissa Dow Cullina, Bryan Connolly, Bruce Sorrie and Paul Somers Massachusetts Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program The Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program (NHESP), part of the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, is one of the programs forming the Natural Heritage network. NHESP is responsible for the conservation and protection of hundreds of species that are not hunted, fished, trapped, or commercially harvested in the state. The Program's highest priority is protecting the 176 species of vertebrate and invertebrate animals and 259 species of native plants that are officially listed as Endangered, Threatened or of Special Concern in Massachusetts. Endangered species conservation in Massachusetts depends on you! A major source of funding for the protection of rare and endangered species comes from voluntary donations on state income tax forms. Contributions go to the Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Fund, which provides a portion of the operating budget for the Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program. NHESP protects rare species through biological inventory,
    [Show full text]
  • Suncoast Grapevine
    www.fnps.org/chapters/suncoast The Suncoast Grapevine Newsletter of the Suncoast Native Plant Society, Inc. Volume 18 Number 11 November 2001 November 21 Meeting Highlights Wild Orchids of Florida by Paul Martin Brown and Stan Folsom Calendar………………2 Our speaker for November, Paul Martin Brown, is a leading expert on Directory….…………..6 the native orchids of America. Together with his partner, the artist Stan Folsom, he has published Wild Orchids of the Northeastern United Election of 2002 States. Two other books are forthcoming, Wild Orchids of North Board of Directors…....5 America, an Annotated and Illustrated Checklist, and, of special interest to our group, Wild Orchids of Florida. Unfortunately, the latter will not Fall Plant Sale be published until mid-December. Fortunately, Paul will have order Thank You………..….3 forms for those of us who want the book, and Stan will be selling some Landscaping with natives of his paintings. in Hillsborough County for November…...…….4 Paul is a research associate at the University of Florida Herbarium at the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville. He received his M.S. Meeting location……...6 from the University of Massachusetts, and is the founder of the North American Native Orchid Alliance and editor of the North American Membership Native Orchid Journal. Stan, who will assist in the presentation, is a application………….....3 retired art teacher who received his baccalaureate at the Massachusetts College of Art, and his Master of Fine Arts and Ph.D at the Pennsylvania Plant profile…….…......5 State College. His primary medium is watercolor, and his work is represented in several permanent collections including the Federal Upcoming programs…..2 Reserve Bank of Boston.
    [Show full text]
  • 10 Easy Wildflowers for Butterflies and Bees Tips and Terms
    10 Easy Wildflowers for Butterflies and Bees Tips and Terms Selection Glossary of helpful terms It may take a while to understand your landscape’s soil and drainage conditions. If Anther: pollen-bearing part of the stamen your wildflowers don’t succeed, try again, maybe with different species. Remember, Axil: upper angle between the stem and success depends on using the right plant in the right place. leaf or other plant part Water Basal: forming or attached at the base Water plants thoroughly when planting, then water as needed until they are established Bract: modified leaf at the base of a flower and putting out new foliage. Once plants are established, irrigation should be needed Calyx: collective term for the sepals of a only during extended dry periods. Learn to recognize when plants look wilted and flower; typically a whorl that encloses water them then. Over-irrigation can cause fungus and rot, which can kill your the petals and protects the flower bud wildflowers. It can also cause them to grow too quickly, becoming more susceptible to pests and diseases, or too tall, requiring staking. Corolla: collective term for the petals of a flower Fertilizer Corona: petal-like structures arising from Native wildflowers should not need fertilizer. Applying fertilizer can produce plants that the corolla of some flowers to form a grow too quickly, which can lead them to become pest and disease prone, and too tall, crownlike ring requiring staking. Fertilizing also encourages weeds, which can easily out-compete Cultivar: horticultural variety of a wildflowers. naturally occurring species produced in cultivation by selective breeding Sustaining wildflowers If you want wildflowers to persist on their own in your landscape, you’ll need to allow for Deciduous: seasonal shedding of leaves; self-seeding, especially for annual or short-lived species.
