128 64 21MB
English Pages 280 Year 1981
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
OpenSIUC Illustrated Flora of Illinois
Southern Illinois University Press
3-1981
Flowering Plants: Magnolias to Pitcher Plants Robert H. Mohlenbrock Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/siupress_flora_of_illinois Part of the Botany Commons Recommended Citation Mohlenbrock, Robert H., "Flowering Plants: Magnolias to Pitcher Plants" (1981). Illustrated Flora of Illinois. 11. http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/siupress_flora_of_illinois/11
This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Southern Illinois University Press at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Illustrated Flora of Illinois by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected].
The nomenclature for the species and lesser taxa in this volume has been chosen after lengthy study of recent floras and monographs. Synonyms, with complete author citation, which have applied to species in the northeastern United States, are given under each species. Each description, while not necessarily intended to be complete, covers the more important features of the species. As in previous volumes in this series, the common name, or names, is the one used locally in Illinois. The habitat designation is not always the habitat throughout the range of the species but only in Illinois. Ranges have been compiled from various sources, including herbarium material and field studies. Dot maps showing county distribution for each taxon are provided. Each dot represents a voucher specimen deposited in some herbarium. Each species is illustrated, depicting the habitat and distinguishing features. Because of the scientific exactitude and practical usefulness of this distinguished series, the eighth volume devoted to flowering plants— ninth volume in the series—will find a welcome place in reference collections and in the field. Robert H. Mohlenbrock, one of the most prolific writers of contemporary plant scientists, is professor of botany at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, and general editor of The Illustrated Flora of Illinois series. Among his many publications are 25 books, of which Flowering Plants: Hollies to Loasas (1978) was the first volume to be devoted to the dicots in this series, and over 200 articles in technical journals and popular magazines. He is coauthor with Douglas M. Ladd of Distribution of Illinois Vascular Plants and with John W. Voight of A Flora of Southern Illinois and Plant Communities of Southern Illinois.
Magnolias to Pitcher Plants, the eighth volume devoted to flowering plants in The Illustrated Flora of Illinois series, is the third of several volumes treating dicotyledons.
Edited by ROBERT H. MOHLENBROCK ADVISORY BOARD Constantine J. Alexopoulos, University of Texas Gerald W. Prescott, University of Montana Aaron J. Sharp, University of Tennessee Robert F. Thorne, Rancho Santa Ana Botanical Gardens Rolla M. Tryon, Jr., The Gray Herbarium This first attempt by any botanists in the country to produce a work which covers the whole range of plant groups will give keys, descriptions, distribution maps, comments, and illustrations of every kind of plant known to occur in this state. While various states have floras for certain groups of plants (ferns, or flowering plants, or mosses, etc.), they generally are not illustrated, or lack descriptions, or are incomplete in some other way. “These books are excellent and should be invaluable to teachers and serious students of botany.” —The Explorer
1915 University Press Drive Mail Code 6806 Carbondale, IL 62901 www.siu.edu/~siupress
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 0-8093-0920-3 ISBN 978-0-8093-0920-7
,!7IA8A9-dajcah!
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Southern Illinois University Press
Magnolias to Pitcher.indd 1
Dicotyledons are those flowering plants that upon germination generally produce a pair of “seed leaves” called cotyledons. Dicots in Illinois far outnumber the monocots, or single cotyledonous plants. Dicots include such well-known plants as roses, peas, mustards, mints, nightshades, milkweeds, and asters. The two previous volumes featuring dicots are Flowering Plants: Hollies to Loasas (1978) and Flowering Plants: Willows to Mustards (1980). In this volume of the Illustrated Flora, Robert H. Mohlenbrock includes four orders and fifteen families of plants. Because such a small number of families of dicots is found in this work, no overall key to the dicot families is included. For keys to all families of vascular plants in Illinois, Mohlenbrock’s companion volume, Vascular Flora of Illinois (2002) is recommended. For The Illustrated Flora of Illinois series, Mohlenbrock has chosen to follow the classification system proposed in synoptical form in 1968 by Robert Thorne, rejecting those of Linnaeus (1753), Cronquist (1968), and Hutchinson (1973). In this volume, he has departed from the Thorne system by recognizing the Nymphaeaceae, Nelumbonaceae, and Cabombaceae as distinct families rather than subfamilies of the Nymphaeaceae. The orders included in this work are the Annonales, Berberidales, Nymphaeales, and Sarraceniales. The fifteen families that comprise them are generally conceded by most botanists to be among the most primitive living plants in the world today. These orders can be characterized generally as woody in the Annonales (except for the Saururaceae and some Aristolochiaceae), herbaceous in the Berberidales (except for the Menispermaceae and some Berberidaceae), aquatic in the Nymphaeales, and insectivorous in the Sarraceniales.
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS
10/30/07 2:54:23 PM