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Transcript
Introduction to California Plant Families
8–10 August 2014
Jepson Herbarium Workshop
LYCOPHYTES 3
MONOCOTS 34
FERNS 14
GYMNOSPERMS 4
NYMPHEALES 2
MAGNOLIIDS 4
CERATOPHYLLALES 1
BASAL EUDICOTS 6
EUDICOTS SUPERROSIDS 58
EUDICOTS SUPERASTERIDS 62
%Total California Families by Phylogenetic Clade in TJM2 [out of 188]
Introduction to California Plant Families
Jepson Herbarium Workshop: Basic Botany Series
Instructors: Sheryl Creer, Jane Van Susteren, and Genevieve K. Walden
Volunteers: Rebecca Crowe, Will Freyman, Helen Kurkjian, Gary Li, and Christina Yunker
3030 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley
8–10 August 2014
WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
9:00-9:30AM 9:30-12:00noon
Welcome, logistics, introductions
Introduction to the California flora and plant families, resources, terms, keying
12:00-1:10PM LUNCH
1:10-3:00PM 3:00-3:15PM
3:15-4:50PM 4:50-5:00PM Ferns ferns ferns and horsetails too
15 minute afternoon break
Gymnosperms, Basal Angiosperms, Basal Eudicots
Friday final questions
SATURDAY
9:00-9:30AM the rest of the EUDICOTS!
9:30-10:30AM Flowers, flowers, flowers! Crassulaceae and Onagraceae
Caryophyllaceae, Lamiaceae, Solanaceae
10:30-10:45AM
15 minute morning break
10:45-12:00noon Ovaries: position and placentation.
hypanthia: Aizoaceae, Rosaceae, Rhamnaceae, Saxifragaceae
superior: Boraginaceae, Polemoniaceae
12:00-1:10PM LUNCH
1:10-3:00PM inferiority complex: Apiaceae
Dipsacaceae and Asteraceae
3:00-3:15PM
15 minute afternoon break
3:15-4:50PM Flowers continued! Fabaceae and Brassicaceae!
Scrophulariaceae and friends [Orobanchaceae, Plantaginaceae, Phrymaceae]
4:50-5:00PM Saturday final questions
SUNDAY.
9:00-10:30AM Inflorescences! Dicots & Monocots
[Euphorbiaceae, Polygonaceae, Fagaceae, Garryaceae
Agavaceae, Amaryllidaceae, Liliaceae]
10:30-10:45AM
15 minute morning break
10:45-12:00noon MONOCOTS! Poaceae
12:00-1:10PM LUNCH
1:10-3:00PM 3:00-3:15PM
3:15-4:30PM 4:30-5:00PM Cyperaceae and Juncaceae
15 minute afternoon break
More Monocots! Araceae et al.
Workshop Summary Lab Activity, Course evaluations and Final questions.
and then there will be cake!
about this workshop
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
There are 185 188! families of native, naturalized, and non-native vascular plants included in the second
edition of The Jepson Manual and online Jepson eFlora. This three-day workshop, designed for beginning botanists
interested in learning the California flora, will help participants recognize some of California’s most common plant
families. Lectures and lab activities will emphasize the characteristics that are most useful for family identification, and
group keying will build fluency and confidence with using the second edition of The Jepson Manual. The workshop will
be indoors, working with fresh and dried plants collected from various field locations. This workshop will not involve
field identification or collection of plants.
A general familiarity with morphological terms is helpful but not required; these will be briefly reviewed during
the introductory Friday session. There will be a pre-workshop reading assignment, which will assist in providing familiarity with (or review of) technical terms.
Participants will receive a dissecting kit and will use a dissecting microscope during lab sessions; previous dissecting and/or microscope experience is helpful but not necessary. Students must attend all three days of the workshop, because the introductory materials for each part of the workshop will establish the foundation for the following
sessions. The workshop will be moderately fast paced and will meet from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.
goals
why are we doing this?
We love the California flora! All of it, the natives, the nonnatives, and the naturalized parts. We want you to love it too.
what will you learn?
Improved plant identification skills, vocabulary, and family characteristics of plants included in the second edition of The Jepson Manual
how will you learn it?
Reviewing California plant families, group keying with lots
of practice using TJM2, asking questions and learning from each other, and identifying resources
that suit your taxonomic preferences.
acknowledgements
people, places, funding, and facilities that generously supported this workshop:
Holly Forbes (Curator) and the University of California Botanical Garden at Berkeley
http://botanicalgarden.berkeley.edu/
Mona Bourell (Curator) and the San Francisco Botanical Garden at Strybing Arboretum
http://www.sfbotanicalgarden.org/
University of California, Berkeley campus
Phillip Evans (Director, Site Planning), Martin Grantham (SFSU Greenhouse), and San Francisco State University
Jeanne Marie Acceturo and Edith Summers, Friends of the Jepson Workshop
SHERYL CREER
about us
has a BS in Botany and an MS in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology from San Francisco State University. Her studies
focused on the systematics of the Arbutoideae (Ericaceae) with a specific interest in the relationships within Arbutus. She is currently
employed as a Biologist at Insignia Environmental.
[email protected]
REBECCA CROWE
is a current graduate student in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology at San Francisco State University, investigating morphology
of manzanita fruit and seed (Arctostaphylos: Ericaceae). Hiking with family in the mountains of Southern California ignited her early interest in plants, and she developed a passion for plant ecology as an undergraduate at Sonoma State University. Rebecca has traveled and botanized throughout California for research and work, mapping and identifying vegetation for the Vegetation Program of the California Native Plant Society, the Mendocino National Forest, the San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge, UC Davis, and the Sonoma Ecology Center.
[email protected] http://userwww.sfsu.edu/parker/pages/current.html#Rebecca
WILL FREYMAN
is a native of the tall-grass prairies and oak savannas of Illinois, and is a current PhD student in the Baldwin lab at UC Berkeley. At Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago, Will studied the molecular systematics and biogeography of the genus Rhodiola
(Crassulaceae). Will also worked as a software engineer developing visualization and analysis tools for conservation groups such as the
National Audubon Society. Currently, he is using phylogenomic approaches to study reticulate evolution in Chylismia (Onagraceae).
[email protected] http://breadorpyramid.org
HELEN KURKJIAN
is a PhD candidate in the Simms lab at UC Berkeley. She is from Massachusetts. She has an MS in Biology from Humboldt State
University, where she studied the population biology of Lupinus constancei and taught Plant Taxonomy labs. She has held plant-related positions with the US Forest Service, CNPS, and several universities. In her current research, she uses a bacterial model system
to investigate how metapopulation connectivity affects recovery from disturbance.
[email protected] GARY LI
is from San Leandro. He enjoys plant identification and studying plant morphology. He has a BA in Integrative Biology from UC Berkeley and is a current graduate student in the Fritsch lab at the California Academy of Sciences and San Francisco State University. His
thesis work is a taxonomic revision of Styrax (Styracaceae), a genus of mostly tropical trees and shrubs with lovely white flowers, with
centers of diversity in eastern Asia and the New World tropics. Previous research projects include morphometric analyses on western
North America extant and fossil Ribes for species circumscriptions, and digitization projects with the University and Jepson Herbaria.
[email protected]
JANE VAN SUSTEREN
is from Mount Shasta. She has a BS in Plant Biology from UC Davis, and has worked for the Forest Service, the University of California, and Sierra Pacific Industries. She revisited historic populations of Erythronium citrinum var. roderickii, Ageratina shastensis, and
Sedum subg. Gormania, and refined the known ranges. She has coordinated a statewide survey of serpentine-adjacent plots for the
Harrison lab, and worked on floristic and rare plant surveys for the Forest Service, SPI, and North State Resources. She is the botanist in the video game Extrasolar. She is currently working on a molecular phylogeny of Sedum subgenus Gormania as a graduate
student at San Francisco State, and is also employed by North State Resources.
[email protected]
GENEVIEVE WALDEN
is from Fresno. She has a BS in Plant Sciences from UC Davis, an MS in Ecology and Systematic biology from San Francisco State
University, and is a PhD candidate in the Baldwin Lab at UC Berkeley. Her studies focus on the evolutionary relationships of Hydrophylloideae (Boraginaceae s.l.), a western North American subfamily of 15 fantastic genera, using lab, field, herbaria, and digital
assets in a combined approach. She is an author of treatments in the Jepson eFlora, FNANM, and Families and Genera of Vascular
Plants, and an editorial assistant for the journal Madroño.
[email protected] www.genevievekwalden.com
CHRISTINA YUNKER
is currently the natural resources intern for the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District. As an ecology and evolution undergraduate at UCSC, she worked for the NOAA salmon ecology team, and has since interned for the Invasive Spartina Project. While
working in science education and with rescued reptiles and amphibians, a personal adventure to the Everglades inspired her to return to school to research conservation biology with a plant focus at SFSU. She will be defending her master’s thesis on manzanita
(Arctostaphylos: Ericaceae) flowering phenology and floral visitors in fall 2014.
