IRIDACEAE IRIS FAMILY

Similar documents
COMMELINACEAE SPIDERWORT FAMILY

OLEACEAE OLIVE FAMILY

CYPERACEAE SEDGE FAMILY

PORTULACACEAE PURSLANE FAMILY

CUCURBITACEAE GOURD OR CUCUMBER FAMILY

POLEMONIACEAE PHLOX FAMILY

CORNACEAE DOGWOOD FAMILY

CONVOLVULACEAE MORNING-GLORY FAMILY

CARYOPHYLLACEAE PINK FAMILY

ERICACEAE HEATH FAMILY

CUPRESSACEAE CYPRESS FAMILY

RUBIACEAE MADDER OR BEDSTRAW FAMILY

POACEAE [GRAMINEAE] GRASS FAMILY

Alismataceae water-plantain family

LAMIACEAE MINT FAMILY

Malvaceae mallow family

Berberidaceae Barberry Family

ROSACEAE ROSE FAMILY

Common plant species of Seattle Parks (winter 2010) BIOL 476 Conservation Biology

Identification of Sedge and Sedge-Like Weeds in Florida Citrus 1

DATA SHEET: TREE ID. Leaf Additional Information Common Name Scientific name Moisture Habitat Preference

Cornaceae dogwood family Cornus florida flowering dogwood

Plantaginaceae plantain family

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

GUIDE TO THE GENERA OF LIANAS AND CLIMBING PLANTS IN THE NEOTROPICS

ASTERACEAE ASTER FAMILY

GUIDE TO THE GENERA OF LIANAS AND CLIMBING PLANTS IN THE NEOTROPICS

It s found in all six New England states.

Terrestrial Invasive Species. Susan Burks Invasive Spp Program Coord MNDNR, Forestry

Common Name: VIRGINIA SPIRAEA. Scientific Name: Spiraea virginiana Britton. Other Commonly Used Names: Appalachian spiraea

Major Plants of the Great Plains

SCROPHULARIACEAE FIGWORT OR SNAPDRAGON FAMILY

AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA -- U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE ST. PAUL MINNESOTI' 5~

Urticaceae nettle family

Field Guide to Georgia Milkweeds

Non-Native Invasive Plants

Heights of Melica species. Tall ( cm) Melica smithii Smith s melic. Centimetres

2018 IRIS. ACORN FARMS INC Worthington Rd. Galena, OH / ph 614/ fx Iris sibirica Ruffled Velvet

Haloragaceae water-milfoil family

Weeds of Rice. Broadleaf signalgrass Brachiaria platyphylla

ASTERACEAE ASTER FAMILY

BIOL 221 Concepts of Botany (Spring 2008) Topic 13: Angiosperms: Flowers, Inflorescences, and Fruits

NATIVE/RAIN GARDEN PLANTS

The Beauty of the Trees & Shrubs in Farndon

SMALL TREES & LARGE SHRUBS

Fruits aid angiosperm seed dispersal by wind or by animals. Fruit development

Fruits can be dry of fleshy

SHRUBS ALTERNATE COMPOUND LEAVES

Plant Identification. California Natives and Exotic Weeds

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

Identification of Grass Weeds in Florida Citrus1

Key to the Genera of the Cichorieae Tribe of the Asteraceae Family of the New York New England Region. Introduction

Forage Plant Pocket Guide

Common Name: AMERICAN MOUNTAIN-ASH

Native Milkweeds of Oklahoma

Common Arctic Grasses

Perennial shrub Shrublands Active EDRR target Iris pseudacorus Yellow flag iris Perennial monocot Wetlands (fresh) Assessing 9+ Yes 15

Warm berries with smoked butter and meadowsweet with cordial.

Common Name: ALABAMA LEATHER FLOWER. Scientific Name: Clematis socialis Kral. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Onagraceae evening-primrose family

Common shrubs shrub-steppe habitats

Unit A: Introduction to Forestry. Lesson 4: Recognizing the Steps to Identifying Tree Species

Other Commonly Used Names: spreading false foxglove, spreading yellow false foxglove

Ledebouria minima Plantz Africa

Crop Identification - Alfalfa Deep taproot and welldeveloped

Common Name: PORTER S REED GRASS. Scientific Name: Calamagrostis porteri A. Gray ssp. porteri. Other Commonly Used Names: Porter s reed bent

APIACEAE CARROT OR PARSELY FAMILY

Yellow floating heart

Agrostis stolonifera L. Creeping Bentgrass

NOTES ON WILD FLOWERS. By E. NAPIER.