    [Show full text]
  • Cocoa Beach Maritime Hammock Preserve Management Plan
    MANAGEMENT PLAN Cocoa Beach’s Maritime Hammock Preserve City of Cocoa Beach, Florida Florida Communities Trust Project No. 03 – 035 –FF3 Adopted March 18, 2004 TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION PAGE I. Introduction ……………………………………………………………. 1 II. Purpose …………………………………………………………….……. 2 a. Future Uses ………….………………………………….…….…… 2 b. Management Objectives ………………………………………….... 2 c. Major Comprehensive Plan Directives ………………………..….... 2 III. Site Development and Improvement ………………………………… 3 a. Existing Physical Improvements ……….…………………………. 3 b. Proposed Physical Improvements…………………………………… 3 c. Wetland Buffer ………...………….………………………………… 4 d. Acknowledgment Sign …………………………………..………… 4 e. Parking ………………………….………………………………… 5 f. Stormwater Facilities …………….………………………………… 5 g. Hazard Mitigation ………………………………………………… 5 h. Permits ………………………….………………………………… 5 i. Easements, Concessions, and Leases …………………………..… 5 IV. Natural Resources ……………………………………………..……… 6 a. Natural Communities ………………………..……………………. 6 b. Listed Animal Species ………………………….…………….……. 7 c. Listed Plant Species …………………………..…………………... 8 d. Inventory of the Natural Communities ………………..………….... 10 e. Water Quality …………..………………………….…..…………... 10 f. Unique Geological Features ………………………………………. 10 g. Trail Network ………………………………….…..………..……... 10 h. Greenways ………………………………….…..……………..……. 11 i Adopted March 18, 2004 V. Resources Enhancement …………………………..…………………… 11 a. Upland Restoration ………………………..………………………. 11 b. Wetland Restoration ………………………….…………….………. 13 c. Invasive Exotic Plants …………………………..…………………... 13 d. Feral
    [Show full text]
  • National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands 1996
    National List of Vascular Plant Species that Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary Indicator by Region and Subregion Scientific Name/ North North Central South Inter- National Subregion Northeast Southeast Central Plains Plains Plains Southwest mountain Northwest California Alaska Caribbean Hawaii Indicator Range Abies amabilis (Dougl. ex Loud.) Dougl. ex Forbes FACU FACU UPL UPL,FACU Abies balsamea (L.) P. Mill. FAC FACW FAC,FACW Abies concolor (Gord. & Glend.) Lindl. ex Hildebr. NI NI NI NI NI UPL UPL Abies fraseri (Pursh) Poir. FACU FACU FACU Abies grandis (Dougl. ex D. Don) Lindl. FACU-* NI FACU-* Abies lasiocarpa (Hook.) Nutt. NI NI FACU+ FACU- FACU FAC UPL UPL,FAC Abies magnifica A. Murr. NI UPL NI FACU UPL,FACU Abildgaardia ovata (Burm. f.) Kral FACW+ FAC+ FAC+,FACW+ Abutilon theophrasti Medik. UPL FACU- FACU- UPL UPL UPL UPL UPL NI NI UPL,FACU- Acacia choriophylla Benth. FAC* FAC* Acacia farnesiana (L.) Willd. FACU NI NI* NI NI FACU Acacia greggii Gray UPL UPL FACU FACU UPL,FACU Acacia macracantha Humb. & Bonpl. ex Willd. NI FAC FAC Acacia minuta ssp. minuta (M.E. Jones) Beauchamp FACU FACU Acaena exigua Gray OBL OBL Acalypha bisetosa Bertol. ex Spreng. FACW FACW Acalypha virginica L. FACU- FACU- FAC- FACU- FACU- FACU* FACU-,FAC- Acalypha virginica var. rhomboidea (Raf.) Cooperrider FACU- FAC- FACU FACU- FACU- FACU* FACU-,FAC- Acanthocereus tetragonus (L.) Humm. FAC* NI NI FAC* Acanthomintha ilicifolia (Gray) Gray FAC* FAC* Acanthus ebracteatus Vahl OBL OBL Acer circinatum Pursh FAC- FAC NI FAC-,FAC Acer glabrum Torr. FAC FAC FAC FACU FACU* FAC FACU FACU*,FAC Acer grandidentatum Nutt.