[email protected] | [email protected]
http://userwww.sfsu.edu/parker/pages/current.html#Christina
the CA flora
TJM2 CLADE
LYCOPHYTES
FERNS
GYMNOSPERMS
NYMPHEALES
MAGNOLIIDS
CERATOPHYLLALES
BASAL EUDICOTS
EUDICOTS SUPERROSIDS
EUDICOTS SUPERASTERIDS
MONOCOTS
Total number of native & naturalized
Families (% of 188]
3 (1.60%)
14 (7.45%)
4 (2.13%)
2 (1.06%)
4 (2.13%)
1 (0.53%)
6 (3.19%)
58 (30.85%)
62 (32.98%)
34 (18.09%)
Total number native & naturalized Genera Total number native & naturalized species
[% of 1375]
[% of 6575]
4 (0.29%)
18 [0.27%]
32 (2.33%)
96 [1.46%]
16 (1.16%)
62 [0.94%]
4 (0.29%)
5 [0.08%]
8 (0.58%)
11 [0.17%]
1 (0.07%)
1 [0.02%]
36 (2.62%)
154 [2.34%]
365 (26.55%)
1772 [26.95%]
675 (49.09%)
3268 [49.70%]
234 (17.02%)
1188 [18.07%]
%Total Species CA Flora [6575]
Poaceae [Graminae] 103
Selaginellaceae
Lycopodiaceae
Dennstaedtiaceae
Isoetaceae
Aspleniaceae
Cyatheaceae
Dryopteridaceae
Blechnaceae
Azollaceae
Equisetaceae
Ophioglossaceae
Marsileaceae
121
2
11
2
1 Pinaceae
11 23 4
Scheuchzeriaceae
Tecophilaeaceae
Smilacaceae
Themidaceae
Tofieldiaceae
Zannichelliaceae
Typhaceae
Zingiberaceae
Zosteraceae
1
6Cupressaceae
1Salviniaceae
21Ephedraceae
Polypodiaceae
1 13
Ruppiaceae
Ruscaceae
21
10
Potamogetonaceae
Pontederiaceae
3
2 1Pteridaceae
Thelypteridaceae
Woodsiaceae
815
1 24 1222
Aristolochiaceae
Calycanthaceae
Nymphaeaceae
Cabombaceae
Saururaceae
Lauraceae
Taxaceae
13151
Ceratophyllaceae
Berberidaceae
Gunneraceae
Papaveraceae
Platanaceae
Proteaceae
11
Ranunculaceae
15
Anacardiaceae
Apodanthaceae
Bataceae
Betulaceae
1 36 1
Brassicaceae [Cruciferae] 69
Orchidaceae 1
11
Nartheciaceae
Melanthiaceae
6
Liliaceae 9
Laxmanniaceae
Juncaginaceae 1
Juncaceae 2
Iridaceae 11
Hydrocharitaceae 6
Burseraceae
Cannabaceae
Celastraceae
46
3
Cistaceae
3 1
Cleomaceae
Crassulaceae 7
Cucurbitaceae
Crossosomataceae
Datiscaceae
Elaeagnaceae
Elatinaceae
21 52 102
Euphorbiaceae
Cyperaceae 19
Fabaceae [Leguminosae] 55
Commelinaceae
Asphodelaceae 4
2
Asparagaceae
Arecaceae
[Palmae] 1
3
Araceae 10
Aponogetonaceae
Amaryllidaceae
4
1
Alliaceae 3
Alismataceae 4
Agavaceae
Viscaceae 8
3
Verbenaceae 4
Theophrastaceae
Tamaricaceae
Valerianaceae
Styracaceae 1
4
Solanaceae 12
Simmondsiaceae 1
Sarraceniaceae
Sarcobataceae 2
1
Scrophulariaceae
5
Rubiaceae 7
Portulacaceae
Primulaceae 2
1
Fagaceae 3
Geraniaceae 4
Grossulariaceae 1
Haloragaceae 11
Hypericaceae
Juglandaceae
Koeberliniaceae
Krameriaceae
Limnanthaceae
Linaceae
3
31
21
Lythraceae 4
Malvaceae 22
Meliaceae 1
Moraceae
Myricaceae
2
Myrtaceae 37
Nitrariaceae 1
Polygonaceae 27
Onagraceae 16
Oxalidaceae 1
Paeoniaceae 1111 1
Parnassiaceae
Passifloraceae
Picrodendraceae
Polygalaceae
Resedaceae 2
Rhamnaceae 7
Polemoniaceae 17
Plumbaginaceae 3
Rosaceae 46
Plantaginaceae 26
Rutaceae 4
Salicaceae 2
Sapindaceae 2
Saxifragaceae 19
Simaroubaceae
Staphyleaceae
Thymelaeaceae
Tropaeolaceae
Ulmaceae
1
11
21
Urticaceae 1 5
Violaceae
Vitaceae 3
Zygophyllaceae
Acanthaceae
Adoxaceae
Aizoaceae
1123 5
Amaranthaceae 5
Pittosporaceae 2
Phytolaccaceae 1
Phrymaceae 1
Orobanchaceae 11
Oleaceae 5
Nyctaginaceae 7
Myrsinaceae 4
Montiaceae 6
Menyanthaceae
Molluginaceae
Martyniaceae 1
2
Loasaceae 3
Lentibulariaceae
Linnaeaceae 2
1
Apiaceae [Umbelliferae] 40
Apocynaceae 10
Araliaceae
Aquifoliaceae
3 1
Lamiaceae [Labiatae] 27
Hydrangeaceae 5
Gentianaceae 10
Fouquieriaceae
Frankeniaceae
Garryaceae 1
Ericaceae 26
Dipsacaceae
Droseraceae
11
Cornaceae 2
Convolvulaceae
Comandraceae 61
Chenopodiaceae 21
Caryophyllaceae 29
Caprifoliaceae
211
Campanulaceae
Cactaceae
11
Asteraceae [Compositae] 240
Boraginaceae 32Balsaminaceae
Bignoniaceae
Basellaceae 141
the CA plant families
Lycophytes
Ferns
Gymnosperms
Nympheales
Magnoliids
Ceratophyllales
Basal Eudicots
Superrosids
Superasterids
Monocots
Order:
Liliales
labeled parts throughout diagram
compare with Lilium in TJM2 pp. 1393
a. 6 tepals (petals and sepals)
b. 6 stamens (androecium)
c. 3 parted stigma (gynoecium)
d. pedicel (infloresence stem)
For inflorescence of multiple flowers, as in
Lilium bolanderi, each flower is subtended by
a peduncle (flower stem) and bracts.
e. cauline leaves (stem, whorled)
f. stem
TJM2 geographic units
US EPA EcoRegions
about bioregions
Vegetation Bioregions are an excellent way to confirm that you’ve keyed a plant to the correct species; if the description of the parts of California where the plant occurs doesn’t include your bioregion, you’ve probably misidentified
the plant. (It’s possible that your identification is correct and it’s a range extension: in this case you should make a
lovely and complete collection and send it to an herbarium with a note.) Many regions have similar flora, but lots of
fine-scale differences, so know your bioregion! BerkeleyMapper has some excellent online map overlays so you can
pinpoint your bioregion, but generally a rough idea is accurate enough.
CALIFORNIA FLORISTIC PROVINCE
Northwestern California Region: Island chains that collided with California from 260 to 130mya.
North Coast: True coastal vegetation; from Oregon border to Bodega Bay. Includes Fort Bragg, Arcata. Vegetation is
coastal prairie, coastal marsh, coastal scrub, closed-cone-pine/cypress forest, and grand-fir/Sitka spruce forest. Klamath Ranges: This area consists of old intrusive igneous and metamorphic rocks and many serpentine and ultramafic veins. The ultramafic rocks lead to serpentine barrens, meadows, and scrubland. Otherwise, the Klamath Ranges
are dominated by forests with more conifer species than anywhere else in the world. Includes Trinity Alps, Yreka,
Mount Eddy
North Coast Range Outer: High rainfall and fog supports redwood, mixed evergreen, and mixed-hardwood forests.
Includes Humboldt Redwoods, Redwood National Park, Willits, Healdsburg, and Santa Rosa.
North Coast Range Highlands: This area is floristically similar to the Sierra Nevada Highlands - there are montane and
subalpine mixed conifer forests. There are also mountains over 2000m, leading to heavy snowpack and peaks above
treeline. Includes most of the Mendocino National Forest.
North Coast Range Inland: Low rainfall and hot dry summers result in a vegetation types dominated by chaparral
and pine-oak woodland. Serpentine is common here, resulting in many serpentine barrens, meadows, and scrubland.
Includes Clear Lake, Lake Berryessa, Ukiah, Potter Valley
Cascade Ranges Region: Andesite volcanos that began to erupt 7 mya.
High Cascade Range: Vegetation boundaries between this range and the Modoc Plateau are unclear; sagebrush
steppe and juniper woodland are found in patches throughout the region. Otherwise, the area is dominated by
ponderosa pine, montane fir and pine, and lodgepole-pine forests. Includes Mount Shasta, Mount Lassen, McCloud
Highlands, and west Lake Shasta.
