View Full Version : Plant ID help
your_comforting_company
03-07-2010, 08:26 PM
Seeing lots of little flowers in bloom makes me say "What is that" everywhere I go. Well this is one that I've been seeing all my life, but dunno what it is. Anyone care to take a guess?
flowers are purple and white with purple spots on lower lobes. 5 sepals, one united petal divided into 3 lobes. 4 fused stamens (2 long and 2 short), single pistil with two long styles. ovary is superior and produces a 4 chamber "nutlet". Leaves kidney shaped and coarsely toothed, opposite on a square stalk.
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg184/your_comforting_company/plants/DSCN2723.jpg
flowers strongly resemble lobelia or loosestrife.
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg184/your_comforting_company/plants/DSCN2719.jpg
It's a confusing one for me. I'm guessing gill-over-the-ground
Gill-Over-The-Ground perhaps. It's a bit hard to tell from the pictures.
Henbit for sure.
http://www.utextension.utk.edu/publications/wfiles/W165.pdf
your_comforting_company
03-07-2010, 09:12 PM
wow. definately henbit. How'd you find it so easy? I'm still learning this whole botany thing. Just got Elpel's book Botany in a Day. I did narrow it down to the mints but the flower was throwing me off big time.
Thanks Rick. You da man!
Henbit?.....never heard of it and it's not in my Peterson guides!
Thank you gentelmen!
your_comforting_company
03-07-2010, 11:39 PM
not in any of my guides either. I gotta get that audobon wildflower book.
Yeah I have a wild flower guide to and it not in it either!
You know guys, my yard is coverd with what I always thought was "gill" but never really checked it out,or ate it sooooo, I'll have to make a positive ID here in a couple weeks. Thanks again!
In other news....Ted was found belly up this week after ingesting hemlock. Family members said they thought it was odd when he poured a bottle of salad dressing on the grass.
your_comforting_company
05-25-2010, 07:00 AM
Got another one that's got me kind of stumped.
Alternate leaves are spatulate to round, long petioles, margins entire. leaves slightly wavy, or curled. slightly pubescent (fuzzy).
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg184/your_comforting_company/plants/DSCN4150.jpg
flowers pea-like, featuring the banner, and wings, but no visible keel. yellow with very light veins. flowers 3/4" or less wide.
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg184/your_comforting_company/plants/DSCN4148.jpg
Flowers in dense clusters, in a ball shape. clusters form in leaf axils.
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg184/your_comforting_company/plants/DSCN4149.jpg
Not sure exactly how to describe the root. Not many fibrous roots, and the tap appeared to be a running rhizome, although there were no more of this plant nearby, and it was the only one I observed on the whole plantation.
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg184/your_comforting_company/plants/DSCN4151.jpg
I'm pretty sure it's some sort of ground nut, or bean, or pea, but the lack of a keel and pinnate leaves is making this one a challenge to ID. It just doesn't seem to fit any tight pattern, and I can't find a similar plant in any of my books.
Any and all help is appreciated.
preachtheWORD
05-25-2010, 09:27 AM
Not sure I can help ID anything, but I will throw something out for you guys to ID.
http://i928.photobucket.com/albums/ad124/preachtheWORD/IMG_3238.jpg?t=1274793716
And another pic:
http://i928.photobucket.com/albums/ad124/preachtheWORD/IMG_3239.jpg?t=1274793781
The root is mostly bulb-like, and layered, but not rounded like an onion - more straight like a leek. The leaves and bulb did not have any smell at all, or very little (so that rules out ramps, which is what I thought it might be at first). It made me think of some kind of lilly or even a lady slipper. Looked more like a lady slipper than anything, but it seemed too big, and not in the right location. This was in a clearcut area on the side of a long slope. It was also more plentiful than lady slipper usually is around here. Ideas?
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