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Wildflower Identification Guide Emma Etchason You on the CUE Farm You stand at the farm’s corner, just outside the wooden gate. You are overwhelmed, your eyes are too small and the world, the natural world, too large. There are colors of spring green, sunshine yellow, rusty red, deep purple, glowing orange. It’s harvesting season. The tallest sunflower catches your eye. The slight breeze of a mid-afternoon fall day provokes the flower to sway. It’s waving at you, beckoning you closer. At once you become aware of the monarch butterfly fluttering by the flowering vine that twined itself up the fence. You look down at your feet and it is as if you can feel the earthworms beneath, burrowing through the soil. The world is alive, all around you. And now is your chance. Take it in. Absorb the bright petals of the zinnias, stare into the centers of black-eyed susans, smell the aroma of the snapdragons and sunflowers. Fall in love with the world, and the beauty surrounding you. Angiosperms The Flowering Plants A REVIEW • Angiosperm is derived from two Greek words, angeion, meaning “vessel” and sperma, meaning “seed.” Thus an angiosperm is a plant were the seed is covered, or carried in a vessel. • The vessel of the seed is called the carpel. • The closest living relative to the angiosperms are the gymnosperms. Gymnosperms have naked seeds. Covered seeds in angiosperms suggests that angiosperms evolved after gymnosperms. • How do you identify an angiosperm? FLOWERS of course. But, carpets, an endosperm, and a second fertilization event are indicators as well. • The flowers of angiosperms have four sets of organs: sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels. • The reproductive elements of angiosperms are the stigma and the style. • The mature ovary is the fruit of the plant. • It is thought that flowers evolved as a mechanism to increase fitness. Showy petals attract pollinators, sweet fruits encourage seed dispersal by animals. Black-eyed Susan Rudbeckai hirta Description: • Grows1-2 feet tall • Alternate leaf arrangement • Stems and leaves covered in short hairs – giving a rough texture • Ray of yellow petals surrounding a central brown cone Pollinators: • Pollinated by bees, wasps, and flies • Preferred by Andrena rudbeckiae and Heterosarus rudbeckiae (see the similarities in scientific names!) Fun Flower Facts: • Used as a restoration/ pioneer plant • Official state flower of Maryland • Has herbal medicine uses • Member of the Sunflower family • Flowers from June through October • Found in fields and prairies Red Clover Trifolium pratense Description: • Member of the pea family • Height of 6-24 inches fall • Flowers from May through September • Found in lawns and roadside • Dense mass of peashaped flowers, extensively branched, spanning one inch wide. • Erect, hairy, hallow stem. • Short-lived perennial plant Pollinators: Flower Fun Facts: • Primarily used for ground cover and soil improvement. • Bumble bees are the primary pollinators of red clover • Often used in herbal tea • Prefered over honey bees as they are better as foraging deep into the floret. • Used as traditional Indian medicine to treat the common cold Description: • Herbaceous perennial plant • Comes in a variety of colors including white, yellow, orange, purple, and pink • Creates “closed lips” with pedals, making a dragon’s mouth. Pollinators • Pollinated most commonly by bumble bees • Penetrate the flower tube from the side to avoid having to open the petals. Snapdragons Antirrhinum majus • Member of the Plantaginaceae family • Flowers from April to November • Found throughout the United States and China Flower Fun Facts: • There are over 40 species of snapdragons • The flower’s scientific name, Antirrhinum, mean like a snout. Ten-pedal Sunflower Helianthus decapetalus Description: • Lower/middle leaves have opposite leaf arrangement • Upper leaves have alternate arrangement • Member of the Sunflower Family • Flowers from June to September • Found in open woodlands, meadows, and along rivers • Each flower consists of 8-12 yellow florets around the center. Pollinators: Flower Fun Facts • Other common names include the thinleaf sunflower and the forest sunflower • Mainly bees, but butterflies, wasps and flies visit the flower Description: • Rough, erect stem with terminal flower heads • Member of the Sunflower family • Overlapping ray florets, with flowers ranging from 3-6 inches wide • Flowers from July through November • Alternate leaf arrangement • Found in prairies and rich sooils Flower Fun Facts Pollinators Common Sunflower Helianthus annus • Both honey and bumble bees pollinate the flower. • Native American’s used the plant’s ground seeds for bread flour and oil for cooking and beauty products. • Effectiveness at pollinating of each bee depends of flower size • Oil is still extracted from the common sunflower to make soap. Smooth Aster Aster laevis • Member of the Sunflower Family • Flowers from August through October • Found in fields and open woods Description: Pollinators: • Most commonly pollinated by bees and butterflies • Its nectar serves as an important late season food source for its pollinators • Ray of lavender petals around a yellow center, each flower about an inch wide • Branches up to three feet tall • Smooth leaves at the stem, hence the common name • Common garden perennial Flower Fun Facts: • The Greek word aster translates to