Cascade Range Foothills: This region is mostly chaparral and blue oak/foothill pine woodland. It includes East Lake
Shasta, Paradise, and Redding.
Great Central Valley Region: Sediment eroded from the mountains that predated the Sierra Nevada, 100 to 66 mya.
Sacramento Valley: Grasslands, farmland,marshes, vernal pools, riparian woodlands, alkali sinks, valley oak stands.
Red Bluff, Chico, Sacramento, Davis, Willows, Vacaville, Fairfield. So many weeds. San Joaquin Valley: Grasslands, farmland, marshes, vernal pools, riparian woodlands, alkali sinks, valley oak stands,
and desert. Stockton, Fresno, Bakersfield, Coalinga. Even more weeds.
Sierra Nevada Region: Uplift of granitic batholiths from beneath ancient volcanos. Batholiths became mountain range
10 mya.
Sierra Nevada Foothills: Blue-oak/foothill pine woodlands, chaparral, occasional serpentine.
North Sierra Nevada Foothills: Lake Oroville, Auburn, Folsom, Placerville.
South Sierra Nevada Foothills: Lake Isabella, Lake Success
Central Sierra Nevada Foothills: Red Hills Area, Sonora, Mariposa
High Sierra Nevada: Lower elevations have forests with giant sequoia, ponderosa pine, and white fir. Higher elevations have forests of red fir, Jeffery pine, and lodgepole pine. Subalpine forests have whitebark pine and mountain
hemlock, and true alpine areas are treeless.
North Sierra Nevada Highlands: Lake Tahoe, Quincy, Nevada City, Truckee.
Central Sierra Nevada Highlands: Yosemite, Mammoth Lakes
South Sierra Nevada Highlands: Kings Canyon National Park, Sequoia National Park
Tehachapi Mountains Area: This area is a mish-mash of the surrounding floras; the Great Valley, the high Sierra Nevada and the Sierra Nevada Foothills, desert regions, and the Western Transverse range. Most vegetation is mixed
woodland or grassland. It includes Castaic Lake.
Central Western California Region: Island chains that collided with California from 260 to 130 mya.
Central Coast: Near Monterey, it is only as far inland as the coastal bluffs, but in other regions (including the Bay
Area) it includes salt marshes, coastal prairie, coastal-sage scrub. and chaparral. San Francisco, Point Reyes National
Seashore, Bodega Bay, Monterey coast.
SF Bay: Vegetation includes wet redwood forest, dry oak/pine woodland, and chaparral. Includes Mount Tamalpais,
Mount Diablo, Gilroy, Walnut Creek, Berkeley Hills.
South Coast Ranges Subregion: Island chains that collided with California from 260 to 130 mya.
Inner South Coast Ranges: Mostly blue-oak/foothill pine woodland, juniper woodland, chaparral, and elements of
desert scrub. Incles Pinnacles National Monument and the Hollister Hills.
Outer South Coast Ranges: Small stands of redwood, mixed-evergreen forest, oak forest, blue-oak/foothill pine woodland, chaparral, and montane conifers at high elevations. Includes Paso Robles and Cachuma Lake.
Southwestern California Region: Island chains that collided with California from 260 to 130 mya, rotated 90 degrees
by tectonic activity.
South Coast: Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego
Channel Islands: Coastal-sage scrub, chaparral vegetation; floristically distinct due to frequent isolation by higher sea
levels. Includes Channel Islands State Park, Catalina Island
Western Transverse Range: Chaparral, oak forest, montane white fir, incense cedar, Jeffery pine, lodgepole pine, and
sugar pine forests. Includes Thousand Oaks, Simi Valley, Ritter Ranch, the Angeles National Forest, Mount San Antonio and the San Bernadino National Forest.
Penninsular Ranges: Well developed montane and subalpine forests; high degree of floristic endemism. Includes Escondito and most of the Cleveland National Forest.
GREAT BASIN PROVINCE:
Tectonic expansion resulting in narrow mountain chains with alternating flat valleys; rocks are primarily metamorphosed igneous and sedimentary. 30 mya.
Sierra Nevada East: Sagebrush steppe, pinyon/juniper woodland, cottonwood dominated riparian vegetation, Jeffreypine forest, subalpine/fir forest, and alpine vegetation. Includes Mono Lake and Bishop. White and Inyo Mountains: Subalpine bristlecone pine and limber-pine woodlands and treeless alpine vegetation.
Includes White Mountain and Waucoba Mountain.
Modoc Plateau: Juniper woodland and sagebrush steppe, with occasional ponderosa pine and Jeffery-pine forest.
Includes Alturas, Lava Beds National Monument, Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge
Warner Mountains: Sagebrush steppe, Jeffery pine and ponderosa pine forests, alpine meadows, fens, and floating
bogs. Includes Eagle Peak and Blue Lake.
DESERT PROVINCE:
Mojave Desert Region: Tectonic expansion resulting in narrow mountain chains with alternating flat valleys; rocks are
primarily metamorphosed igneous and sedimentary. 30 mya.
Mojave Desert: Vegetation is primarily Joshua tree and Mojave yucca. Includes Barstow, Twentynine Palms, Death
Valley.
Desert Mountains: Pinyon/juniper woodland, locations include Telescope Peak, the Panamint, and the Grapevine
Mountains.
Sonaran Desert Region: Tectonic expansion resulting in narrow mountain chains with alternating flat valleys; rocks are
primarily metamorphosed igneous and sedimentary. 30 mya.
Sonoran Desert: Similar to the Mojave, but warmer and lover. Vegetation is blue palo verde, ocotillo, chuparosa, and
ironwood. Includes Indio, Blythe, Salton Sea
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Fri, 14 Mar 2014 19:53:40 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
GREENE, E. L. 1929. Why the Eschscholtzia? Madroño 1(14):195-197.
Reprinted in Madroño 60(4):339-341. 2014.
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Fri, 14 Mar 2014 19:53:40 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Fri, 14 Mar 2014 19:53:40 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
NAMES!
What do all those scientific names mean?
Scientific names are information. The point is effective communication in a hierarchical
system - and it has to work for written and oral communication for today, for the future, and it has
to be consistent with previous publications [the past]. So there are some rules - this is science!
DomainBacteria, Archaea, and..........................................Eukaryota
Kingdom ends in -aePlantae
Divsion or Phylaends in -ophytaMagnoliophyta
Classends in -opsidaEquisetopsida
Orderends in -alesRanunculales
Family
Genus
species
ends in -aceae
Papaveraceae
always italicized, sentence case always italicized, sentence case, binomial
Eschscholzia Cham.*
Eschscholzia californica Cham.
IAPT 18.1. The name of a family is a plural adjective used as a noun; it is formed from the genitive singular of a name
of an included genus by replacing the genitive singular inflection (Latin -ae, -i, -us, -is; transcribed Greek -ou, -os, -es,
-as, or -ous, and its equivalent -eos) with the termination -aceae (but see Art. 18.5 [nomen alternativum]).
Scientific and common names provide details about plants - look at the TJM2 INDEX and you
will start recognizing some common elements:
PARTS
radix [root]
arbor, -dendron [tree]
-folium, -phyllos [leaved]
ramus [branch]
lobus [lobe]
-seminalis, -spermum
[seeded]
DESCRIPTIVE
toxicarius [poison]
amoenus, pulcher [beautiful]
diversi- [different]
grandis, magnus, mega-,
macro- [big, large]
vivus, viven [living]
mentha [mint]
brachy [short]
suave [sweet]
scandens [climbing]
nutans [nodding]
COLORS!
viride, virens [green]
alba [white]
aurantiacus [orange]
sanguineus [blood color]
purpureus [purple]
miniatus [scarlet]
caeruleus [sky blue]
malvaceus [mauve]
prasinus [leek green]
lineus [flax blue]
atromurinus [dark
mouse grey]
PLACE NAMES!
californica [California]
franciscanum [San
Francisco]
yosemitanum [Yosemite]
chilensis [Chile]
shastensis [Mt. Shasta]
vallis-mortae [Death
Valley]
fresnensis [Fresno]
americanum [America]
HABITAT!
insulare [island]
tectorum [of roofs]
litoralis [coastal, shore]
palustris [marshy,
swampy]
serpentinus [serpentine]
inundata [flooded
places]
salina [salt springs]
occidentale [western]
Names can be formed from compound words of any language! [TJM2 includes etymology for genera in treatments,
and there are a lot of great online resources.] Ziziphus zizyphus (L.) H. Karst. (Rhamnaceae) [p. 1165]
In TJM2 the scientific names of Native California Taxa, naturalized plants and waifs, and
uncertain status taxa are identified by type face. Symbols are used to indicate status:  indicates a native plant listed by CNPS,   indicate invasive non-native taxa listed by CDFG or
CalIPC.
How do you pronounce that name?
When in doubt, sound it out! Pronounce all the syllables. The emphasis is usually on the
second-to-last syllable.
BE BOLD! Botanical Latin [and Greek!] is a modern technical language practiced and used
by botanists. There are very few ways to mess it up. It always helps to key out loud and practice
saying scientific names. Practice helps with pronunciation and with remembering new plant names!
