Plant Identification Reviewing Some of the Common Plants Found on the SMSL - SM South HS Environmental Science I – Fall 08-09.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Horticulture II - LC Plant ID Herbaceous Perennials I.
Advertisements

4-H/FFA Crops Career Development Event Weed Plant Identification Photos Courtesy of Purdue Agronomy and Google Images.
PLANT IDENTIFICATION.
Life Cycle of a Maple Tree
Vascular plants of NATLs Upland Pine Sam Hart, Jun.-Dec Scientific name: Acalypha gracilens Native to Florida?: yes NATL common name: slender threeseed.
Pawpaw The dark green leaves of Pawpaw have a tropical look, with their large, shiny blades that are distinctly obovate (widest just behind the leaf tip).
Common Trees of North Carolina Environmental and Natural Resources I- Objective
Yellow Birch A medium size tree to 75 feet with an irregular crown
Weeds Chapter 7 Section VII of the Pest Bear & Affiliates Service Personnel Development Program , Central Fla Duplicating, Inc.
Bignoniaceae (the bignonia family)
7Ranges Pipestone Plants Your study guide to some of the most common plants found on 7Ranges Scout Reservation for fulfilling your Pipestone plant identification.
Wilderness Survival Edible Plants. LAMB’S QUARTER CHENOPODIUM ALBUM Lamb’s Quarter is one of the earliest spring plants. Both the leaves and seeds are.
American Beauty Berry American beauty-berry most often grows 3-5 ft. tall and usually just as wide, It can reach 9 ft. in height in favorable soil and.
Frasier Fir (Fraser) Flattened needles, 3/4 inch long, blunt or notched at the end, shiny dark green above and silvery below. Needles generally more dense.
Agronomic Weeds – 1 CS 414 Note: weeds occur in a variety of sites, management schemes, & niches. These weeds are commonly (not exclusively) found in agronomic.
Plant Identification Reviewing Some of the Common Plants Found on the SMESL - SM South HS Environmental Education 1.
Plant Classification & Identification Junior High Agriculture.
All plants have features (adaptations) which help them to survive and reproduce in the places where they live (their habitat)
Horse Chestnut large, 7-leaflet, palmately-compound leaves leaves have impressed veins fruits are the most spiny of all Aesculus each leaflet is 4" to.
“Plants Out of Place” Frequently Seen at Cold Spring School
4-H/FFA Crops Career Development Event Weed Plant Identification Photos Courtesy of Purdue Agronomy and Google Images.
4-H/FFA Crops Career Development Event Crop Plant Identification Photos Courtesy of Purdue Agronomy and Google Images.
Tree Identification By: Courtney Barber. Baldcypress Taxodium distichum  Leaf: linear and small, ¼ to ¾ inch long, leaves look feathery and are yellow-green.
What makes a tree a tree? Heights at least 4.5 meters (about 15 feet) Single dominant woody stem (trunk or bole) Capable of diameter growth Perennial plant.
Biome: Shrub Land By: Diana Ramirez Uriel Lucero Jesus Lopez.
PLANT ID WEEK 3.  Cercis canadensis  COMMON NAME: Eastern Red Bud  Small, deciduous tree20’- 25’tall and wide  Border, foundation, specimen  FOLIAGE:
Junior Nursery/ Landscaping Competition
Angiosperms – The Scientific name for the flowering plants. These plants produce covered seeds that develop inside the ovary of a flower.
Plains or Broadleaf Cottonwood Populus sargentii The Plains or broadleaf cottonwood is also the largest broadleaf tree of Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming.