    [Show full text]
  • Lyonia Preserve Plant Checklist
    Lyonia Preserve Plant Checklist Volusia County, Florida Aceraceae (Maple) Asteraceae (Aster) Red Maple Acer rubrum Bitterweed Helenium amarum Blackroot Pterocaulon virgatum Agavaceae (Yucca) Blazing Star Liatris sp. Adam's Needle Yucca filamentosa Blazing Star Liatris tenuifolia Nolina Nolina brittoniana Camphorweed Heterotheca subaxillaris Spanish Bayonet Yucca aloifolia Cudweed Gnaphalium falcatum Dog Fennel Eupatorium capillifolium Amaranthaceae (Amaranth) Dwarf Horseweed Conyza candensis Cottonweed Froelichia floridana False Dandelion Pyrrhopappus carolinianus Fireweed Erechtites hieracifolia Anacardiaceae (Cashew) Garberia Garberia heterophylla Winged Sumac Rhus copallina Goldenaster Pityopsis graminifolia Goldenrod Solidago chapmanii Annonaceae (Custard Apple) Goldenrod Solidago fistulosa Flag Paw paw Asimina obovata Goldenrod Solidago spp. Mohr's Throughwort Eupatorium mohrii Apiaceae (Celery) Ragweed Ambrosia artemisiifolia Dollarweed Hydrocotyle sp. Saltbush Baccharis halimifolia Spanish Needles Bidens alba Apocynaceae (Dogbane) Wild Lettuce Lactuca graminifolia Periwinkle Catharathus roseus Brassicaceae (Mustard) Aquifoliaceae (Holly) Poorman's Pepper Lepidium virginicum Gallberry Ilex glabra Sand Holly Ilex ambigua Bromeliaceae (Airplant) Scrub Holly Ilex opaca var. arenicola Ball Moss Tillandsia recurvata Spanish Moss Tillandsia usneoides Arecaceae (Palm) Saw Palmetto Serenoa repens Cactaceae (Cactus) Scrub Palmetto Sabal etonia Prickly Pear Opuntia humifusa Asclepiadaceae (Milkweed) Caesalpinceae Butterfly Weed Asclepias
    [Show full text]
  • AMERICAN BEAUTYBERRY (Callicarpa Americana)
    ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT AND RESTORATION RESEARCH PROGRAM TECHNICAL REPORT EL-97-15 AMERICAN BEAUTYBERRY (Callicarpa americana) Section 7.5.8, U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS WILDLIFE RESOURCES MANAGEMENT MANUAL by Chester O. Martin DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY Waterways Experiment Station, Corps of Engineers 3909 Halls Ferry Road, Vicksburg, Mississippi 39180-6199 and Sarah P. Mott Conservation Communications Vicksburg, Mississippi 39180 August 1997 Final Report Approved For Public Release; Distribution Is Unlimited EL-97-15 ^ 1997 Prepared for DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Washington, DC 20314-1000 Under EIRP Work Unit 32420 library OEC I 1 The contents of this report are not to be used for advertising, publication, or promotional purposes. Citation of trade names does not constitute an official endorsement or approval of the use of such commercial products. The findings of this report are not to be construed as an official Department of the Army position, unless so designated by other authorized documents. PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER ÍJ\ LIBRARY 92046874 "; ■ 11 -J - y] PREFACE This work was sponsored by the Headquarters, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (HQUSACE), as part of the Ecosystem Management and Restoration Research Program (EMRRP), Work Unit 32420, entitled Development of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wildlife Resources Management Manual. Mr. Dave Mathis, CERD-C, was the EIRP Coordinator at the Directorate of Research and Development, HQUSACE. The Program Monitors for the study were Ms. Cheryl Smith, Mr. F. B. Juhle, and Mr. Forrester Einarsen, HQUSACE. The report serves as a section of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wildlife Resources Management Manual.
    [Show full text]
  • A Review of the Plants of the Princeton Chert (Eocene, British Columbia, Canada)
    Botany A review of the plants of the Princeton chert (Eocene, British Columbia, Canada) Journal: Botany Manuscript ID cjb-2016-0079.R1 Manuscript Type: Review Date Submitted by the Author: 07-Jun-2016 Complete List of Authors: Pigg, Kathleen; Arizona State University, School of Life Sciences DeVore, Melanie; Georgia College and State University, Department of Biological &Draft Environmental Sciences Allenby Formation, Aquatic plants, Fossil monocots, Okanagan Highlands, Keyword: Permineralized floras https://mc06.manuscriptcentral.com/botany-pubs Page 1 of 75 Botany A review of the plants of the Princeton chert (Eocene, British Columbia, Canada) Kathleen B. Pigg , School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, PO Box 874501, Tempe, AZ 85287-4501, USA Melanie L. DeVore , Department of Biological & Environmental Sciences, Georgia College & State University, 135 Herty Hall, Milledgeville, GA 31061 USA Corresponding author: Kathleen B. Pigg (email: [email protected]) Draft 1 https://mc06.manuscriptcentral.com/botany-pubs Botany Page 2 of 75 A review of the plants of the Princeton chert (Eocene, British Columbia, Canada) Kathleen B. Pigg and Melanie L. DeVore Abstract The Princeton chert is one of the most completely studied permineralized floras of the Paleogene. Remains of over 30 plant taxa have been described in detail, along with a diverse assemblage of fungi that document a variety of ecological interactions with plants. As a flora of the Okanagan Highlands, the Princeton chert plants are an assemblage of higher elevation taxa of the latest early to early middle Eocene, with some components similar to those in the relatedDraft compression floras. However, like the well known floras of Clarno, Appian Way, the London Clay, and Messel, the Princeton chert provides an additional dimension of internal structure.