The 1993 TJM has a great, and short, discussion about pronounciation of scientific names [pp.
11–12]. Give #7 a try!
Proper names [people and places] keep their original pronunciation for the “radical”, austin-i-ae, dales-iana, douglas - sii, eastwood-ae, jepson-ii, menzies-ii, nuttall - ii, trask-i-ae, whipple-ii, laxman[n]-iaceae, linnae -aceae, scheuchzer-iaceae, simmonds-iaceae, zannichelli-aceae.
PRACTICE!
Text reproduced from the 1993 TJM [The Jepson Manual: higher plants of California], pp 11-12.
Navigating and integrating resources
TJM2 was supported by numerous sponsors, authors [pgs xvii-xxii], illustrators, and editors. The Dedication to James
Hickman, Preface about Willis Linn Jepson [p xiii] and Acknowledgements [pp. xv-xvi] cover briefly the history of this
epic project. The Jepson Flora Project continues to update these resources, supported by the Friends of the Jepson
Herbarium. About the Jepson Flora Project, and all the handy online resources http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/jepson_flora_project.html
What are some of these resources?
TJM2!
Baldwin, B. G., D. H. Goldman, D. J. Keil, R. Patterson, T. J. Rosatti, and D. H. Wilken. 2012. The Jepson Manual:
vascular plants of California, Second Edition. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
Digital TJM2!
Baldwin, B. G., D. H. Goldman, D. J. Keil, R. Patterson, T. J. Rosatti, and D. H. Wilken. 2012. The Digital Jepson Manual: vascular plants of California, Second Edition. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
Instructions for downloading the Digital TJM2 to supported devices [www.ucpress.edu/content/instructions/digital_jepson_download_instrux.pdf]. The Digital Jepson is in EPUB ebook format.
Depending on your device, operating system, and preferred notetaking - there are different options and third party applications to digitally mark up an ebook, save your annotations, and export notes as files. As with any digital text, it is
definitely user preference for reading, updating with errata and Revision 1, use in the field, and annotating.
What is new in TJM2? A lot!
You will notice some changes from the 1993 TJM in the new TJM2. Flowering times have been added to descriptions
in TJM2 from hyperlinked specimen data in the Consortium of California Herbaria http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/consortium/. Horticultural information is not included in TJM2 but is still available from the 1993TJM at the online Jepson
Horticultural Database http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/db/horticulture/
Geographical subdivisions for the California Floristic Province have been updated since the 1993 TJM- plates are the
first page and pg 44 in TJM2. Explanation pgs 35-48. Hierarchical outline of subdivisions on pg 42. Online http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM_geography.html.
The Jepson eFlora treatments include full descriptions, links to the Online Interchange, elevation, bioregions in which the
taxon occurs, georeferenced accessions through BerkeleyMapper 2.0 http://berkeleymapper.berkeley.edu/ and links
to specimens in the Consortium of California Herbaria.
The Jepson eFlora! Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2013. Jepson eFlora, http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM.html [accessed on
02 August 2013].
How do updates and changes get made?
ERRATA
What is a stipe? Look on pg 33 of the TJM2 Botanical Glossary pgs 17-34 refers you to the illustration on pg 29. But
wait! You say to yourself. The TJM2 glossary only refers to Ferns in the key to Group 3 (pg 74) and family descriptions
pgs 113-134. And you are not looking at a fern, you are looking at stipes in Eriogonum (genus description and keys,
pg 1083-1092. Eriogonum diclinum description pg 1096, illustration 1097)! No worries, the online Jepson eFlora Botanical glossary has been updated to reflect the different usage of this term for Ferns and Polygonaceae [http://ucjeps.
berkeley.edu/IJM_glossary.html].
Discover additional errors, issues, additions, or corrections for TJM2? online Errata for TJM2 is available at http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/JM12_errata.html or contact Dr. Tom Rosatti rosatti@ berkeley.edu.
REVISIONS
Since the publication of the second edition some treatments have been revised and published in the first supplement.
These are incorporated into the Jepson eFlora and available as a separate PDF for adding to your digital library.
Revision 1, July 2013! http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM_suppl_summary.html
Comparison of plant families in different iterations of “the Jepson”
Family
Acanthaceae
Adoxaceae
Agavaceae
Aizoaceae
Alismataceae
Alliaceae
Amaranthaceae
Amaryllidaceae
Anacardiaceae
Apiaceae [Umbelliferae]
Apocynaceae
Apodanthaceae
Aponogetonaceae
Aquifoliaceae
Araceae
Araliaceae
Arecaceae [Palmae]
Aristolochiaceae
Asparagaceae
Asphodelaceae
Aspleniaceae
Asteraceae [Compositae]
Azollaceae
Balsaminaceae
Basellaceae
Bataceae
Berberidaceae
Betulaceae
Bignoniaceae
Blechnaceae
Boraginaceae
Brassicaceae [Cruciferae]
Burseraceae
Cabombaceae
Cactaceae
Calycanthaceae
Campanulaceae
Cannabaceae
Caprifoliaceae
Caryophyllaceae
Celastraceae
Ceratophyllaceae
Chenopodiaceae
Cistaceae
Cleomaceae
Comandraceae
Commelinaceae
Convolvulaceae
Cornaceae
Crassulaceae
Crossosomataceae
Cucurbitaceae
Cupressaceae
Cyatheaceae
Cyperaceae
Datiscaceae
Dennstaedtiaceae
Dipsacaceae
Droseraceae
Dryopteridaceae
Elaeagnaceae
Elatinaceae
Ephedraceae
Equisetaceae
Ericaceae
Euphorbiaceae
A Flora of CA 1909-1943
+
Aceraceae
taxa incl. in Caprifoliaceae
Amaryllidaceae
+
Alismaceae
incl. in Liliaceae
+
+
+
+ as Umbelliferae
+
+
+
+ [as Palmaceae]
+
Asclepiadaceae
Asparagus incl. in Liliaceae
taxa incl. in Liliaceae
+
Batidaceae
+
+
+
+
incl. in Loganiaceae
+
Buxaceae
incl. in Nymphaeaceae
+
Callitrichaceae
+
Capparidaceae
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Capparidaceae
incl. in Santalaceae
+
+
Corylaceae
+
+
+
+
Cuscutaceae
+
+
+
+
Empetraceae
incl. in Gnetaceae
+
+
TJM 1993
+
+
+
Liliaceae
+
+
+
+
Agave incl. in Liliaceae
+
+
+
incl. in Rafflesiaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Buddlejaceae
TJM2
Supplement 1:2013 Jepson eFLORA
+
+
taxa incl. in Sapindaceae
TJM2 name
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Apocynaceae
TJM2 name
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
- [waif PI]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Scrophulariaceae
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Simmondsiaceae
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Plantaginaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
Capparaceae
taxa incl. in Cleomaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Capparaceae
TJM2 name
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Betulaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Convolvulaceae
+
S1 addition
Cymodoceaceae
presumed extirpated
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Ericaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 CLADE
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Magnoliids
Monocots
Monocots
Ferns
Eudicots Superasterids
Ferns
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Ferns
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
+
+
Nymphaeales
Eudicots Superasterids
+
+
+
Magnoliids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Ceratophyllales
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
+
+
+
+
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Gymnosperms
+
Ferns
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Ferns
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Ferns
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
+
+
+
+
Gymnosperms
Ferns
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Family
Fabaceae [Leguminosae]
Fagaceae
Fouquieriaceae
Frankeniaceae
Garryaceae
Gentianaceae
Geraniaceae
Grossulariaceae
Gunneraceae
Haloragaceae
Hydrangeaceae
Hydrocharitaceae
Hypericaceae
Iridaceae
Isoetaceae
Juglandaceae
Juncaceae
Juncaginaceae
Koeberliniaceae
Krameriaceae
Lamiaceae [Labiatae]
Lauraceae
Laxmanniaceae
Lentibulariaceae
Liliaceae
Limnanthaceae
Linaceae
Linnaeaceae
Loasaceae
Lycopodiaceae
Lythraceae
Malvaceae
Marsileaceae
Martyniaceae
Melanthiaceae
Meliaceae
Menyanthaceae
Molluginaceae
Montiaceae
Moraceae
Myricaceae
Myrsinaceae
Myrtaceae
Nartheciaceae
Nitrariaceae
Nyctaginaceae
Nymphaeaceae
Oleaceae
Onagraceae
Ophioglossaceae
Orchidaceae
Orobanchaceae
Oxalidaceae
Paeoniaceae
Papaveraceae
Parnassiaceae
Passifloraceae
Phrymaceae
Phytolaccaceae
Picrodendraceae
Pinaceae
Pittosporaceae
Plantaginaceae
A Flora of CA 1909-1943
+ [as Leguminosae]
+
+
+
Fumariaceae
+
+
+
Gnetaceae
incl. in Saxifragaceae
+
taxa incl. in Sapindaceae
taxa incl. in Haloragaceae
incl. in Saxifragaceae
+
Hydrophyllaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ [as Labiatae]
+
Lemnaceae
Lennoaceae
+
+
+
+
Loganiaceae
Loranthaceae
+
+
incl. in Liliaceae
incl. in Gentianaceae
incl. in Aizoaceae
incl. in Portulaceae
+
Naiadaceae
incl. in Liliaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Ranunculaceae
Palmaceae
+
incl. in Saxifragaceae
incl. in Saxifragaceae
+
incl. in Euphorbiaceae
+
-
TJM 1993
TJM2
Supplement 1:2013 Jepson eFLORA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Papaveraceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Ephedraceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Sapindaceae
