Wildflowers of West Virginia

Wildflowers of West Virginia
Title Wildflowers of West Virginia PDF eBook
Author Hassan Amjad
Publisher Lulu.com
Pages 89
Release 2006-03
Genre Gardening
ISBN 141166115X

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A unique collection of over 150 colored photographs. Perfect for the flower-lover's coffee table!

Spring Wild Flowers of West Virginia

Spring Wild Flowers of West Virginia
Title Spring Wild Flowers of West Virginia PDF eBook
Author Earl Lemley Core
Publisher
Pages 124
Release 1981
Genre Nature
ISBN

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West Virginia Spring Wildflowers

West Virginia Spring Wildflowers
Title West Virginia Spring Wildflowers PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 10
Release
Genre Wild flowers
ISBN

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Wildflowers and Trees of West Virginia

Wildflowers and Trees of West Virginia
Title Wildflowers and Trees of West Virginia PDF eBook
Author Christopher M. Gatens
Publisher
Pages 187
Release 2009
Genre Plants
ISBN 9781891852633

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West Virginia Trees and Wildflowers

West Virginia Trees and Wildflowers
Title West Virginia Trees and Wildflowers PDF eBook
Author James Kavanagh
Publisher Pocket Naturalist Guide
Pages 0
Release 2009-03
Genre Nature
ISBN 9781583554548

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West Virginia's 48 state parks, forests, wildlife management areas and rail trails are home to an array of thousands of plants, including the gorgeous state flower - the Rhododendron. This beautifully illustrated guide highlights over 140 familiar and unique species of trees, shrubs and wildflowers and also includes an ecoregion map featuring prominent botanical sanctuaries. Laminated for durability, this lightweight, pocket-sized folding guide is an excellent source of portable information and ideal for field use by visitors and residents alike. Made in the USA.

Common Summer Wildflowers of West Virginia

Common Summer Wildflowers of West Virginia
Title Common Summer Wildflowers of West Virginia PDF eBook
Author Norma Jean Venable
Publisher
Pages 44
Release 1996*
Genre Wild flowers
ISBN

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Flora of West Virginia

Flora of West Virginia
Title Flora of West Virginia PDF eBook
Author Perry Daniel Strausbaugh
Publisher Seneca Press
Pages 1128
Release 1978
Genre Science
ISBN

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Green photosynthetic plants abound in West Virginia. These green ecological producers capture sunlight energy and convert it into chemical energy in the form of sugars. A sugar maple tree, for example, produces tremendous amounts of sap, which it stores in its roots, and uses it to produce green leaves, new twigs, fresh bark and roots. Because green plants produce more food than they themselves can utilize, consumers such as aphids, cardinals, pipevine swallowtail caterpillars, white tailed deer, and rabbits may eat the plants leaves to gain energy themselves. In a complex array of food chains and food webs, plants capture sunlight energy, animals eat them, other animals eat those animals, and the web of life in the ecosystems of West Virginia is supported. Plus, rooted plants affect their environment by holding soil from the eroding effects of rainfall. They provide shelter and cover and building materials for animals. Trees hold tremendous amounts of nutrients within their trunks, branches and twigs. As a result, those soil nutrients are not lost down-stream when spring rains come to the forest. Trees provide various degrees of shade, which in turn provides a variety of micro-habitats within the forest, permitting a great variety of plant species to thrive in dry, wet, or moderately moist situations. Of course, wild plants provide wood, food, and even medicines to the knowing harvester. The plants of West Virginia, then, are critical to our own survival as well as the survival of all the ecosystems of our state. We need to conserve not only the ecological communities these plants live within, but the species of plants themselves. West Virginians can boast of a diversity of plant species. Vascular plants (usually larger plants: ferns, trees, wildflowers, vines, with sophisticated veins for transporting water, nutrients, and sugars) constitute most of the flora, but there are also numerous species of usually smaller, non-vascular plants (mosses, hornworts, liverworts, with less sophisticated means of moving materials throughout their bodies). There have been found in West Virginia to date 2474 vascular taxa, including subspecies and varieties. There are 2344 species of vascular plants recognized in our state, in 779 genera and 160 families. Table 1 highlights those families with the most number of genera or species in them. Three fourths of the vascular flora of West Virginia is native to the state, while the remainder is adventive, introduced, or exotic (Figure 2). While the non-vascular plant data is less complete than the vascular data, to date we have documented 375 species of mosses, liverworts and hornworts in our state. Natural Heritage Programs are concerned about the diversity of life on our planet, documenting it, cataloging it, organizing data about it, all to the end of helping land use managers conserve it. We are concerned about biological diversity, or biodiversity. Biodiversity has been defined in a variety of ways, but one of the simplest definitions may be the best: "The variety of life in an area, including the variety of genes, species, plant and animal communities, ecosystems, and the interactions of these elements." (USDA, Forest Service, Fisheries, Wildlife and Range, Southern Region). Another good definition is this: "At the simplest level, biodiversity is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all of the interactions between them. It is the set of living organisms that make up the fabric of the planet Earth and allow it to function as it does, by capturing energy from the sun and using it to drive all of life's processes ... making possible the sustainability of our planet" (Peter H. Raven, Missouri Botanical Garden)