FlourGarden Plant Guide

Botanically Speaking: Getting to Know the Food We Eat Everyday

Phylogeny of Asterids. Asterids

TWO NEW SPECIES OF POACEAE FROM INDIA

broadly winged samaras milky sap stout twigs broad leaves, green on both sides winter buds with only 4-6 scales Acer platanoides Norway Maple

ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE NEOTROPICAL GENERA OF ANNONACEAE

BIOL 301 Extra Credit Assignment

Common Name: TRAILING MEADOWRUE. Scientific Name: Thalictrum debile Buckley. Other Commonly Used Names: southern meadow-rue

Fig. 3: Leaves of Corchorus aestuans L.

Weeds. Wheat and Oat Weed, Insect and Disease Field Guide 5

Common Name: AWNED MEADOWBEAUTY. Scientific Name: Rhexia aristosa Britton. Other Commonly Used Names: awnpetal meadowbeauty

Common Name: GEORGIA ROCKCRESS. Scientific Name: Arabis georgiana Harper. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Festuca subuliflora Scribn. Crinkle-awned Fescue

Tree Descriptions. Village of Carol Stream Tree Sale. Saturday, October 1, :00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Water Reclamation Open House Kuhn Rd.

Řepka R., Veselá P. & Mráček J. (2014): Are there hybrids between Carex flacca and C. tomentosa

American beech. (Fagus grandifolia) Description: Only species of this genus found in North America.

The Native Iris of Ohio and Bordering Territory

Casuarina glauca. Family: Casuarinaceae. Common Name: Swamp Oak

Magnolia (Magnoliaceae)

DUS TEST REPORT. Oryza sativa L. (RICE) GROUP A LIST NAMES and PHOTOGRAPHY. No. Characteristics Candidate similar 1 Similar 2

1st Year Garlic Mustard Plants

Vegetation Identification

Diversity and Evolution of Asterids!... milkweeds, nightshades, and morning glories...!

Spurge Laurel Daphne laureola

Slender branched infl. (raceme) 6-10 long, 1-1¼ wide Fls white, ~ 1/21 in across Calyx tube cup-shaped

Three new species of Impatiens (Balsaminaceae) from Sumatra, Indonesia

Common Name: ALABAMA WARBONNET. Scientific Name: Jamesianthus alabamensis Blake & Sherff. Other Commonly Used Names: Jamesianthus

Other Commonly Used Names: Fremont s virgins-bower, Fremont s clematis, Fremont s curly-heads

Wildflowers of the Trinity Alps Including the Marble Mountain Wilderness, Russian Wilderness, & Trinity Divide

AQUATIC WEED IDENTIFICATION Purple Loosestrife Water Willow Water Primrose

Transcription:

IRIDACEAE IRIS FAMILY Plant: herbs, perennial; can be shrub-like elsewhere Stem: Root: growing from rhizomes, bulbs, or corms Leaves: simple, alternate or mostly basal (sheaths open or closed), most grass or sword-like with parallel veins Flowers: perfect, regular (actinomorphic) or irregular (zygomorphic); flowers showy, often solitary; flowers in 3 s (petals, sepals, and stamens), both sepals and petals often colored; regular as in Blue-Eyed grasses (looks like 6-plan), or irregular as in true Irises; flower subtended by 2 bracts; ovary mostly inferior, 3 carpels, 1 style Fruit: capsule with seed Other: Monocotyledons Group Genera: 65+ genera; locally Belamcanda (blackberry-lily), Iris (iris), Sisyrinchium (blue-eyed grass) WARNING family descriptions are only a layman s guide and should not be used as definitive

Flower Morphology in the Examples of some common genera German Iris [Blue Flag] Iris germanica L. (Introduced Blackberry Lily Belamcanda chinensis (L.) DC. (Introduced) Dwarf Crested Iris Iris cristata Aiton Stout Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium angustifolium Mill. Copper [Red] Iris Iris fulva Ker Gawl. Prairie Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium campestre E.P. Bicknell

IRIDACEAE IRIS FAMILY Blackberry Lily; Belamcanda chinensis (L.) DC. (Introduced) Dwarf Crested Iris; Iris cristata Aiton Copper [Red] Iris; Iris fulva Ker Gawl. German Iris [Blue Flag]; Iris germanica L. (Introduced) Yellow Iris [Flag]; Iris pseudacorus L. (Introduced) Southern Blue Flag [Shreve's Iris]; Iris virginica L. var. shrevei (Small) E.S. Anderson Common Blue-Eyed Grass; Sisyrinchium albidum Raf. Stout Blue-Eyed Grass; Sisyrinchium angustifolium Mill. Eastern Blue-Eyed Grass; Sisyrinchium atlanticum E.P. Bicknell Prairie Blue-Eyed Grass; Sisyrinchium campestre E.P. Bicknell