Hippocastanaceae
taxa incl. in Plantaginaceae
Hippuridaceae
incl. in Philadelphaceae
TJM2 name
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Boraginaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 addition
+
+
taxa incl. in Araceae
+
taxa incl. in Boraginaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Caprifoliaceae
TJM2 name
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Buddlejaceae
incl. in Saxifragaceae
taxa incl. in Viscaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Scrophulariaceae
Myoporaceae
+
+
+
incl. in Primulaceae
TJM2 name
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Potamogetonaceae, Zannichelliaceae, and Zosteraceae
+
TJM2 name
+
TJM2 addition
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Arecaceae
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
TJM2 addition
Philadelphaceae
taxa incl. in Hydrangeaceae
incl. in Scrophulariaceae
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 CLADE
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Lycophytes
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Magnoliids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Lycophytes
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Ferns
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Nymphaeales
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Ferns
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Gymnosperms
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Family
Platanaceae
Plumbaginaceae
Poaceae [Graminae]
Polemoniaceae
Polygalaceae
Polygonaceae
Polypodiaceae
Pontederiaceae
Portulacaceae
Potamogetonaceae
Primulaceae
Proteaceae
Pteridaceae
Ranunculaceae
Resedaceae
Rhamnaceae
Rosaceae
Rubiaceae
Ruppiaceae
Ruscaceae
Rutaceae
Salicaceae
Salviniaceae
Sapindaceae
Sarcobataceae
Sarraceniaceae
Saururaceae
Saxifragaceae
Scheuchzeriaceae
Scrophulariaceae
Selaginellaceae
Simaroubaceae
Simmondsiaceae
Smilacaceae
Solanaceae
Staphyleaceae
Styracaceae
Tamaricaceae
Taxaceae
Tecophilaeaceae
Thelypteridaceae
Themidaceae
Theophrastaceae
Thymelaeaceae
Tofieldiaceae
Tropaeolaceae
Typhaceae
Ulmaceae
Urticaceae
Valerianaceae
Verbenaceae
Violaceae
Viscaceae
Vitaceae
Woodsiaceae
Zannichelliaceae
Zingiberaceae
Zosteraceae
Zygophyllaceae
A Flora of CA 1909-1943
+
+
+ as Gramineae
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Naiadaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Naiadaceae
incl. in Liliaceae
+
+
Santalaceae
+
+
+
+
incl. in Juncaginaceae
+
Simarubaceae
incl. in Buxaceae
incl. in Liliaceae
+
Sparganiaceae
+
Sterculiaceae
+
+
+
incl. in Liliaceae
Taxodiaceae
incl. in Liliaceae
+
incl. in Liliaceae
[waif] in Geraniaceae
+
+
+
+
incl. in Loranthaceae
+
incl. in Naiadaceae
incl. in Naiadaceae
+
TJM 1993
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Punicaceae
Rafflesiaceae
+
+
+
+
+
incl. in Potamogetonaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Typhaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Samolus incl. in Primulaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2
Supplement 1:2013 Jepson eFLORA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 addition
+
+
+
taxa incl. in Lythraceae
taxa incl. in Apodanthaceae
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 addition
+
taxa incl. in Comandraceae
+
+
TJM2 addition
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
TJM2 CLADE
Eudicots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Ferns
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots
Ferns
+
taxa incl. in Malvaceae
+
+
+
TJM2 name
taxa incl. in Cupressaceae
+
TJM2 name
TJM2 name
+
TJM2 name
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
TJM2 addition
+
- [waif PI]
+
+
+
Eudicots Superrosids
+
+
+
+
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Gymnosperms
Monocots
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
eFlora addition
+
+
Ferns
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superrosids
Ferns
Monocots
Monocots
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Monocots
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superrosids
Ferns
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Eudicots Superasterids
Magnoliids
Eudicots Superrosids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
Lycophytes
Eudicots Superrosids
Eudicots Superasterids
Monocots
Eudicots Superasterids
CHASE, A. 1922. First book of grasses. The structure of grasses explained for beginners. Macmillan, New York, NY.
what is a key
GENERAL APPROACH TO KEYING IN TJM2 and the JEPSON eFLORA
keys are meant to be used, not followed
A dichotomous key is a series of increasingly selective choices within couplets (pairs of leads) until
you reach an identifying name for your plant specimen. Keys to families use characters that are
diagnostic for large groups. Describing your plant before keying is helpful, as these general characteristics are repeated in keys. See the Keying Worksheets for some guidelines for taking notes.
The choice between two leads can sometimes use a singular character that describes a particular
California plant family. These singular characters can allow you to key efficiently - in some cases go
straight to the group, family, or genus key. Do you have anthers fused in a tube around the twoparted style? You probably have Asteraceae.
Treatments in TJM2 are meant to be a used as a field guide to vascular plants - and so the keys are
written with characters that are recognizable in the field. This means YOU WILL NEED a 20× magnification hand lens. Additional characters are included in descriptions (range, elevation, flowering
time) that help with identification. Other characteristics (chromosome counts, molecular studies)
contribute to species delimitation but are impossible to actually use in the field. Read the family,
genus, AND species descriptions for full characteristics when keying!
Read couplets in order [left to right]. Key leads are supposed to present the most obvious and
clear cut character choices first. They are also ordered proximal to distal.
To save space, TJM2 uses abbreviations and symbols. Think of it as a densely coded text. Abbreviations and Symbols pp. 13–15. Symbols [http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/TJM2_symbols.html]. Abbreviations are not used in the online Jepson eFlora. Why not?
Everything is “gen” [generally]. That is, keys present characters that are most common, obvious,
and likely to be encountered in the field. Read descriptions to get an of common characteristics
for family/genus keys, and look for additional characteristics for species to provide confirmation
of identification. Remember that characters addressed in family descriptions are not repeated in
genus descriptions, and characters addressed in genus descriptions are not repeated in species
descriptions if generally true. Exceptions to the general condition are included in the descriptions.
Can’t decide which lead to choose? Try going both ways in the key! There are multiple options
to successfully key. Choose one key lead and follow it to taxon, then go back and pick the other
couplet lead at the point of confusion. See if the resulting identification helps exclude one of the
leads. TIP - if you aren’t having success with the key at a difficult couplet, go back up to the previous couplet and try again. Still confused? Go back to the beginning and try again. It is easy to skip
a couplet or a character and be led astray.
TJM2 is written for plants WITH reproductive parts available. It is not impossible to key out a vegetative terrestrial plant lacking flowers or fruit using TJM2 - you will need to rely on additional resources or try again at another time. Plant material in hand may not have the necessary flowering
AND mature fruiting material required. However, the keys are artificial - which means that it may
be impossible to encounter all included characteristics of keys in real plants.
building a key activity
Alles ist Blatt
says Goethe
axillary bud
leaf arrangement
TRICHOMES!
hairs and other irritations
short hairy
short bristly hairy
shorter is hispidulous
flattened/appressed and
sharp/stiff hairs
shorter is strigulous
densely hairy
hairs intertwined
stalked/stipitate glandular
glands can also be sessile
long bristly hairy
shorter is setulous
long soft hairy
less dense is pilosulous
sessile stellate
stalked/stipitate stellate
villose/shaggy
sparse long soft hairy
less dense is villosulous
Descriptive of sea urchins
wooly, densely long hairy
hairs intertwined
glochid-like
California, 4th edition. Mad River Press, Eureka, California.
hooked
minutely hairy
hairs gray
hairy
minutely hairy
hairs straight, erect
silky hairy
tufted
Fig. 32, Pp. 192 from James P. Smith Jr, and John O. Sawyer. 1981. Keys to the families and genera of
vascular plants in northwest California, 4th edition. Mad River Press, Eureka, California.
Fig. 36, Pp. 196 from James P. Smith Jr, and John O. Sawyer. 1981. Keys to the families and genera of vascular plants in northwest
axillary bud
stem
Leaf Margins
simple leaves illustrated
palmately
divided
Fig. 35, Pp. 195 from James P. Smith Jr, and John O. Sawyer. 1981. Keys to the families and genera of
vascular plants in northwest California, 4th edition. Mad River Press, Eureka, California.
axillary bud
pinnately compound
pinnately
divided
of 2
Elliptic
!"#$%&'()*%&
+,'+
linear obtriangular or
narrowly cuneate
linear triangular
linear
.'+
!"##$%&'()*+,-$).'/0&$1
.',
-'/
234,5%$4)6&7#)8,97-:);<=>?