Plant Identification Reviewing Some of the Common Plants Found in Our Area Environmental Education 1.
Different kinds of food apple (n) a round fruit with shiny red or green skin and firm white flesh.
 Herbs, shrubs, woody vines or trees  Leaves opposite or whorled, simple, stipulate; stipules sometimes indistinguishable from leaves in plants with.
Plant ID #4 Horticulture 2. Dieffenbachia maculata Dumbcane –Foliage: simple; entire margin; ovate; pinnate; evergreen; 8 to 12 inches; variegated –Height:
Plant ID Week 3. Norfolk Island Pine Indoor plant Looks like a little pine or cedar tree About 4 feet tall.
Evan Bell Dawson Wagner.  Large, rolling terrains of flowers, grasses, and herbs.
Weed Identification Grasses National Railroad Contractors Association.
By Bailey Fasano & Hailey Jagger
1 Let’s Learn About… Deciduous Trees!. 2 What Is a Deciduous Tree? Has broad, flat leaves –Leaves are green in summer –Leaves turn colors in the fall.
Grasslands- Savannah plants By Carissa. Soil Roots, that can extend some 6 into the ground, and the soil together. The roots prevent the grasslands fine.
Tree Identification Reviewing Some of the Common Trees Found on the SMEL Shawnee Mission South H.S. Environmental Science I – Mr. Wright.
Envirothan study guide By Alexis Moore.  The leaf is broad, flat and not lobed.  Smooth bottom  Asymmetrical base  They are usually one to five inches.
Adam S The Botanist BY: ADAM S. FOR THE GRASSLAND PRAIRIES.
H2- Plant ID #2. Aucuba japonica Japanese Aucuba –Foliage: evergreen; simple, lustrous, leathery leaves; 3 to 8" long; rounded green stems –Flower: rare.
Panax quinquefolia L..  Kingdom- Plantae (plants)  Subkingdom-Travhebionta (Vascular)  Superdivision-Spermaphyta (seed)  Division-Magnoliophyta (flowering)
BarnyardgrassBarnyardgrassShattercaneShattercane.
1 Let’s Learn About… Deciduous Trees!. 2 What Is a Deciduous Tree? Has flat leaves –Leaves are green in summer –Leaves turn colors in the fall –Leaves.
Ben Ferguson. Winged Elm, Ulmus alata Michx., has also been called Wahoo Elm.
Digital Plant Portfolio By. Drew Smith. Setaria pumila Yellow Foxtail.
Hi, my name is James and I would like to tell you about my Tree Project, it is a study of a Silver Birch tree that grows in my back garden. The tree you.
Woody Plant Identification. Anacua Leaves are big and green and feels very much like sandpaper.
Weed Identification Introduction to Horticulture CDE Brandon Smith.
Plant Identification Week 9. Corn Plant Dracaena Dracaena fragrans ‘Massangeana’ Strong, upright plant on woody- like stalk Mature plants display palm-like.
Woody Plant Identification. Anacua Leaves big and green Feels like sandpaper.
Plant Identification Week 20.
Scientific Identification & Classification
Tools of the Biologist/Leaf Identification
NATIVE PLANTS A critical part of natural ecosystems. Prevents erosion
Asher McCord and Bain Jenkins
Alfalfa crop modeling Saman Zaheer 15-arid-5171.
Hardwood and Timber-Forage-Wildlife Identification Species
Utah Noxious Weeds 1. Bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon)
Scotch Thistle Biennial Pink to lavender flowers
Trumpet creeper - Campsis radicans Campsis radicans
PLANT GUIDE FOR STUDENTS
Evergreens Quiz.
4-H/FFA Crops Career Development Event
Popular MN Trees & Shrubs
INTRODUCTION TO BIODIVERSITY
Popular MN Trees & Shrubs
How to Identify Poison Ivy, Oak, and Sumac and Wild Parsnip
Presentation transcript:

Plant Identification Reviewing Some of the Common Plants Found on the SMSL - SM South HS Environmental Science I – Fall 08-09

The Grasses From

Foxtail (Setaria sp.)  Flower head a series of dense spikes.  Head floppy, drupes easily like a “fox tail”.

From From

Side Oats Grama (Bouteloua curtipendula)  Its spikelets have an oat-like resemblance  Spikelets Appear to come off one side of the panicle branch.  inches tall. From

Spikelets

From

Purpletop (Tridens flavus)  Its inflorescence is purple.  It has four to seven florets per spikelet.  2 to 5 feet tall  From

Big Bluestem (Andropogon gerardii )  Can be quite tall. (2 to 6 feet)  One of the big grasses on the prairie.  Inflorescence often resembles a turkey foot.  The base of the plant is typically hairy From

Turkey Foot

From

Indian Grass (Sorghastrum nutans )  Inflorescence looks like a big paint brush.  The leaves are broad with a blue-green color.  One of the big grasses on the prairie. From

 The ligules/auricles take on the appearance of rabbit ears, Paint Brush From

Little Bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)  20 to 60 inches tall.  Greenish-blue to purplish.  Branching above, leafy base.  Inflorescence form wind blown seed tufts. From

InflorescenceSpikelets From

Broadleaf & Herbaceous Plants

Mullien (Verbascum thapsus)  feet tall.  Single erect stem  Leaves large and covered by fine soft hairs. Wooly  “Natures Toilet Paper”  Leaves form rosette at base and up stem  Long flower spike at top of stem  Yellow flowers

Wing Stem  Wings on sides of stems.  Yellow flowers.  Tall plants.  One stalk that branches at top.  Narrow, rough leaves up to 6 inches long.

Golden Rod (Solidago sp.)  Flowers yellow  Inflorescence usually wider than it is tall, with numerous tiny flowering heads on the upper side of curving branches.  Stem is green to Reddish- green, single or clustered, usually erect.  Leaves lanceolate, 2 to 5 inches long From

From epod.usra.edu From

Poison Ivy (Toxicodendron radicans )  3-leaflets.  Petiole often reddish.  Leaflets kind of triangular with side notch.  “If it’s 3 let it be”

Note the Red Petiole White Berries

Ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia)  Leaves finely divided.  Green flower buds at end of stems.  Inconspicuous flowers.  Find in sunny areas.

Cattail (Typha latifolia)  Leaves are large spear-shaped.  Stalks are topped with hotdog-shaped, dark brown flower tuff which turns into fluff in the fall  Grows at edge of pond in thick stands.

From

Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca)  Grows up to six feet tall.  Has large, broad leaves, usually four to ten inches long.  Flowers are often droop.  Flowers are pinkish- purple clusters which often droop.  Fruits are large green pods which turn brown before bursting open to let out fluffy seeds.  Sap is milky white. From

Flowers in the spring

Tick Trefoil (Desmodium canescens)  3 leaflets.  Small plant.  Purple flowers  Found in sunny areas

From

Thistle  Leaves with sharp spines or prickles on the margins.  Their prickles often occur all over the plant, including on the stem and flat parts of the leaf.  Purple flowers. From

Butterflies love thistle.

Ironweed (Vernonia sp.)  Narrow leaves.  Central stalk, branches at the top.  Purple flowers.  Stem very tough, hard to cut. From

Horse Nettle (Solanum carolinense)  Prickly stems and leaves.  Yellow fruit that resembles little tomatoes. But poisonous.  White flowers with yellow stamens. From

From From

Joe-pye Weed (Eupatorium altissimum)  Also known as Tall Boneset.  feet tall.  Flowers white.  Leaves attach to stem oppositely.  The plant has a gray- green coloration due to the fine hairs on the stem and leaves. From

Forest Dwelling Woody Plants

Buck Brush  Thin branches  Leaves in Opposite pairs.  Little bunches of berries at base of leaves in the fall.

Goose Berry (Ribes sp.)  Leaves look like little maple leaves but more divided  Branches covered with sharp spines.  Green fruits form on underside of branches.

From

Vines

Grape (Vinca sp.)  Leaves large and heart shaped with three points.  Often growing high in trees and over shrubs.  Green fruits in late summer and fall, turning purple as ripen. From

Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia)  5-leaflets per leaflets instead of three.  Toothy edges to leaflets.  Bottom of each leaflet is often wedge-shaped.  Leaflets may taper abruptly into a short blunt tip,

Which is which? Poison IvyVirginia Creeper

Trumpet Creeper (Campsis radicans)  Large leaves with toothy leaflets 3–10 cm long.  Emerald green when new, maturing into a dark green.  The flowers orange to red in color, trumpet shaped.  The plant as a whole may grow to 10 meters in height.  The flowers are very attractive to hummingbirds. From

From

Some useful websites  KSU Wildflower Visual Collection  Missouri Wildflower Guide