star, describing the flower shape • This plant was smoked by pipe in the past as it was thought to ward off evil spirits Panicled Aster Aster simplex Flower Fun Facts: • Spreads by underground rootstocks to form colonies • Associated with lasting love, patience and good luck • Are often times mistaken for the daisy • Member of the Sunflower Family • Flowers from August to October • Found in meadows Description: Pollinators: • Pollinated by bees and butterflies • Grown in areas to promote habitat protection of pollinators • Tall stem with a loose arrangement of white flower heads • Flower heads are about one inch wide • Leaves larger near the ground, smaller near the flower Description: • Blue flower heads with squared ends, about an inch and a half wide • Member of the Sunflower Family • Petals have a a fringe appearance • Flowers from June through October • Tough, grooved stem • Found in fields and along the roadside • Basal leaves are three to six inches wide • Stem leaves are smaller and oblong Flower Fun Facts: Pollinators: • Came from the Old World • Common pollinators include bees, flies and beetles • Roots can be roasted and ground as a coffee substitute • Each flower bloom lasts only a day Chicory Cichorium intybus • In winter, American Goldfinches feed on the chicory seeds Purple Coneflower Echinacea purpurea • Member of the Sunflower Family • Flowers from June to August • Found in prairies, fields, and open woods Pollinators: Flower Fun Facts: • Most commonly pollinated by native butterflies. • The only native prairie plant used for medicinal purposes by medical professionals • Finches commonly eat the seeds. Description: • Grows to a height of 2-4 feet • Flower heads like sun flowers, with disks as large as 3.5 cm in diameter • Drooping ray of florets colored purple and lavender • Yellow/orange pollen grains • Also, extensively used as a fold remedy Description: • Grows to 1-2 feet tall • Light green stem with alternate leaf arrangement • Dense, cylindrical spike of clustered pink/ purple flowers • No petals, but 4-6 sepals Flower Fun Facts • Lady’s thumb often forms colonies • Dark green splotches on leaves resemble a lady’s thumbprint Pollinators • One of the most abundant weeds in the United States and Europe • Most common pollinators include Halictid bees, wasps, and Syrphid flies Lady’s Thumb Polygonum persicaria • Member of the Buckwheat Family • Flowers from June to October • Found on roadsides, cultivated ground, and moist clearings Yarrow Achillea millefolium Description: • Herbaceous perennial • Flat-topped cluster of white flowers • Leafy, hairy stem • Flowers are ¼ inch wide, 4-6 ray florets • Member of the Sunflower Family • Flowers from June through September • Found in old fields and along roadsides Pollinators: • Leaves are about six inches • Pollinated long, finely dissected, by a wide fernlike range of Flower Fun Facts: bees, butterflies, • Used for medicinal and insects purposes, break a fever by as it is increasing perspiration, easily treat hemorrhaging and accessible rashes • Member of the Sunflower Family Common Ragweed Ambrosia artemisiifolia • Flowers from July through October Description: • Course, hairy stem • Found in cultivated fields, old fields, along roadsides • Annual flowers in elongated clusters spanning several inches near the top of the plant • Male reproductive organs, yellow stamens, are organized on the 15-20 florets clustered at the top of the plant • Female flowers are small, green, stalkless, and are located at leaf axils in clusters Pollinators • Ragweed depends on wind dispersal and thus attracts few pollinators. Fun Flower Facts: • Causes hay fever • Perennial plants are often used to control ragweed plantings, a crowding out. • Seeds persist into winter, thus serving as an important food source for birds Description: • The common yellow violet is an herbaceous perennial • Small rosette of basal leaves Flower Fun Facts: • The common yellow violet is safe to eat • Hairless stem • It’s stems and petals have high amounts of vitamin C • Each flowers is ¾ of an inch wide Pollinators: • Each flower consists of 5 rounded petals and 5 green sepals • Root system consists of rhizomes • Common pollinators are carpenter bees, mason bees, cuckoo bees, and long-horned bees. Common Yellow Violet Viola pubescens • Member of the Violet Family • Flowers April through July • Found in deciduous woodlands, woodland borders, and thickets Zinnia Zinnia elegans • Member of the Sunflower Family • Flowers from June through October • Found in gardens and open fields Description: • Annuals • Grow 1-3 feet tall • Upright, hairy, branching stems • Come in many different colors including red, orange, yellow, lavender, green, and white • Opposite leaf arrangement along the stem Flower Fun Facts: • Native to Mexico • Zinnia represents friendship • Know as the “poorhouse” flower as zinnias are abundant and easy to grow Pollinators: • Most commonly pollinated by butterflies, bees, and moths • Hummingb irds are also attracted to the bright colors of the zinnias References and Resources Books: Yaksievych, K. (2000). Field Guide to Indiana Wildflowers. Indiana University Press. Niering, W.A. (1998). National Audubon Society: Field Guide to Wildflowers Eastern Region, North America. Alfred A. Knopf Inc. Online Resources: Missouri Botanical Garden website (www.missouribotanicalgarden.org) Indiana Wildlife Federation website ( www.indianawildlife.org/wildlife/native-plants/