,'+
elliptic
widely oblong
-'+
narrowly elliptic
oblong
widely ovate
widely elliptic
narrowly oblong or
ovate
ovate
+'+
circular
square
very widely ovate
quadrate rhombic
very widely
obovate
widely rhombic
very widely
trullate
deltate
widely trullate
widely deltate
obdeltate
very widely
obtrullate
widely
obdeltate
widely
obtrullate
widely obovate
lanceolate
rhombic
obovate
narrowly rhombic
trullate
oblanceolate
narrowly trullate
obtrullate
obtriangular or widely
cuneate
triangular
narrowly obtrullate
narrowly triangular
cuneate
!"#$
,'.
%$&'()*$+(,,,
+',
transversely widely
oblong
depressed ovate
transversely oblong
/'-
widely depressed
ovate
depressed obovate
transversely elliptic
widely depressed
obovate
transversely depressed trullate
transversely rhombic
widely depressed
trullate
shallowly obtriangular
shallowly triangular
transversely depressed obtrullate
shallowly obdeltate
shallowly deltate
widely depressed
obtrullate
widely transversely
rhombic
oblate
Available from the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden Virtual Herbarium http://www.virtualherbarium.org/glossary/ShapeDefs.html
With widest axis at midpoint of structure and with margins symmetrically curved
Oblong
With widest axis at midpoint of structure and with margins essentially parallel
Ovate
With widest axis below middle and with margins symmetrically curved; egg-shaped
Obovate
Inversely ovate
Rhombic
With widest axis at midpoint of structure, and with straight margins; elliptic but
margins straight and middle angled
Trullate
With widest axis below middle and with straight margins; ovate but margins straight
and angled below middle, trowel-shaped
Obtrullate
Inversely trullate
Triangular
With three sides and three angles
Obtriangular
Inversely triangular
012
314"
-'"./(&0*10&2+3
+'.
-'"./(&0*4$5/"23
+'-
narrowly transversely elliptic
narrowly transversely oblong
narrowly transversely rhombic
very shallowly triangular
very shallowly obtriangular
+'+,
67"8+*93
transversely
linear
3/16/14 7:08 P
Keying Notes Worksheet
INTRODUCTION TO CALIFORNIA PLANT FAMILIES
There are some common diagnostic taxonomic characters that will come up repeatedly in TJM2,
especially in the Key to Groups and Families [Note: Family and genus keys will have additional characters].
Common characteristics for vascular plants in TJM2
Life history: annual or perennial?
Habit: aquatic or terrestrial?
Herb or shrub/tree?
Woody only at base, or woody throughout?
Leaf: simple or compound?
What does the leaf margin look like?
Leaf venation type?
Reproductive structures: do you have sporangia & spores, or seeds [naked, or in cones, or enclosed in ovary]?
If producing fruit: inferior or superior ovary?
Flowers: unisexual or bisexual?
Flowers: all closed or some open?
Sepals/petals: fused or free?
Hypanthium present?
Additional character notes:
Keying Notes (Key to Groups & Families):
Keying Notes (Family Key):
Keying Notes (Genus and species key):
Additional Keying Notes:
FAMILY
floralformula
Habit:
Stem:
Leaves:
Inflorescence:
Flower:
Fruit:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
FAMILY
Exampletaxon
Notes:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
Keying Notes Worksheet
INTRODUCTION TO CALIFORNIA PLANT FAMILIES
There are some common diagnostic taxonomic characters that will come up repeatedly in TJM2,
especially in the Key to Groups and Families [Note: Family and genus keys will have additional characters].
Common characteristics for vascular plants in TJM2
Life history: annual or perennial?
Habit: aquatic or terrestrial?
Herb or shrub/tree?
Woody only at base, or woody throughout?
Leaf: simple or compound?
What does the leaf margin look like?
Leaf venation type?
Reproductive structures: do you have sporangia & spores, or seeds [naked, or in cones, or enclosed in ovary]?
If producing fruit: inferior or superior ovary?
Flowers: unisexual or bisexual?
Flowers: all closed or some open?
Sepals/petals: fused or free?
Hypanthium present?
Additional character notes:
Keying Notes (Key to Groups & Families):
Keying Notes (Family Key):
Keying Notes (Genus and species key):
Additional Keying Notes:
FAMILY
floralformula
Habit:
Stem:
Leaves:
Inflorescence:
Flower:
Fruit:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
FAMILY
Exampletaxon
Notes:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
Keying Notes Worksheet
INTRODUCTION TO CALIFORNIA PLANT FAMILIES
There are some common diagnostic taxonomic characters that will come up repeatedly in TJM2,
especially in the Key to Groups and Families [Note: Family and genus keys will have additional characters].
Common characteristics for vascular plants in TJM2
Life history: annual or perennial?
Habit: aquatic or terrestrial?
Herb or shrub/tree?
Woody only at base, or woody throughout?
Leaf: simple or compound?
What does the leaf margin look like?
Leaf venation type?
Reproductive structures: do you have sporangia & spores, or seeds [naked, or in cones, or enclosed in ovary]?
If producing fruit: inferior or superior ovary?
Flowers: unisexual or bisexual?
Flowers: all closed or some open?
Sepals/petals: fused or free?
Hypanthium present?
Additional character notes:
Keying Notes (Key to Groups & Families):
Keying Notes (Family Key):
Keying Notes (Genus and species key):
Additional Keying Notes:
FAMILY
floralformula
Habit:
Stem:
Leaves:
Inflorescence:
Flower:
Fruit:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
FAMILY
Exampletaxon
Notes:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
Keying Notes Worksheet
INTRODUCTION TO CALIFORNIA PLANT FAMILIES
There are some common diagnostic taxonomic characters that will come up repeatedly in TJM2,
especially in the Key to Groups and Families [Note: Family and genus keys will have additional characters].
Common characteristics for vascular plants in TJM2
Life history: annual or perennial?
Habit: aquatic or terrestrial?
Herb or shrub/tree?
Woody only at base, or woody throughout?
Leaf: simple or compound?
What does the leaf margin look like?
Leaf venation type?
Reproductive structures: do you have sporangia & spores, or seeds [naked, or in cones, or enclosed in ovary]?
If producing fruit: inferior or superior ovary?
Flowers: unisexual or bisexual?
Flowers: all closed or some open?
Sepals/petals: fused or free?
Hypanthium present?
Additional character notes:
Keying Notes (Key to Groups & Families):
Keying Notes (Family Key):
Keying Notes (Genus and species key):
Additional Keying Notes:
FAMILY
floralformula
Habit:
Stem:
Leaves:
Inflorescence:
Flower:
Fruit:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
FAMILY
Exampletaxon
Notes:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
Keying Notes Worksheet
INTRODUCTION TO CALIFORNIA PLANT FAMILIES
There are some common diagnostic taxonomic characters that will come up repeatedly in TJM2,
especially in the Key to Groups and Families [Note: Family and genus keys will have additional characters].
Common characteristics for vascular plants in TJM2
Life history: annual or perennial?
Habit: aquatic or terrestrial?
Herb or shrub/tree?
Woody only at base, or woody throughout?
Leaf: simple or compound?
What does the leaf margin look like?
Leaf venation type?
Reproductive structures: do you have sporangia & spores, or seeds [naked, or in cones, or enclosed in ovary]?
If producing fruit: inferior or superior ovary?
Flowers: unisexual or bisexual?
Flowers: all closed or some open?
Sepals/petals: fused or free?
Hypanthium present?
Additional character notes:
Keying Notes (Key to Groups & Families):
Keying Notes (Family Key):
Keying Notes (Genus and species key):
Additional Keying Notes:
FAMILY
floralformula
Habit:
Stem:
Leaves:
Inflorescence:
Flower:
Fruit:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
FAMILY
Exampletaxon
Notes:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
Keying Notes Worksheet
INTRODUCTION TO CALIFORNIA PLANT FAMILIES
There are some common diagnostic taxonomic characters that will come up repeatedly in TJM2,
especially in the Key to Groups and Families [Note: Family and genus keys will have additional characters].
Common characteristics for vascular plants in TJM2
Life history: annual or perennial?
Habit: aquatic or terrestrial?
Herb or shrub/tree?
Woody only at base, or woody throughout?
Leaf: simple or compound?
What does the leaf margin look like?
Leaf venation type?
Reproductive structures: do you have sporangia & spores, or seeds [naked, or in cones, or enclosed in ovary]?
If producing fruit: inferior or superior ovary?
Flowers: unisexual or bisexual?
Flowers: all closed or some open?
Sepals/petals: fused or free?
Hypanthium present?
Additional character notes:
Keying Notes (Key to Groups & Families):
Keying Notes (Family Key):
Keying Notes (Genus and species key):
Additional Keying Notes:
FAMILY
floralformula
Habit:
Stem:
Leaves:
Inflorescence:
Flower:
Fruit:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
FAMILY
Exampletaxon
Notes:
Introduction to California Plant Families Family Characteristics Worksheet
Using Stereomicroscropes in Jepson Herbarium Workshops
Introduction to California Plant Families, 21–23 March or 8–10 August 2014
1. Two-handed carry
Use one hand to pick up scope by the head
handle [1a].The other hand supports the
scope from the base [1b]. Always carry with
two hands. Place on flat surface.