Blackberry Lily Belamcanda chinensis (L.) DC. (Introduced) Ash Flat area, Sharp County, Arkansas Notes: 6 tepals (both petals and sepals showy), orange with purple to red to brown spots; leaves linear, flat, parallel veined, basal and from stem; orange to yellow rhizomes; masses of black seeds from dried capsule resembles a blackberry-like fruit; summer [V Max Brown, 2007]

Dwarf Crested Iris Iris cristata Aiton Shawnee State Forest, Scioto County, Ohio Notes: flower of 3 erect petals (light blue to purple) and 3 spreading sepals (light blue to purple) with a yellow ridge bordered by white, both petals and sepals united below into a tube; leaves both on stem and basal, larger leaves mostly basal, parallel veined; fruit a capsule; woods; spring [V Max Brown, 2009]

Copper [Red] Iris Iris fulva Ker Gawl. Big Cane Conservation Area, Butler County, Missouri Notes: 3 sepals present (copper-orange-red-brown) that are spreading or somewhat arching, petals narrower and colored similarly to sepals, flowers present both axial and terminal (1-4 flowers at each site); leaves linear, flat, parallel veined, basal and from stem; rhizomes present; fruit an oblong capsule with 6 ribs; lowland swamps, ditches, etc.; spring to summer [V Max Brown, 2012]

German Iris [Blue Flag] Iris germanica L. (Introduced) Oak Openings Metropark, Lucas County, Ohio Notes: flower of 3 erect petals (incurved) and 3 spreading sepals (colors vary) with line of hairs (beard); leaves mostly basal, linear, parallel veined; fruit a capsule; homestead areas, roadsides, and often planted as an ornamental; late spring to early summer [V Max Brown, 2004]

Yellow Iris [Flag] Iris pseudacorus L. (Introduced) Lake Springfield, Greene County, Missouri Notes: flowers both terminal and axillary with 2-3 flower clusters; each flower of 3 smaller erect petals and 3 larger spreading sepals (yellow with brown to purple markings), bracts are unequal and spathe-like; leaves mostly basal (some on stems), linear, parallel veined; fruit a capsule; homestead areas, roadsides, and escaped from cultivation; likes wet muddy areas along streams, lakes and ponds; late spring to early summer [V Max Brown, 2016]

Southern Blue Flag [Shreve's Iris] Iris virginica L. var. shrevei (Small) E.S. Anderson Oak Openings Metropark, Lucas County, Ohio Notes: 3 upright petals (blue) and 3 spreading blue sepals with yellow bases; leaf large, mostly basal or near base, width up to 3+ cm; fruit capsule about 2x longer than wide; ditches, mashes and wet areas; late spring to summer [V Max Brown, 2004]

Common [White] Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium albidum Raf. Oak Openings Metropark, Lucas County, Ohio Notes: 3 petals and 3 sepals (tepals), blue (or rarely white), 2 spathes beneath flower open to base, a third leaf-like bract rises above flowers (it is distinct to base); upper stem winged to ~ 4mm, stem unbranched; basal leaves somewhat larger; spring to summer [V Max Brown, 2007]

Eastern Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium atlanticum E.P. Bicknell Kitty Todd Nature Preserve, Lucas County, Ohio Notes: 3 similar sepals and petals (tepals); flower blue, peduncles slender, several peduncles from axil with leafy bract; larger leaves from base, usually shorter them flowering stem; stem narrow and barely winged; late spring to summer [V Max Brown, 2008]

Stout Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium angustifolium Mill. Oak Openings Metropark, Lucas County, Ohio Notes: 3 sepals and 3 petals (tepals) flower, blue; upper stem wide (up to 4+ mm), wide winged, looks branched, lower stem winged to 6+ mm, larger leaves from base; late spring to summer [V Max Brown, 2005]

Prairie Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium campestre E.P. Bicknell Wah-Kon-Tah Prairie, St. Clair County, Missouri Notes: 3 petals and 3 sepals (tepals), light blue (to white or even yellow), 1 spathe encloses the flower with a bract that rises above flowers (it is distinct to its base); upper stem winged to ~ 4mm, stem unbranched; basal leaves somewhat larger; spring to summer [V Max Brown, 2013]