    [Show full text]
  • Etoniah Creek State Forest Management Plan
    TEN-YEAR RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR THE ETONIAH CREEK STATE FOREST PUTNAM COUNTY, FLORIDA PREPARED BY THE FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND CONSUMER SERVICES, FLORIDA FOREST SERVICE APPROVED ON JULY 9, 2015 Land Management Plan Compliance Checklist Etoniah Creek State Forest – April 2015 Section A: Acquisition Information Items Statute/ Page Numbers and/or Item # Requirement Rule Appendix 18-2.018 & Page 1 (Executive Summary); 1. The common name of the property. 18-2.021 Page 2 (I); Page 9 (II.A.1) Page 1 (Executive Summary); The land acquisition program, if any, under which the property 18-2.018 & 2. Page 2 (I); Page 10 (II.A.4); was acquired. 18-2.021 Page 10 (II.B.1) Degree of title interest held by the Board, including 3. 18-2.021 Page 11 (II.B.2) reservations and encumbrances such as leases. 18-2.018 & 4. The legal description and acreage of the property. Page 9 (II.A.2) 18-2.021 A map showing the approximate location and boundaries of 18-2.018 & 5. the property, and the location of any structures or Exhibits B, C, and E 18-2.021 improvements to the property. An assessment as to whether the property, or any portion, 6. 18-2.021 Page 15 (II.D.3) should be declared surplus. Identification of other parcels of land within or immediately Page 14 (II.D.2); 7. adjacent to the property that should be purchased because they 18-2.021 are essential to management of the property. Exhibit F Identification of adjacent land uses that conflict with the 8.
    [Show full text]
  • NLI Recommended Plant List for the Mountains
    NLI Recommended Plant List for the Mountains Notable Features Requirement Exposure Native Hardiness USDA Max. Mature Height Max. Mature Width Very Wet Very Dry Drained Moist &Well Occasionally Dry Botanical Name Common Name Recommended Cultivars Zones Tree Deciduous Large (Height: 40'+) Acer rubrum red maple 'October Glory'/ 'Red Sunset' fall color Shade/sun x 2-9 75' 45' x x x fast growing, mulit-stemmed, papery peeling Betula nigra river birch 'Heritage® 'Cully'/ 'Dura Heat'/ 'Summer Cascade' bark, play props Shade/part sun x 4-8 70' 60' x x x Celtis occidentalis hackberry tough, drought tolerant, graceful form Full sun x 2-9 60' 60' x x x Fagus grandifolia american beech smooth textured bark, play props Shade/part sun x 3-8 75' 60' x x Fraxinus americana white ash fall color Full sun/part shade x 3-9 80' 60' x x x Ginkgo biloba ginkgo; maidenhair tree 'Autumn Gold'/ 'The President' yellow fall color Full sun 3-9 70' 40' x x good dappled shade, fall color, quick growing, Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis thornless honey locust Shademaster®/ Skyline® salt tolerant, tolerant of acid, alkaline, wind. Full sun/part shade x 3-8 75' 50' x x Liriodendron tulipifera tulip poplar fall color, quick growth rate, play props, Full sun x 4-9 90' 50' x Platanus x acerifolia sycamore, planetree 'Bloodgood' play props, peeling bark Full sun x 4-9 90' 70' x x x Quercus palustris pin oak play props, good fall color, wet tolerant Full sun x 4-8 80' 50' x x x Tilia cordata Little leaf Linden, Basswood 'Greenspire' Full sun/part shade 3-7 60' 40' x x Ulmus
    [Show full text]