6
1a
2. Power plug & cord
8
Cord not shown in figures. Plug located at
back of scope/base of arm [2]. Connect cord
firmly to scope. Requires electricity source.
Wrap cord up when finished.
7
3. ON/OFF switch
ON/OFF switch located at back of
scope/ base of arm [3]. ON/OFF and LED
lights are on a 4sec delay.
4. Light switches
LED light switches located on right side of
stage [4]. LED lights are on a 4sec delay. LED
light intensity controlled by dimmer switches to
decrease ! or increase ! lights. LED lights
can be used in any combination.Incident LED
light " is best for opaque objects illuminated
from above. Transmitted LED light # is best for
transparent objects illuminated from below.
4
2
3
5
1b
6
6
5. Stage
Never dissect material on the glass.
Always use a glass slide or 3X5 card to work
with material under magnification.
8
8
6. 10X ocular
Adjust left to right spacing as needed for eye
width. Roll cover down for eyeglass wearers.
7
7
7. Coarse focus knob
Raises the optical head up and down. Should
be lowered completely for storage. Right &
left handed.
8. Fine focus knob
10X or 30X magnification. Right & left
handed.
2
3
4
! !
5
1b
Stereomicroscropes for the Jepson Herbarium Workshops were generously donated by Friends of the Jepson Herbarium.
Images [EZ4] and instructions modified from the Leica ES series by GKWalden for these workshops.
Jepson Workshop Dissecting Basics 2014
e]
to
ut
er
/b
ot
to
ad
[o
a
l[
xia
ial
inn
/
er
ax
distal [sky]
ab
cross section (xs)
id
ps
ms
ide
]
longitudinal section (ls)
proximal [soil]
Jepson Herbarium Workshop Dissecting Kit Basics
!"#$%&"'()#*+,-#.-%&/.0#1(,#%*%2#'&34#23(&.")'0#5367,#8""/#&(.,2#9)%:".#3&#9&38"6#;)%..#.)+:".#+6#23(&#8+,0#5+./3."#
of all sharps appropriately. <',"&#"%$-#(."=#/(,#23(&#8+,#9%$8#,3;",-"&#$)"%6#%6:#:&20#>&%$,+$"#23(&#:+.."$,+36#.8+)).?#
DISSECTING KIT ITEMS
Sharps: @$+..3&.0#@$%)/").#A#"B,&%#9)%:".#C&"D(+&"#%.."49)2E0#@(//)"4"6,#*+,-#4(),+/%$8#&%F3&#9)%:".0
Forceps. Supplement with fine point or watchmaker forceps.
Probes. @(//)"4"6,#*+,-#'+6"#/&39".=#/+6.#A#6"":)".0
Ruler#C4",&+$#A#"6;)+.-E0#!3,%6+$%)#)+6"#$36G"&.+36HI#)+6"#J#IKIL#+6$-#J#IKM#9%&)"2$3&6#J#I#/3//2."":
Glass Dropper#C,3#*",#:+.."$,+6;#4%,"&+%)E
RECOMMENDED ITEMS
10X Handlens - a necessity! <#LNO#)"6.#+.#%*".34"#,330#P%62%&:.#%&"#;&"%,#'3&#8""/+6;#,&%$8#3'#-%6:)"6.0
Glass slides & cover slips C;&"%,#'3&#'(6;+#%6:#<))+(4E0#@,%+6.#C*-+)"#;&"%,E#%&"#63,#&"$344"6:":#'3&#;"6"&%)#8+,.0#
<)*%2.#$-"$8#Q@5@=#RSA@=#%6:#$-"4#-%F%&:.0#
3x5 cards 5367,#$(,#36#%#4+$&3.$3/"#.,%;"#T#(."#UOV#$%&:.=#.)+:".=#%6:K3&#/&"/%&"#3''#,-"#.,%;"0#W-"#/%/"&#%$,.#
%.#%#9)3,,"&#%6:#-")/.#,&%6./3&,#:+.."$,+36.0#X3(#$%6#*3&8#36#4(),+/)"#./"$+4"6.#%6:#/&"..#4+6+TG3($-"&.#*+,-#%#
UBV#$%&:0
Small notebook ,3#&"$3&:#63,".#CY+"):#Z3,".E0#['#23(#*+))#9"#:3+6;#*",#'+"):#*3&8#\+,"#+6#,-"#\%+6#/3$8",#.+F"#
notebooks.
Clear plastic tape ]."#,3#'+B#&3)2/3)2#4%,"&+%)#C."":.=#;)393."#3G%&+".E#,3#UOV#$%&:.#'3&#:+.."$,+360#5+.."$,":#
4%,"&+%)#$%6#9"#$)"%6)2#,%/":#:3*6#%6:#+6$)(:":#+6#%#'+"):#63,"9338#'3&#)%,"&#&"'"&"6$"0#W%/"#+.#%$+:+$#%6:#*+))#
2"))3*#+6#%;"#T#:367,#(."#+'#/&"."&G%,+36#+.#%#$36$"&60
Pencil sharpener & pencil A small pencil sharpener is essential. Can also sharpen pencil with a small knife. Pencils
%6:#$&%236.#%&"#&"%))2#-")/'()#,3#4%8"#)"%'#&(99+6;.#'3&#)"%'#G"6%,+36#:+%;&%4.0#['#23(#*+))#9"#4%8+6;#%663,%,+36.=#
-"&9%&+(4#)%9").=#3&#)%9#63,"9338.#(."#%$+:#'&""#%&$-+G%)#/"6.#C>+;4%Q+$&36E0
Bags & envelopes ^)%..+6"#3&#.,%4/#"6G")3/".#C:&2#4%,"&+%)E0#>)%.,+$#F+/)3$#9%;.#C'3&#$3))"$,+6;#'&".-#4%,"&+%)#+6#
'+"):E0#_""/#'&".-#4%,"&+%)#+6#,-"#'&+:;"#3&#$33)"&0
Bandaids!#Y+&.,#%+:#.(//)+".0#Just in case.
general floral morphology
bisexual flower
gynoecium
stamen
androecium
male flower
female flower
radial
top, outside middle, bottom images from JAMES P. SMITH J.r and J. O. SAWYER. 1981. Keys to the
families and genera of vascular plants in northwest California. 4th ed. Mad River Press, Eureka, CA.
center image from M.G. SIMPSON. 2006. Plant systematics. Elsevier Academic Press, Burlington, MA.
ovaries- position and placentation
top, lower middle, bottom figures from JAMES P. SMITH Jr. and J. O. SAWYER. 1981. Keys to the families and genera of vascular plants in northwest California. 4th ed. Mad River Press, Eureka, CA
upper middle figure from M.G. SIMPSON. 2006. Plant systematics. Elsevier Academic Press, Burlington, MA.
Dry Fruits
Fig. 41, Pp. 201 from James P. Smith Jr, and John O. Sawyer. 1981. Keys to the families and genera of
vascular plants in northwest California, 4th edition. Mad River Press, Eureka, California.
circumscissile
loculicidal
poricidal
septicidal
Fleshy Fruits
Fig. 42, Pp. 202 from James P. Smith Jr, and John O. Sawyer. 1981. Keys to the families and genera of vascular plants in northwest
California, 4th edition. Mad River Press, Eureka, California.
APPENDIX
Want to learn more? Additional references and resources abound!
Please note the references and resources included in this handout are not comprehensive - there are many additional resources available for specific botanical interests that you may wish to explore further on your own. We have
tried to include resources that had both a hardcopy and an online version, please let us know if links are broken or
inaccessible due to subscription or paywall issues.
Questions? Comments? Is this handout missing something helpful to keying and identifying California plants using TJM2 or your other favorite plant guide? I am always looking for useful tips, good resources, and efficient ways to
identify plants in California. Let me know your favorite tip or tough plant puzzle! Email [email protected]
Want to become MORE involved? You do? Why didn’t you just say so?
More Jepson Herbarium Workshops are scheduled for the rest of 2014! See the schedule online http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/workshops/2014/index.
html. Check out photos and field notes from all the amazing workshops at the tumblr for the Jepson Herbarium Workshops.
jepsonworkshops.tumblr.com
Anytime is a good time to join or renew your membership to The Friends of the Jepson Herbarium. Friends receive the newsletter of the herbarium,
The Globe, and receive discounts on all Jepson Herbarium Workshops.
ucjeps.berkeley.edu/jeps/friends/
Curatorial Volunteer Days in the University and Jepson Herbaria are held on one Saturday a month. For more information contact Curator Kim
Kersh [[email protected]]. Looking to get involved with your local lovable herbarium, botanical garden, or arboretum? Most also have organized
volunteer days and generally really appreciate any help. Check out the ‘contact us’ page for the institution or organization of interest, or let me
know if you are looking for specific contacts.
Are you a member of the California Botanical Society? Members of the California Botanical Society receive the scientific journal Madroño.
www.calbotsoc.org
What about membership in the California Native Plant Society? There are great resources available for state and local chapters! Check out the
CNPS Online Inventory, publications, workshops, and events.
www.cnps.org
How about the Northern California Botanists [http://www.norcalbotanists.org/ ] and the Southern California Botanists [http://www.socalbot.org/]?
Both have great conferences and publications!
Additional reading about California Botany, Jepson, the Jepson Manual, and the Jepson Flora Project
Beidleman, R. G. 2000. Willis Linn Jepson - The Botany Man. Madroño 47(4): 273–286, and online http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/history/biog/jepson/jepson_the_botany_man.html
Constance, L. 1995. Homage to Willis Linn Jepson. Madroño 42(2): 96-102. http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/history/biog/jepson/jepson_homage.html
Dean, E. 2011. A review of The Jepson Manual: vascular plants of California. Madroño 58(4): 273-274.
James P. Smith, THE BOTANY OF CALIFORNIA: CALIFORNIA’S FIRST FLORA, Fremontia 41(2):22-27. 2013. [www.cnps.org/cnps/publications/
fremontia/FremontiaV41.2.pdf]
LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES
If you are looking for any botanical reference, I highly recommend checking out our UC and Jepson Library and Archives and contacting our archivist Amy Kasameyer. There are fantastic archives and field notebooks, and texts that are unavailable elsewhere. The UC Berkeley Libraries [Bancroft!] have extraordinary resources for botanical research, as does the California Academy of Sciences Archives. Additionally, if you are stumped
after searching online through WorldCat and Google, ask Amy [[email protected]].
http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/main/libraries.html
http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/main/archives/
Biodiversity Heritage Library http://biodiversitylibrary.org/
Internet Archive http://archive.org/
Botanicus http://www.botanicus.org/
Google Books http://books.google.com
WorldCat www.worldcat.org
DIGITAL CURATION
There are a number of very very good online resources for specimens. Start with the Consortium of California Herbaria, and then see where that
takes you!
Consortium of California Herbaria [CCH] http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/consortium/
UC & JEPS specimen portal [https://ucjeps.cspace.berkeley.edu/ucjeps_project/public/publicsearch/]
Southwest Environmental Information Network SEINet [http://swbiodiversity.org/portal/index.php]
Consortium of Pacific Northwest Herbaria [http://www.pnwherbaria.org/]
UC & JEPS type specimen images http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/db/types/types_table.html
JSTOR Plant Science, this may require institutional and/or individual subscription and/or login through MyPlants http://plants.jstor.org/
FORBES, M. 2012. CollectionSpace: A story of open-source software development and user-centered design. Bulletin of the American Society for
Information Science and Technology 38(3): 22-26. CollectionSpace [http://www.collectionspace.org]
Are you looking for a historic name from the Jepson Field Notebooks? http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/images/fieldbooks/jepson_fieldbooks.html
Also, check out the Jepson Place Name Index http://www.mip.berkeley.edu/query_forms/browse_jpn.html
BerkeleyMapper 2.0 http://berkeleymapper.berkeley.edu/
FLORAS - Mosses, Algae, and the plants of California
California Moss eFlora http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/CA_moss_eflora/
Index Nominum Algarum Bibliographia Phycologica Universalis [INA] http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/INA.html
Jepson Horticultural Database http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/db/horticulture/
Smith, J. P. 2010. California Floras: Literature on the identification and uses of California vascular plants. Humboldt State Herbarium Miscellaneous
Publication No. 1 (17th edition):1-71. www.humboldt.edu/herbarium/publications/Bibliographic/California-floras-November-2010.pdf
An exhaustive list of floras in California, periodically updated. If you are looking for regional floras or plant lists check here first. Humboldt has
tremendously great resources.
Flora of North America North of México http://floranorthamerica.org/ Online FNANM published volumes http://www.efloras.org/flora_page.
aspx?flora_id=1
eFloras http://www.efloras.org/
CalPhotos http://calphotos.berkeley.edu/
CalFlora [http://www.calflora.org/]
Flickr! [https://www.flickr.com/]
TJM2 Botanical Glossary pgs 17-34 http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM_glossary.html
Hunt Flora of North America North of Mexico (FNANM) glossary online
http://huntbot.andrew.cmu.edu/hibd/departments/DB-INTRO/IntroFNA.shtml
Fairchild Botanic Garden Virtual Herbarium Symmetric Plane Figures online http://www.virtualherbarium.org/glossary/ShapeDefs.html
Mabberley, D. J. 2008. Mabberley’s plant-book: a portable dictionary of plants, their classification, and uses. Cambridge, UK; New York, Cambridge University Press.
Additional resources for botanical Latin - The 1993 TJM had a lovely discussion on the Pronunciation of Scientific Names pg 11-12.
McNeill, J. 1997. Latin, the Renaissance lingua franca, and English, the 20th century language of science: their role in biotaxonomy. Taxon 46(4):
751-757.
Smith, G. F., E. Figueiredo, and G. Moore. 2011. English and Latin as alternative languages for validating the names of organisms covered by the
International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants: The final chapter? Taxon 60(5): 1502-1503.
Stearn, W. T. 2004. Botanical Latin. 4 ed. Portland, Timber Press.
GoogleTranslate http://translate.google.com/
Perseus Digital Library [Perseus 4.0, or Perseus Hopper] http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/
Ancient Greek and Latin Dependency TreeBanks http://nlp.perseus.tufts.edu/syntax/treebank/
Textkit http://www.textkit.com/
Plant names and nomenclature
TROPICOS http://www.tropicos.org/NameSearch.aspx
International Plant Name Index IPNI http://www.ipni.org/ipni/plantnamesearchpage.do
Index Nominum Genericorum http://botany.si.edu/ing/
Reveal, J. 2012. Indices Nominum Supragenericorum Plantarum Vascularium 2011 [cited 15 April 2012]. Available from http://www.plantsystematics.org/Reveal/pbio/fam/allspgnames.html.
McNeill, J., F. R. Barrie, H. M. Burdet, V. Demoulin, D. L. Hawksworth, K. Marhold, D. H. NicolsonI, J. Prado, P. C. Silva, J. E. Skog, J. H. Wiersema, and N. J. Turland, eds. 2006. International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (Vienna Code). Regnum Vegetabile. Vol. 146: A. R. G. Gautner
Verlag K. G. http://ibot.sav.sk/icbn/main.htm
McNeill, J., F. Barrie, W. Buck, V. Demoulin, W. Greuter, D. Hawksworth, P. Herendeen, S. Knapp, K. Marhold, and J. Prado. 2012. International
Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Melbourne Code) adopted by the Eighteenth International Botanical Congress Melbourne,
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ICBN Article 60 http://ibot.sav.sk/icbn/frameset/0065Ch7OaGoNSec1a60.htm#60.2
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FRIDAY
YOUR NAME (optional): _____________________________
DAILY EVALUATION SHEET for Introduction to California Plant Families Workshop
We want to know how the workshop is going for you! We know that we may not get enough time to answer your specific questions within class time. We also know that more questions will come up as the class moves forward. But we want to answer all
of your questions, and if we don’t know how - we will find someone who can. So please keep notes about persistent questions
that come up, as well as confusing terms or jargon that are unclear. Do you have any suggestions? Let us know!
Please turn in your evaluation to any instructor or volunteer when you leave for the end of each day.
QUESTIONS:
Jargon & Term LIST:
One thing that you liked about the workshop today:
One thing that didn’t work for your learning, and suggestions for improvements:
One thing that you learned today:
Any other comments for the instructors:
CATURDAY
YOUR NAME (optional): _____________________________
DAILY EVALUATION SHEET for Introduction to California Plant Families Workshop
We want to know how the workshop is going for you! We know that we may not get enough time to answer your specific questions within class time. We also know that more questions will come up as the class moves forward. But we want to answer all
of your questions, and if we don’t know how - we will find someone who can. So please keep notes about persistent questions
that come up, as well as confusing terms or jargon that are unclear. Do you have any suggestions? Let us know!
Please turn in your evaluation to any instructor or volunteer when you leave for the end of each day.
QUESTIONS:
Jargon & Term LIST:
One thing that you liked about the workshop today:
One thing that didn’t work for your learning, and suggestions for improvements:
One thing that you learned today:
Any other comments for the instructors:
FUNDAY
YOUR NAME (optional): _____________________________
DAILY EVALUATION SHEET for Introduction to California Plant Families Workshop
We want to know how the workshop is going for you! We know that we may not get enough time to answer your specific questions within class time. We also know that more questions will come up as the class moves forward. But we want to answer all
of your questions, and if we don’t know how - we will find someone who can. So please keep notes about persistent questions
that come up, as well as confusing terms or jargon that are unclear. Do you have any suggestions? Let us know!
Please turn in your evaluation to any instructor or volunteer when you leave for the end of each day.
QUESTIONS:
Jargon & Term LIST:
One thing that you liked about the workshop today:
One thing that didn’t work for your learning, and suggestions for improvements:
One thing that you learned today:
Any other comments for the instructors: