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lsu-sc-msw_csv.csv
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PID Common Name :: title Scientific Name (Species) :: subTitle Collector :: namePart Artist :: namePart dateCreated @keyDate="yes" @point="start" publisher dateCaptured dateCreated @point="end" Place Collected :: geographic Time Period :: temporal Description Family Name (Latin) Family Name (English) Date(s) Collected typeOfResource note @type="medium" internetMediaType extent languageTerm @type="code" Source Relation Digital Collection :: title OCLC Member Symbol Physical Location Institution Web Site subLocation Contact Information Rights Cite As Object File Name Migrated From recordOrigin recordCreationDate recordChangeDate fileSize digitizedBy imageManipulation colorMode cataloger hardwareSoftware alias pointer imageBitDepth imageResolution note @type="content"
lsu-sc-msw:100 Louisiana Blue-Star Amsonia ludoviciana Vail Lemke, David Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 Natchitoches Parish 1976-1989 "This attractive member of the mostly tropical dogbane family has been reported in Louisiana and Mississippi and was thought for a time to be extinct in the wild. Recent interest in rare plants has shown that the Louisianan blue-star still grows in a few places in the central part of Louisiana. A population of Amsonia discovered in Georgia about a year ago may indeed be this species. The larger flowers and the downy, soft undersides of the leaves distinguish this species from the more common Amsonia tabernaemontana. The Louisiana blue-star reminds us of how much there is to be learned about many of our native species." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.16 APOCYNACEAE Dogbane Family April 4, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000007 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/41 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 41 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:101 Louisiana Iris Hybrids Iris spp., Louisiana hybrids Givens, Florence M.||Shaffer, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Terrebonne Parish 1976-1989 "Hybrids between different species of Iris may be formed under appropriate natural conditions. In parts of southern Louisiana, red iris and some of the blue flowering species, I. brevicaulis and I. giganticaerulea, have crossed with one another in various combinations. So diverse was the array of color variations from these natural crosses in southern Louisiana that early in this century [20th Century], J.K. Small, preeminent specialist on the southeastern flora, and E.J. Alexander, a collaborator, recognized more than eighty species of Iris from this state alone. Later investigators subsequently demonstrated that this variation was due to interspecific hybridization rather than specific diversity. Contemporary specialists are continuing to unravel the details and significance of such hybridizations by doing controlled ecological experiments and by using comparative studies of nucleic acids. Louisiana iris hybrids are popular garden ornamentals, and new cultivated varieties are continually being developed by iris enthusiasts."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 99 IRIDACEAE Iris Family April, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000101 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/117 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 117 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:102 Lousewort or Wood Betony Pedicularis canadensis L. Phillips, Eloyce Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Winn Parish 1976-1989 "Lousewort, a herbaceous perennial, often forms dense colonies on moist, wooded hillsides or in clearings throughout much of the eastern United States. Like many other members of the figwort family, its roots parasitize other species of plants. Its woolly stems grow to about fifteen inches tall and support many leaves whose finely divided blades have a fernlike appearance. A congested raceme of showy yellow flowers about eight inches long terminates the stem. Individually, the flowers consist of a green, tubelike calyx and a conspicuously bilabiate corolla whose strongly incurved upper lip has a hooded appearance. Within the corolla are four stamens. Pedicularis, a genus of about five hundred species of north temperate distribution, is named for a louse. Reportedly, an early European belief held that cattle grazing this kind of plant became infested with lice."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 203 SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family April 9, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000146 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/150 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 150 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:103 Lundell's Locoweed Astragalus soxmaniorum Lundell Givens, Florence M.||MacRoberts, D.T.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-27 1989 Caddo Parish 1976-1989 "Lundell's locoweed is a low perennial with many branches bearing featherlike leaves and terminal, compact racemes of pale lemon-yellow flowers and, later, beanlike fruit. This rare species of locoweed is restricted to deep, sandy soils in western Louisiana and eastern Texas. Because of its rareness, it had never been given a common name until the author provided it with one. Various members of the genus are called locoweed because they absorb selenium from the soil and consequently cause nervous disorders in livestock that graze on them. Astragalus, a large genus of about fifteen hundred species, grows mostly in arid regions. Because only six species of Astragalus are known in Louisiana, they are local curiosities." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.57 FABACEAE Legume Family April 4, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000020 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/20 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 20 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:104 Lyre-Leaved Sage Salvia lyrata L. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Roadside ditches, pastures, and lawns may be colored a misty blue in the early springtime by large colonies of lyre-leaved sage. Basal rosettes of pinnately round-lobed leaves, the veins and lower surfaces often shaded purple, characterize the foliage. One to several four-angled, flowering stalks up to eighteen inches tall may develop from a single rosette. Its upper half bears a number of whorls of flowers, each with a two-lipped calyx that is typical for the genus Salvia. Prominent features of the pale blue to violet corollas include a long, slender tube that, like those of most members of the mint family, forms a mouth-shaped opening; both lips have two or three smaller lobes. Within the corolla are two stamens and a four-lobed ovary. Lyre-leaved sage is widely distributed in the eastern United States. Although not well represented in the Louisiana flora, Salvia, with about seven hundred species, is a diverse group, especially in South America. Several species are grown as ornamentals, and some are used as herbal seasonings."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 101 LAMIACEAE Mint Family March 22, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000182 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/190 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 190 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:105 Magnolia Macrophylla Big Leaf Magnolia Pencil SketchPSd 1976 1989 still image http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/278 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2008-02-07 2017-02-02 MSW 278
lsu-sc-msw:106 Mayapple Podophyllum peltatum L. Barton, Paula (flowers)||Odenwald, Neil (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "The gregarious colonies of mayapple commonly found on rich, moist woodlands are well known to wildflower enthusiasts. These unusual plants spread by means of creeping rhizomes. Each upright stem may grow to a foot or more tall and usually bears two large, peltate, orbicular, three- to nine- parted leaves. A single flower arises from between the petioles of the two leaves. Its fugacious perianth consists of six sepals and six to nine large, showy petals that surround the numerous yellow stamens. The fragrant flower gives way to an ovoid, many-seeded berry that is reported to be edible, though its seeds and its vegetative parts contain poisonous substances. Mayapple appears early in the spring and flowers and fruits in a short period. It is easy to cultivate if provided with a moist, shady environment. Podophyllum, a genus of nearly a dozen species, is mostly Asian; only this one grows in the United States. Although generally placed in the barberry family, some specialists segregate it into the Podophyllaceae."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 34 BERBERIDACEAE Barberry Family July 16, 1978 (flowers and fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000158 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/162 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 162 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date for flowers as appears on the drawing is April 5, 1978.
lsu-sc-msw:107 Maypop or Passion Flower Passiflora incarnata L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Perhaps known by every child, the maypop commonly occurs in vacant lots and along the margins of woods, streams, and roadsides throughout much of the South. Leaves of this tendril-bearing vine are alternate and palmately three-parted. Its large, spectacular flowers, with five showy, bluish sepals and five similar petals, are about two inches in diameter. A number of unusual features--such as the corona, a crown of many threadlike filaments, and a stalk prominently displaying the stamens and pistil above the corona--are seen in maypop flowers. Their many-seeded fruits are soft and yellow when mature. Surrounding the seeds is a succulent, gelatinous substance that can be eaten directly or used to make a refreshing drink with a flavor similar to the commercially sold passion punch. Maypop may be cultivated for its fruits, attractive foliage, and sweet-smelling flowers. It is adaptable to a variety of soil conditions but must receive full sunlight in order to flower abundantly. Propagation may be accomplished by seeds, sucker shoots, and stem cuttings. Several other species of Passiflora have colorful and unusual flowers but generally are not hardy in subtropical or temperate areas."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 164 PASSIFLORACEAE Passion Flower Family August 21, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000144 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/148 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 148 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date of fruit as appears on the drawing is September 5, 1980.
lsu-sc-msw:108 Meadow Lily Trifurcia lahue (Mol.) Goldbl. ssp. Caerulea (Herb.) Goldbl. [Alophia drummondii (Graham) R.C. Foster, misapplied] Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish||East Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "The correct scientific name for meadow lily has been the source of considerable confusion. Generally, this plant has been called Alophia drummondii, Herbertia drummondii, or H. caerulea and has only recently been called Trifurcia. Its common name too is somewhat misleading, because this plant is a member of the iris family. This species, known from the coastal and prairie regions of eastern Texas and Louisiana, has a rather restricted distribution. It often grows in lawns, where it stature is much shorter than in areas not subject to mowing. Except when in flower, meadow lily is inconspicuous. About a half-dozen, narrowly linear leaves that grow to about eighteen inches long and a nearly leafless stem arise from a subglobose bulb buried deep in the ground. Each stem generally bears two delicate, short-lived, intricately colored flowers two or more inches in diameter. The outer three perianth parts are large, rather wedge-shaped, and typically a pale to dark lavender with a violet halo outlining the white, violet-spotted base. Its inner three perianth parts are much smaller and are a deep violet, sometimes with white spots near the base. The three narrow anthers lie against the style branches."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.100 IRIDACEAE Iris Family April 12, 1982; April 10, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000208 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/216 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 216 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:109 Meadow Pink Sabatia campestris Nutt. Barton, Paula||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Meadow pink (left) is an erect annual with strongly four-angled stems. It grows in seasonally wet pine lands, prairies, marshes, and meadows. Its handsome five-petaled, star-shaped flowers, except for being larger with a more conspicuous, starlike, yellow eye highlighted with white markings and a more strongly ribbed calyx, are similar to those of rose gentian. In addition, meadow pink has alternate inflorescence branches, i.e., there is only one for each stem node. Exhibiting a wide range of coloration, corollas of this plant can be nearly white to rose. Meadow pink is widely distributed in Louisiana and may form large, spectacular colonies in early spring. It is easy to grow from seeds, which should be sown in early fall."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 94 GENTIANACEAE Gentian Family June 13, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000180 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/186 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 186 8-bit 600 dpi Sabatia angularis (Rose Gentian) on the right, Sabatia campestris (Meadow Pink) on the left, and Sabatia gentianoides (Pinelands Pink) in the center appear on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:10 Beach Evening Primrose Oenothera drummondii Hook. Hawkins, Julia||Hawkins, Murray Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Cameron Parish 1976-1989 "Beach evening primrose is native to the sandy beaches and cheniers from Cameron Parish, Louisiana, to Vera Cruz, Mexico. The generic name Oenothera was first used by the ancient Greeks, while the epithet for this species commemorates Thomas Drummond, an early botanical explorer of the western Gulf of Mexico region. Beach evening primrose may grow to about three feet in height from a woody, many stemmed base. Numerous hairs covering the stems and the simple, alternate leaves impart a silvery green color to the shoots. Like most evening primroses, the plant's large, bright yellow flowers are composed of four petals and eight stamens attached to the rim of a floral tube above the ovary. The flowers open near sunset and close during the middle of the following day. As the corollas age, they fade to a reddish color. Because this species is sometimes grown as an ornamental, its natural geographic range has been enlarged considerably."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 148 ONAGRACEAE Evening Primrose Family April 18, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000136 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/133 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 133 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:110 Mountain Laurel Kalmia latifolia L. Barton, Betty||Barton, Paula Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Mountain laurel is noted for its handsome foliage and flowers. Its simple, shiny leaves are evergreen and leathery. Large, rounded clusters of flowers appear at the ends of the many branches in late spring. Each flower is about an inch in diameter and displays exquisite symmetrical beauty. The sepals and petals number five each, and the latter form a saucer-shaped corolla that ranges in color from nearly white to dark pink. The ten stamens of each flower are unusual because their anthers are held in small pouches in the corolla. This bizarre structure represents a mechanism to aid cross-pollination. An insect landing on a flower causes the anthers to release and spring forward, dusting it with pollen that may then be transferred to other flowers on other plants. Mountain laurel grows naturally from Louisiana to Florida and northward to Ohio and New York. In Louisiana, this species is quite rare, growing only on a few sites in Washington Parish. In the southern parts of its range, mountain laurel may attain thirty feet in height, but northward the shrubs are much smaller. Kalmia, a genus of about six species, is restricted to North America. Other widely known plants of the heath family include azaleas, rhododendrons, blueberries, and cranberries."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 68 ERICACEAE Heath Family April 22, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000103 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/119 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-02 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 119 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:111 Narrow-Leaved Skullcap Scutellaria integrifolia L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 Livingston Parish 1976-1989 "Narrow-leaved skullcap grows in bogs, open, wet woodlands, and roadsides throughout most of the southeastern United States. This perennial may reach two feet in height. It possesses opposite leaves and four-angled stems characteristic of the mint family. The aerial parts of the plant are covered with large numbers of short, soft hairs. Flowers of this species are arranged in terminal racemes. Of special interest is the inverted, skullcap-shaped appendage borne on the calyx of species in this genus. Corollas of the narrow-leaved skullcap are about one inch long and are typically bright blue. Its four stamens are located under the hooded lobes of the upper corolla lip. Scutellaria is a widely distributed genus of about three hundred species with nearly a dozen recorded for Louisiana. The very large, cosmopolitan mint family is important for the large number of herbs cultivated for ornamental or culinary uses. Among the most familiar mints are basil, marjoram, oregano, peppermint, sage, spearmint, and thyme."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 102 LAMIACEAE Mint Family May 13, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000189 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/197 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 18.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 197 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:112 Narrow-Leaved White Violet Viola lanceolata L. ssp. Vittata (Greene) Russell Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "The narrow-leaved white violet (left) is one of the two white-flowered species that commonly grows in Louisiana. It is a so-called stemless type, which means it has short, underground stems. Its leaves form a rosette, and the first ones to appear in the spring are much shorter and wider than the narrowly lanceolate ones that appear later. The plant's solitary, nodding buds are supported on long stalks. Upon opening, the flowers, like those of other violets, are bilaterally symmetrical with five sepals and petals. The intricate veins on the lower half of the spurred petal are purple, while the upper half of this petal and the other four petals are white, sometimes with faintly colored veins. Narrow-leaved white violet is distributed throughout eastern North America. The species usually grows in moist, sunny locations in wet pine savannas and along ditches and woodland borders. Although the violet family in North America essentially consists of the genus Viola, it contains several species of tropical shrubs belonging to several different genera."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 208 VIOLACEAE Violet Family April 26, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000217 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/228 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 228 8-bit 600 dpi Viola lanceolata ssp. Vittata (Narrow-Leaved White Violet) on left and viola primulifolia (White Violet) on right. Common name as appears on drawing is Lance-Leaved Violet.
lsu-sc-msw:113 Nodding Indigo Baptisia leaucophaea Nutt. Urbatsch, Lowell E. (flowers)||Givens, Florence M. (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Tangipahoa Parish (flowers and fruit) 1976-1989 "The attractive, creamy yellow flower clusters of nodding indigo arise from the base of the crown of this rounded, shrubby plant and represent a feature unique among the species of Baptisia. Nodding indigo, like other Baptisia, is a stout, herbaceous perennial with a single stem arising at ground level and branching above, trifoliate leaves, and papilionaceous flowers. Its leaves are green, and its flowers are yellow and are arranged differently from the white indigo's. Nodding indigo grows on dry, upland, sandy soils along the edges of woods, and it flowers in the late springtime in the southern United States." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.58 FABACEAE Legume Family April 16, 1981 (flowers); May 8, 1981 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000022 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/24 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 24 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:114 Nodding-Nixie Apteria aphylla (Nutt.) Barnh. Martin, Ben Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "Uncommon and perhaps often overlooked, this curious, delicate little annual of the rich, moist woodlands and bogs of the Gulf Coastal Plain is a saprophyte. It derives its nutrition from decaying vegetation, much as do certain fungi. Threadlike stems and small, scaly leaves lack the green color created by the presence of chlorophyll (found in plants that make their own food photosynthetically) and instead may be pigmented with shades of lavender to purple. The relatively large, white to sometimes purple, bell-shaped flowers, which appear in autumn, give way to capsules containing numerous tiny seeds." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.48 BURMANNIACEAE Burmannia Family September 1, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000010 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/44 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 44 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:115 Oak-Leaved Hydrangea Hydrangea quercifolia Bartr. Hawkins, Murray||Hawkins, Julia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Oak-leaved hydrangea, a many-branched shrub that grows to about fifteen feet in height, is characterized by its pyramidal-shaped flower clusters. Conspicuous on the inflorescence are the sterile flowers, which have three to four showy, petal-like sepals. These flowers are white during the spring when the plant flowers bloom, but persist and turn reddish in summer, then brown in the fall. The fertile pollen- and seed-producing flowers are small and partially concealed by the much larger sterile ones. The common name and the specific epithet for this species refer to the large, deeply four- or five-lobed leaves, which are shaped much like oak leaves. Its leaves are deciduous and are densely covered beneath with silvery hairs. The attractive, reddish brown bark of this species is smooth when young but is shed in papery, irregularly shaped plates on older stems. Oak-leaved hydrangea grows as an understory shrub in moist, sandy soils along stream banks and on slopes of ravines in deciduous woods of the southeastern United States. This species is often cultivated for its ornamental qualities."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 200 SAXIFRAGACEAE Saxifrage Family May, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000087 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/100 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 100 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:116 Obedient Plant Physostegia angustifolia Fern. [Physostegia virginiana (L.) Benth.] Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Livingston Parish 1976-1989 "Late springtime is when obedient plant is seen in great abundance in wet roadside ditches and moist swales, primarily in extreme southeastern Louisiana. Its terminal racemes of large, pale lavender flowers are supported by stiff, upright stems that may grow to about three feet in height. Within their two-lipped corollas, and adding to their beauty, are intricate patterns of darker purple dots and lines that presumably serve as nectar guides for pollinating insects. Not only are the flowers attractive, they are also obedient, because when moved from side to side, they will remain where they have been positioned. Physostegia angustifolia has been recorded in other parts of Louisiana and from Texas to Alabama northward to Missouri. The genus, readily placed in the mint family because of its square stems, opposite leaves, and certain floral features, embraces approximately a dozen species. Although Physostegia is widely distributed in North America, the greatest concentration of its different species can be found in western Louisiana and eastern Texas. At the time this drawing was executed and prior to it, our plants were thought to be P. virginiana, but more recent investigations have revealed this to be a more northern species. P. virginiana is the correct name for the common species in Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 90 LAMIACEAE Mint Family May 23, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000152 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/156 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 156 8-bit 600 dpi name as appears on the drawing is Physostegia virginiana.
lsu-sc-msw:117 Orange Candy Root Polygala lutea L. Givens, Florence M.||Barker, Nancy Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Species of Polygala are often called candy root because bruised roots have the very pleasing smell of wintergreen. Red-hot poker, a name sometimes given to orange candy root, aptly describes the color of the dense, terminal flower clusters. Although the specific epithet lutea, which means "yellow," seems inappropriate, the corollas fade from orange to a yellow or greenish yellow when they dry. Orange candy root (right) normally develops a solitary stem that may form a few to several branches each ending with a cluster of flowers. All five of the sepals are bright orange, and the inner two are large and petal-like. The three petals are fused along nearly their total length and terminate in a four-lobed crest. Orange candy root is generally associated with sandy soils in wet to moist pine savannas. Polygala, a genus with more than five hundred species, has a nearly cosmopolitan distribution."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 190 POLYGALACEAE Milkwort Family April 1, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000161 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/249 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 249 8-bit 600 dpi Polygala nana (left) and Polygala lutea (right) both appear in this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:118 Pale Coneflower Echinacea pallida Nutt. Pruski, John||Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Allen Parish 1976-1989 "Characteristic of the prairies and open, wooded hillsides of the central United States, the pale coneflower grows in western Louisiana. Its rather rough stems may reach three feet in height. The greatest concentration of leaves is at each stem's base and the leaves become progressively smaller and fewer along the stem. The central, cone-shaped disk of each head consists of many tiny, dark-lobed disk flowers. Associated with each flower of the disk are spiny tipped bracts, alluded to by the genus name Echinacea. Surrounding the disk and giving color and elegance to the flower cluster are several evenly spaced ray flowers with long, narrow, pale purple, drooping petals. Pale coneflower and some of the other nine species in this genus are often planted as garden flowers. Some investigators give species recognition (based largely on features of the chromosomes) to populations from Louisiana and adjacent states as E. sanguinea Nutt."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 10 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family May 18, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000060 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/73 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 73 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:119 Partridge Berry Mitchella repens L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Natchitoches Parish 1976-1989 "The prostrate, creeping stems of partridge berry form small colonies, often along stream banks and low ridges in rich, deciduous woods throughout much of Louisiana. Even without flowers, this species is readily recognizable by its paired, ovately shaped, and often variegated leaves. In the springtime, pairs of sweetly scented flowers with white, trumpet-shaped corollas develop from the branch tips. Typically, the flowers are four-merous, i.e., there are four corolla lobes, stamens, and style branches. Two flower forms occur within the species; in one, both the stamens and the styles are exerted from the corolla, and in the other, the stamens are included within the corolla. Presumably, such structural variations promote cross-pollination. Ovaries of the paired flowers are fused to one another and jointly form a bright red, berrylike fruit with two "eyes," which are formed by the remnants of the calyces from the paired flowers. The fruits are reportedly edible but seem rather flavorless."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 198 RUBIACEAE Madder or Coffee Family May 6, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000128 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/137 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 137 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date of some fruit as appears on drawing is May 15, 1978.
lsu-sc-msw:11 Beard-Tongue Penstemon tenuis Small Vincent, Karl||Wussow, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Acadia Parish 1976-1989 "Beard-tongue, a name in general use for this and other species of the genus, refers to the toothbrush-shaped, sterile stamen or staminode found within the corolla. Among the five species of Penstemon known to grow naturally in Louisiana, P. tenuis is one that is commonly encountered. Its natural habitat includes the edges of bottomland forests, low prairies, and wet, disturbed areas. It is one of our four species with essentially white corollas often tinged with blue or purple. In habit, P. tenuis is similar to the red penstemon, and though much less colorful, it is nevertheless attractive, especially when growing in mass. Distinguishing it from the other native species depends on recognizing a number of rather trivial features such as the serration along the leaf margins and the size, shape, and pubescence of the corolla and the staminode. Although not readily available for cultivation, native beard-tongues offer considerable potential as garden ornamentals, and they may become as popular here as they are in other parts of the country."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 203 SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family May 7, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000149 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/153 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 153 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:120 Paw Paw Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Paw paw is a large shrub to small tree that often grows in clumps in rich woods and along stream banks in the eastern United States. Its flower and leaf buds, young twigs, and leaves are covered with rusty hairs. The large leaves are obovate and, when crushed, have an odor like that of bell peppers. The unusual flowers are characterized by six greenish petals that become mauve at maturity. The berrylike fruit is flavorful. Paw paws, if grown in the landscape, will flower and fruit more heavily in a sunny location. Several tropical members of this plant family, such as the annona, bear edible fruit of considerable importance." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.1 ANNONACEAE Custard-Apple Family March 22, 1977 (flowers); May 6, 1977 (leaves and fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000017 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/17 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne Capturing Software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 17 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:121 Paw Paw Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal Thomas, R. Dale Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 Ouachita Parish||Moorehouse Parish (flowers) 1976-1989 "Paw paw is a large shrub to small tree that often grows in clumps in rich woods and along stream banks in the eastern United States. Its flower and leaf buds, young twigs, and leaves are covered with rusty hairs. The large leaves are obovate and, when crushed, have an odor like that of bell peppers. The unusual flowers are characterized by six greenish petals that become mauve at maturity. The berrylike fruit is flavorful. Paw paws, if grown in the landscape, will flower and fruit more heavily in a sunny location. Several tropical members of this plant family, such as the annona, bear edible fruit of considerable importance." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.1 ANNONACEAE Custard-Apple Family March 5, 1984 (flowers); July 23, 1984 (leaves and fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000227 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/251 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 251 8-bit 600 dpi This drawing does not appear in Flora of Louisiana.
lsu-sc-msw:122 Persimmon Diospyros virginiana L. Pope, Tom Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Notorious for its astringent fruits, persimmon is a common, well-known tree found in various predominantly upland habitats. Although the orange, soft-textured, fully ripened fruits are flavorful, they provide little substance because of their numerous, large seeds. Nevertheless, persimmons may be an important wildlife food. The trees are functionally dioecious-that is, individuals produce either fruit or pollen-and both types must be growing near one another for successful fruit production. Pollen- and fruit-producing flowers are superficially similar in size and have greenish yellow, four- to five-lobed, bell-shaped corollas. Other characteristics that serve to identify the persimmon include its dark, checkered trunks and its simple, alternate, smooth-margined leaves borne on short stalks and usually covered on the undersides with small, soft hairs."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 54 EBENACEAE Ebony Family April 28, 1982 (male flowers); May 2, 1982 (female flowers); October 5, 1981 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000058 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/71 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 71 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:123 Phacelia Phacelia strictiflora (Engelm. & Gray) Gray Givens, Florence M.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Winn Parish 1976-1989 "Phacelia strictiflora ranges from Alabama westward to Oklahoma and Texas. It is known to grow in only a few localities in central and western Louisiana where it is found in deep, sandy soils. When fully developed, phacelia has many branches arising from its base. Along each one are the rather evenly spaced and progressively smaller, deeply lobed leaves. Each branch is tipped with a coiled cluster of flower buds that progressively unfolds as the flowers open. Generally, four or more flowers open at one time; their saucer-shaped, lavender to purplish corollas highlight the darker purple anthers. Like most members of the waterleaf family, phacelia has two-cleft styles. This particular species lacks a trivial name, though others have fanciful appellations like Miami Mist and California Bluebells. Phacelia, a genus of approximately two hundred species, is most diverse in the western United States, with only a half dozen or so species in the East. Some phacelias, though not the present species, cause contact dermatitis. Several of the western species are grown from readily available seed for their showy flowers."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 97 HYDROPHYLLACEAE Waterleaf Family April 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000150 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/154 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 154 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:124 Pickerel Weed Pontederia cordata L. Barton, Paula Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 Ascension Parish 1976-1989 "Pickerel weed is common along ditches and streams and in the shallow water of ponds and lakes throughout much of eastern North America. Rooting in the mud, this aquatic plant produces upright stems as tall as three feet. Arising from near the plant's base are several erect, long-petiolate leaves with cordate to lanceolate blades. Just below the base of the inflorescence is a heart-shaped, leaflike bract. Elongated spikes of bilaterally symmetrical flowers appear in late spring, and flowering may continue throughout the summer. The sepals and petals are showy and bluish violet, and the upper segment bears a yellow mark. Six stamens of two lengths are attached within the perianth, and a single-seeded fruit matures from the ovary. A small solitary bee, Dufourea, appears to depend completely on a pickerel weed for its livelihood. Pickerel weed is attractive and worthy of planting in a garden pond, especially one in a natural setting. It is related to water hyacinth, the introduced, attractive, but troublesome weed of waterways in the southern United States."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 192 PONTEDERIACEAE Pickerel Weed Family June 2, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000163 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/167 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 167 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:125 Pine Lily or Leopard Lily Lilium catesbaei Walt. Givens, Florence M.||Rebertus, Alan Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "The epithet commemorates Mark Catesby, who wrote and illustrated The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, published between 1731 and 1743. He illustrated the pine lily in Volume Two, plate fifty-eight, in 1736. Pine lily grows in wet pine savannas of the coastal plain from Louisiana to Virginia. Although this species had been documented for this state by collections in the 1930s, it had not been observed in the wild for some time. Only through diligent searches by several individuals were extant populations rediscovered. Pine lily grows to a height of about two feet. Unlike the Carolina lily, pine lily has alternate leaves, and each of its stems forms a bright rusty red to orange with yellowish bases. The six large, rust-colored anthers are supported in the central part of the flower by long filaments. As is characteristic of most lilies, this plant has a small, scaly bulb below the ground. If grown in suitable habitat, this species would be an attractive and unusual garden plant. Successful propagation may be obtained from seeds and daughter bulbs."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 112 LILIACEAE Lily Family September 13, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000108 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/240 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 240 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Catesby's Lily.
lsu-sc-msw:126 Pine Lily or Leopard Lily Lilium catesbaei Walt. Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Lemke, David Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 Pearl River County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "The epithet commemorates Mark Catesby, who wrote and illustrated The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, published between 1731 and 1743. He illustrated the pine lily in Volume Two, plate fifty-eight, in 1736. Pine lily grows in wet pine savannas of the coastal plain from Louisiana to Virginia. Although this species had been documented for this state by collections in the 1930s, it had not been observed in the wild for some time. Only through diligent searches by several individuals were extant populations rediscovered. Pine lily grows to a height of about two feet. Unlike the Carolina lily, pine lily has alternate leaves, and each of its stems forms a bright rusty red to orange with yellowish bases. The six large, rust-colored anthers are supported in the central part of the flower by long filaments. As is characteristic of most lilies, this plant has a small, scaly bulb below the ground. If grown in suitable habitat, this species would be an attractive and unusual garden plant. Successful propagation may be obtained from seeds and daughter bulbs."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 112 LILIACEAE Lily Family September 11, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000107 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/239 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 239 8-bit 600 dpi This drawing does not appear in the Flora of Louisiana.
lsu-sc-msw:127 Pinelands Pink Sabatia gentianoides Ell. Barton, Paula Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Pinelands pink (center) is an annual, upright plant with several pairs of relatively long, narrow leaves that are quite different from the broader ones that make up the basal rosette. Sitting atop its sparsely branched stem are several large, closely clustered, showy flowers, each subtended by a pair of long, leafy bracts. Sabatia gentianoides is one of the few species in the genus to have corollas of ten to twelve petals and a yellow, starlike eye highlighting the centers. S. gentianoides typically has seven or more petals, while other species in this genus have six or fewer. In Louisiana, S. dodecandra (marsh pink) has similar flowers, but its closely associated bracts are the same length as, or shorter than, the petals. A few more technical features serve to distinguish these species. Pinelands pink grows mostly in wet pine savannas and flatwoods, whereas marsh pink is more abundant along stream margins and in brackish marshes."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 94 GENTIANACEAE Gentian Family September 7, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000180 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/187 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 187 8-bit 600 dpi Collector names as appears on the drawing are Mary Jane Saunders and Clay Keith. Sabatia angularis (Rose Gentian) on the right, Sabatia campestris (Meadow Pink) on the left, and Sabatia gentianoides (Pinelands Pink) in the center appear on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:128 Pinewoods Lilly Alophia drummondii (Graham) R.C. Foster Smith, Latimore||Urbatsch, Lowell E. (flowers) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "This small and rather shy plant of the sandy pinewoods of western Louisiana and adjoining states has suffered the misfortune of having a treacherous nomenclatural history. This plant has been known in botanical publication by the name Eustylis purpurea for many years, but research has shown that Alophia drummondii, a name in general use for the meadow lily, is its proper name. The attractive, delicate velvety purple flowers of the pinewoods lily consist of three broad sepals and three somewhat-smaller petals flecked and banded with yellow, gold, and reddish brown. The short-lived flowers open one at a time over successive days and are borne atop somewhat-smaller petals flecked and banded with yellow, gold, and reddish brown. The short-lived flowers open one at a time over successive days and are borne atop somewhat-zigzag stems supporting narrow, pleated leaves. Underground is an ovoid bulb covered with dark brown scales." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.82 IRIDACEAE Iris Family May 27, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000005 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/39 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 39 8-bit 600 dpi Formerly accepted plant name: Eustylis purpurea (Herb.) Engelm. & Gray
lsu-sc-msw:129 Piney Woods Dropseed Sporobolus junceus (Michx.) Kunth Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "Most grasses have little to offer in terms of attractive flowers or foliage; the piney woods dropseed is one of the few exceptions. A tufted perennial, this species grows in sandy soil in forest openings and along woodland borders. Its many stems may grow to three feet in height, though they are usually shorter, and its numerous, slender leaves are mostly confined to near the plant's base. A variety of colors is seen within the tall, narrowly pyramidal inflorescences when the plants are in flower. Grass flowers are unusual; they lack a perianth but are enclosed by a pair of bracts and are usually arranged into multi-flowered structures called spikelets. When first in flower, the intricately arranged bracts are reddish purple, and the three anthers of each flower are bright orange. The fruit of this species is a tiny grain. Sporobolus, a large genus, comprises about 150 species, which grow in the warmer parts of the world. Grasses have been of enormous importance to humankind in providing food, forage for animals, and materials for shelter. In terms of species diversity, Poaceae is the second largest plant family in Louisiana, with more than three hundred species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 189 POACEAE Grass Family September 21, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000196 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/204 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 204 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Dropseed.
lsu-sc-msw:12 Beauty Berry Callicarpa americana L. Barker, Nancy (flowers)||Hawkins, Julia (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Rapides Parish (flowers)||Washington Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "The beauty berry, also called French mulberry, is one of the most common and widely recognized shrubs of the moist to dry upland forest borders and lightly shaded pine woods. Dense clusters of lavender-pink flowers adorn the upper leaf axils and give way to vivid, magenta, berrylike fruits in autumn. The simple, deciduous leaves of beauty berry are alternate to whorled and have somewhat-toothed margins. This many-branched, medium-sized shrub is sometimes grown for ornamental purposes because of its attractive, unusual fruits and its adaptability to various soil conditions. Occasionally, white-fruited forms of this plant appear in the wild, and some of these have been selected for horticultural use. Although this genus is represented in our area by a single species, well over a hundred species are known to exist in tropical and subtropical regions." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.206 VERBENACEAE Vervain Family June 7, 1982 (flowers); October 18, 1981 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000028 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/30 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 30 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:130 Pink Coreopsis Coreopsis nudata Nutt. Barker, Nancy Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "The simple, unpretentious, rushlike appearance of the stems and leaves belies the impending beauty of the pink coreopsis in flower. The stunning pink and yellow, dahlia-like blooms from such humble underpinnings seems unimaginable. This herbaceous perennial grows in wet, boggy prairies and wet pine savannas in southeastern Louisiana, where a few colonies were found after several diligent searches. Presumably, this species could be grown if provided with a suitable habitat. Several other showy species of Coreopsis are native to Louisiana and the Southeast, but most of them have yellow ray and disk flowers or yellow rays and deep, reddish purple disks."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 10 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family April 18, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000049 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/62 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 62 8-bit 600 dpi Drawings notes, "Caution! This pink colour may be fugitive if exposed for long periods to light."
lsu-sc-msw:131 Pink Evening Primrose Oenothera speciosa Nutt. Hawkins, Bill Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Iberia Parish 1976-1989 "Pink evening primrose, commonly seen along roadsides and in vacant lots, is one of our most abundant and showy wildflowers. Great colonies of this plant may color vast areas of the landscape pink or sometimes white in the early spring. These vivid floral displays are often encouraged by the sowing of seeds and by allowing the plants to mature until they reseed themselves. The flowers of this herbaceous plant have four sepals and four petals. Copious amounts of yellow pollen grains strung together by viscid threads are produced by the eight stamens near the center of each flower. Presumably, this is the reason these plants are sometimes called buttercups. Several other kinds of showy evening primroses are indigenous to Louisiana, but they are far less common than Oenothera speciosa. Other showy flowered members of the evening primrose family include the water primroses and the fuchsias, which are grown in cooler climates for their brightly colored flowers."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 156 ONAGRACEAE Evening Primrose Family April 23, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000137 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/134 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 134 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Evening Primrose.
lsu-sc-msw:132 Poppy Mallow or Winecup Callirhoe papaver (Cav.) Gray Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Acadia Parish 1976-1989 "Claret flowers of the poppy mallow, or winecup, present colorful wildflower displays on the drier hills and along roadsides mostly in central and western Louisiana. Poppy mallow, despite its superficial resemblance to poppies, is a member of the mallow family, which also contains such familiar plants as cotton, okra, and hibiscus. The cup-shaped flowers of poppy mallow are formed by five uniform petals an inch or more in length. Numerous pale yellow stamens, fused by their filaments, form a columnar structure in the central part of the flower of this species and other members of this plant family. The stems of this herbaceous perennial attaining a length of about two feet, sprawl along the ground and support alternate leaves that are divided into three to five narrow segments. The genus grows mostly in the Great Plains and contains about ten species." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.143 MALVACEAE Mallow Family May 25, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000029 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/108 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 108 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:133 Possum Haw Viburnum nudum L. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Possum haw is widely distributed in eastern North America and is found throughout most of noncoastal Louisiana. It occurs in various wetland habitats such as swamps, bays, and wet woodlands. This large shrub or small tree may grow to nearly twenty feet tall. Possum haw is readily characterized by its opposite, smooth-margined, relatively short, petiolate leaves. Rusty scales generally are seen on leaf undersides, petioles, and young twigs. Flowers of the possum haw are arranged in somewhat-rounded, compact clusters that may be up to six inches in diameter. Each flower has five very small sepals, a pale, yellowish white corolla of five partially fused petals, and five stamens. The elliptical, deep blue fruits are covered with a whitish bloom. If possum haw receives full sunlight, it is practically covered with attractive flower clusters. The unpleasant odor emitted by the flowers limits the use of this species as a garden ornamental. Six other species of Viburnum are native to Louisiana, and several exotic ones are grown ornamentally."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 50 CAPRIFOLIACEAE Honeysuckle Family April 26, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000216 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/227 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 227 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:134 Potato Bean or Ground Nut Apios americana Medic. Givens, Florence M. (flowers and tubers)||Blackman, Bill (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Ground nut, a common twining vine found in stream and pond margins, has dark green, pinnately compound leaves and dense clusters of papilionaceous flowers. The banner is white on the outside and purple to reddish brown on the inner surface. The less conspicuous wing and keel petals exhibit similar colors. The intricately shaped flowers exhibit a peculiar tripping mechanism to aid pollination by certain bee species. Beneath the ground are strings of storage tubers, once used for food by Native Americans. The seeds of this plant are also edible. Researchers are looking at the feasibility of cultivating this species for food, as has been done with many of its relatives in the legume family." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.57 FABACEAE Legume Family August 31, 1982 (flowers); October, 1984 (fruit); July 18, 1984 (tubers) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000009 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/43 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.0 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 43 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:135 Powdery Thalia Thalia dealbata Roscoe Barker, Nancy Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Iberville Parish 1976-1989 "Powdery thalia, an elegant and colorful plant found in freshwater marshes and ditches of the southeastern coastal plain, may grow to eight feet in height. Its broad leaves resemble those of canna, and its showy flowers are borne in pairs on tall, terminal, zigzag-branching inflorescences. The perianth consists of three minute sepals and three purple petals; its three stamens are petal-like, and only one bears a fertile, functional anther. The specific epithet refers to the white, powdery, wax-like substance on the inflorescence of this species and is the reason for this plant's common name. One of approximately a dozen species in this genus grows in Louisiana, another grows in Florida, and the others are found in the Americas and Africa. Most of the 350 species in the arrowroot family grow in tropical America. Roots of the West Indian arrowroot (Maranta arundinacea) are of considerable importance as a source of starch. Tough, durable leaves of Calathea lutea are used for roofing houses in parts of the American tropics. A few species of Calathea and Maranta are grown as ornamental houseplants."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 144 MARANTACEAE Arrowroot Family April 19, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000204 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/212 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 212 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:136 Prairie Rose Rosa setigera Michx. Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "Only two species of roses, Rosa setigera and R. Carolina (the Carolina rose), are native to Louisiana, and both have pink flowers. Two commonly encountered white-flowering species (the Cherokee and Macartney roses) are introductions from Asia. The prairie rose is distinguished from the Carolina rose by its arching or trailing stems, which may be fifteen feet long, its pinnate leaves, usually with three leaflets, and its styles that project well beyond the opening of the floral cup. A few to several flowers may be clustered together, forming a somewhat-flattened inflorescence. The hip produced from the flower is subglobose and red with reflexed persistent sepals. Although prairie rose is widely distributed in the eastern United States, where it grows in open woods, thickets, and clearings, it appears to be restricted in Louisiana to the northern parishes. This species would be suitable for planting on embankments as an attractive ground cover and as a source of food for wildlife."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 176 ROSACEAE Rose Family May 25, 1982; October, 1984 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000177 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/182 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 182 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:137 Puccoon Lithospermum tuberosum Regel ex DC. Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 Wilkinson, County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "Characterized by delicate, pale yellow flowers, the puccoon is a widely distributed woodland wildflower. Like most members of the borage family, its stems and leaves are covered with coarse, stiff, white hairs, and its inflorescences when young are coiled like a scorpion's tail. As the flowers mature, the inflorescence axis straightens. The five-lobed calyx surrounds the base of the narrow corolla tube which abruptly flares into a five-lobed, disklike structure. Concealed within the corolla tube are five tiny anthers. Seeds are produced within each flower in four stony nutlets, as alluded to by the generic name, which literally means "stone seed." A rather extensive rhizome system develops below ground, and upon drying, it diffuses a violet-colored substance, staining the paper upon which specimens of this species are mounted. Most members of the borage family are relatively inconspicuous plants of various habitats, but a few are well-known ornamentals such as comfrey and Myosotis, the forget-me-nots."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 47 BORAGINACEAE Borage Family April 6, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000115 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/125 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 125 8-bit 600 dpi Collection location as appears on the drawing is West Feliciana Parish. Collection date as appears on the drawing is April 6, 1982.
lsu-sc-msw:138 Purple Bladderwort Utricularia purpurea Walt. Barker, Nancy||Givens, Florence M.||Rebertus, Alan Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Purple bladderwort grows in pools of quiet water throughout much of eastern North America, the West Indies, and Central America. Although widely distributed, this species is uncommon in Louisiana and has been reported from only a few of its southern parishes. It is readily recognizable by its two to five purple flowers borne on upright racemes, which rise about six inches above the water. Corollas of this plant are approximately one-half inch across with a short, blunt, cone-shaped spur. The upper lip of the corolla is flat to concave, and the lower one is three-lobed and has a basal, yellow spot. Stems of purple bladderwort float below the water's surface and have whorls of from five to seven branches on each node. The branches themselves may bear whorls of smaller branches that sometimes terminate in a bladder for trapping small aquatic creatures."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.104 LENTIBULARIACEAE Bladderwort Family August 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000211 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/221 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 221 8-bit 600 dpi Horned Bladderwort (Utricularia cornuta) also appears on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:139 Purple Coneflower Echinacea purpurea (L.) Moench Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Cox, Patricia Pias Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Caldwell Parish 1976-1989 "Purple coneflower is perhaps the best known and most widely grown species of Echinacea. Its natural geographic distribution centers in Missouri and Arkansas, but the popularity of this plant has led to its introduction throughout the eastern United States. Native populations of purple coneflower grow only in Caldwell Parish. Other reports for this species in Louisiana are probably from cultivation or garden escapes. This species has broader leaves and showier heads than those of the pale coneflower. Purple coneflower's disk is orange to gold, and its rays are broader and may vary in color from nearly white to purple. The popularity of tincture of Echinacea, extracted from the roots of various species in this genus, and used as a medicinal treatment for a variety of ailments, has waxed and waned during the last 150 years."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 26 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family July 11, 1989 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000061 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/74 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 74 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:13 Bellwort Uvularia sessilifolia L. Thomas, R. Dale||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Lincoln Parish 1976-1989 "Bellwort is a delicate perennial that grows on rich, wooded hillsides. Its shoots emerge from a slender rhizome in the early spring. Their yellow-green, elliptic leaves are at first folded and closely clustered as the stem emerges, but they become more widely separated after they fully elongate. The pendant flowers, which appear with the new leaves, are a pale yellow. Their corollas are each composed of six similar segments and surround the six stamens and the three-parted ovary. Uvularia seems to be an unusual name for a plant. Apparently, the manner in which the pretty, pendant flowers hang from the inflorescence reminded Linnaeus, who named the plant, of the uvula of the palate. This eastern North American genus belongs in the lily family and contains five species. Besides U. sessilifolia, one other species, U. perfoliata, grows in Louisiana. The former is known only from some of the northern parishes, and the latter is restricted to the extreme southeastern part of the state."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 140 LILIACEAE Lily Family March 13, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000213 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/223 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 223 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:140 Pyramid Magnolia Magnolia pyramidata Bartr. Meier, Albert||Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Pyramid magnolia has been discovered in only three parishes in Louisiana. Its total geographic range is confined to the region of the Gulf Coast from the Florida Panhandle to east Texas. Like the bigleaf magnolia, this species grows in the understory of rich, mesic, deciduous forests. Except for its smaller size, pyramid magnolia is similar to bigleaf magnolia. Its slender, light gray trunks support a rounded, branching crown. The branch tips support umbrella-like clusters of auriculately based leaves that are typically about one foot in length. Flowers of about six inches in diameter composed of nine perianth parts and many stamens and carpel appear after the tree's new leaves are well formed. The national champion pyramid magnolia, reported from Newton County, Texas, has a height of fifty-seven feet and a circumference of six feet four inches. A few pyramid magnolias have been successfully grown as interesting accent plants, but because this plant is generally unavailable, its performance in cultivation remains largely untested."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 130 MAGNOLIACEAE Magnolia Family April 15, 1985 (flowers); September, 1986 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000124 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/123 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 123 8-bit 600 dpi Drawing notes, "seeds dehisced."
lsu-sc-msw:141 Rayless Goldenrod Bigelowia nudata (Michx.) DC. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-04-06 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "The rayless goldenrod is one of the many diverse species associated with pitcher plants in the bogs and the wet pine savannas of the Gulf Coast. This species is easily recognized during its flowering season in the late summer and fall. The plant grows to no more than two feet in height and characteristically produces a rosette of leaves that widen toward their apices. Several stems, which become many-branched upwardly, arise within the basal rosette and bear numerous threadlike leaves. This plant's flat-topped inflorescence consists of innumerable small heads composed of from two to five yellow disk flowers. As indicated by the common name, this species lacks the strap-shaped ray flowers often found in members of the sunflower family. Bigelowia, a genus of only two species, grows mostly in the southeastern United States."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 8 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 7, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000226 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/235 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 235 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:142 Red Buckeye Aesculus pavia L. Smith, Emory (flowers)||Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Pruski, John (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 West Feliciana Parish (flowers)||East Baton Rouge Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "The red buckeye grows in the understory of rich woodlands throughout most of Louisiana and the southeastern United States. It is easily identifiable by its opposite, palmately compound leaves and large clusters of red-orange flowers that appear in spring. The shiny, rich brown seeds contained within a tan leathery fruit can be seen in the fall. Red buckeye, an attractive landscape plant, is readily grown from freshly harvested seed and will thrive under various conditions, but its leaves may become unsightly in the late summer because of the fungal disease anthracnose." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.96 HIPPOCASTANACEAE Buckeye Family March 29, 1980 (flowers); September 5, 1980 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000002 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/36 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.0 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 36 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:143 Red Chokeberry Aronia Arbutifolia (L.) Ell. Smith, Emory (flowers)||Smith, Latimore (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish (flowers)||Washington Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "In red chokeberry, pinkish buds produce clusters of small white flowers with lavender-pink anthers on wandlike stems in early spring. Rather persistent red fruits subsequently develop. This shrub, which may grow to ten feet tall, bears simple, elliptic, alternately arranged leaves with finely toothed margins and tomentose undersides. Red chokeberry is a common member of the diverse bog and wet pine savanna community in Louisiana and the Gulf and Atlantic coastal plains." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.195 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 5, 1981 (flowers); October 22, 1981 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000013 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/23 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 23 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:144 Red Iris or Bronze Iris Iris fulva Ker-Gawl. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 West Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Red iris is one of the showy wildflowers commonly found along the margins of marshes and bayous in southern Louisiana. As in most species of iris, the perianth of Iris fulva consists of six petal-like members; the outer three are called falls, and the inner three, standards. In red iris, the standards and the falls tend to hang down. The petal-like style branches form the central part of the flower and conceal the stamens. Typically, the flowers are a rusty red, but yellow-brown and pinkish forms have been observed. The seed pods are six-angled, elliptical in outline and about two inches long. Red iris plants normally grow from two to four feet in height and bear strap-shaped leaves approximately one foot long. First discovered in the New Orleans vicinity in the early nineteenth century, the red iris was sent to England, where it caused quite a sensation, because it was the first iris species of this color known to science. In the wild, the red iris hybridizes rather freely with several of the blue-flowered species to produce a vast array of color forms. Many of these variations have been taken into cultivation and propagated."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 86 IRIDACEAE Iris Family April 13, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000098 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/115 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 115 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:145 Red Milkweed Asclepias lanceolata Walt. Cox, Patricia Pias||Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Showy displays of the red milkweed are found in early summer in the wet pine savannas and swamps of the southeastern United States. The rarely branched stems are upright and bear narrow, lance-shaped leaves. The bicolored flowers, with orange coronas and reflexed, red petals, are striking features of this species. Characteristic of most milkweeds, the fruit is a pod, called a follicle, filled with many silky haired seeds." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.22 ASCLEPIADACEAE Milkweed Family May 15, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000014 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/14 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne Capturing Software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 14 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:146 Red Penstemon Penstemon murrayanus Hook. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Winn Parish 1976-1989 "Known in Louisiana only from a few populations, the rare, stately red penstemon is one of our most brilliantly colored wildflowers. This perennial species grows in deep sands in the northwestern part of Louisiana. Its violet to purplish stems support several pairs of connate-perfoliate, pale green, glaucous leaves marked with violet. Dozens of spectacular flowers typically arise at the base of each floral bract. Their scarlet, tubular corollas are surrounded at the base by a smaller, five-lobed calyx. Pollen is produced by four functional stamens included within the corolla. Subsequent to their development from the pistil, the capsules usually persist throughout the winter. Red penstemon is virtually impossible to transplant. More success has been reported by propagating this species from seeds. The genus Penstemon embraces about three hundred species that are found mostly in western North America. Several species are cultivated for their showy flowers, which may be red, white, or blue."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 180 SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family May 15, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000148 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/152 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 152 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:147 Red Pitcher Plant or Parrot Pitcher Plant Sarracenia psittacina Michx. Murry, Robert E. Jr Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Hancock County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "The red pitcher plant is exceedingly rare in Louisiana, known only from Tangipahoa, St. Tammany, and Washington Parishes. Although brightly colored with an intricate, reticulate pattern of pale green, white, and reddish purple markings, this species is difficult to see because its small, tubular leaves recline on the ground and are often partly concealed by the surrounding vegetation. Other unusual features of the leaves are the broad lateral wing and the enlarged apical part, which is shaped somewhat like a bird's head. The plant has flowering scapes six to twelve inches tall, and the dropping, vivid maroon petals of its nodding flowers are held close to the ground. Only two of the approximately eight species in the genus Sarracenia are represented in Louisiana: the red pitcher plant and the yellow pitcher plant. The other species occur mostly in the southeastern coastal plain. The pitcher plant family is restricted to the New World and also includes Darlingtonia of California and Heliamphora of northern South America."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 199 SARRACENIACEAE Pitcher Plant Family April, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000186 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/194 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 194 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:148 Red Pitcher Plant or Parrot Pitcher Plant Sarracenia psittacina Michx. Givens, Florence M.||Rebertus, Alan Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "The red pitcher plant is exceedingly rare in Louisiana, known only from Tangipahoa, St. Tammany, and Washington Parishes. Although brightly colored with an intricate, reticulate pattern of pale green, white, and reddish purple markings, this species is difficult to see because its small, tubular leaves recline on the ground and are often partly concealed by the surrounding vegetation. Other unusual features of the leaves are the broad lateral wing and the enlarged apical part, which is shaped somewhat like a bird's head. The plant has flowering scapes six to twelve inches tall, and the dropping, vivid maroon petals of its nodding flowers are held close to the ground. Only two of the approximately eight species in the genus Sarracenia are represented in Louisiana: the red pitcher plant and the yellow pitcher plant. The other species occur mostly in the southeastern coastal plain. The pitcher plant family is restricted to the New World and also includes Darlingtonia of California and Heliamphora of northern South America."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 199 SARRACENIACEAE Pitcher Plant Family May 2, 1986 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000185 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/193 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 193 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:149 Red Trillium Trillium foetidissimum Freeman Tucker, Shirley C. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Trilliums, also called wake robins, are often regarded as the harbingers of spring. The new shoots of this herbaceous perennial grow from beneath the leaf litter in the moist, deciduous forests of the eastern United States and bear flowers early in the season before the trees form new leaves. Their generic name reflects the fact that the plant's parts come in threes, i.e., three leaflike bracts, sepals, and petals, six stamens, and a three-parted ovary. Red trillium's colorful, leaflike bracts mottled with various shades of green subtend a single, stalkless, upright flower. Sepals of the flower are spreading and green, and its upright petals are maroon. Trillium foetidissimum is restricted to extreme southeastern Louisiana and southwestern Mississippi, and it is the only Trillium in the Florida Parishes. Before it was described as a new species in 1975, it had been called T. sessile. The two plants differ in several technical features, and the latter species occurs from northern Alabama and Missouri northward."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.107 LILIACEAE Lily Family March 26, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000209 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/217 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 18.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 217 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:14 Bigleaf Magnolia Magnolia macrophylla Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish "Bigleaf magnolia, an uncommon tree of the moist, rich woods of certain stream drainage systems in central and southeastern Louisiana, is spectacular in having leaves as long as three feet supported in umbrella-like clusters at the branch tips. Its deciduous leaves are distinctive not only in size but also by their auriculately lobed bases and silvery undersides. Creamy white flowers one foot long open in late spring and would hold the undisputed title of our largest native flower, if there were such a designation. Typical conelike magnolia fruits develop from the numerous pistils of the flower and mature in the fall. Although they may attain heights of about seventy feet and trunk diameters of approximately two fee, most individuals typically remain much smaller trees. Bigleaf magnolia grows in the understory on rich but well-drained soils of riparian and slope forests of the southeaster United States. This species is not widely adaptable in cultivation, preferring conditions similar to those found in nature." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 128 Magnoliaceae Magnolia May 1, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 38 x 57 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000123 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/279 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2008-02-07 2017-02-02 Krause, Kate Gina Costello MSW 279
lsu-sc-msw:150 Redbud Cercis canadensis L. Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Winter buds on naked twigs burst into magenta blooms with the first warming of spring. Subsequent to flowering, heart-shaped leaves and clusters of reddish brown pods adorn the branches of redbud. The flowers, which exhibit showy banner, wing, and keel petals, and the beanlike pods are unmistakably leguminous. Redbud is a popular ornamental, and numerous horticultural selections are available. The flower buds may be eaten and make an unusual and colorful garnish for salads. Cercis canadensis, which grows as an understory tree in hardwood forests of the eastern United States, is one of a handful of redbud species known from North America, Europe, and Asia." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.59 FABACEAE Legume Family March, 1979 (flowers); September, 1979 (fruit); May, 1979 (leaves) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000038 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/50 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 50 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:151 Redroot Lachnanthes caroliniana (Lam.) Dandy Barker, Nancy||Givens, Florence M.||Rebertus, Alan Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Although common in some parts of the Gulf Coastal Plain, redroot is restricted in Louisiana to Washington and St. Tammany parishes, where scattered colonies grow in low, wet savannas. Its gradually tapering, irislike leaves arise from the base of the plant. In flower, the plants become quite evident by their grayish, flat-topped inflorescences of numerous small flowers. The woolly perianth of the individual flowers is composed of six members; the outer three are slightly shorter than the three inner, yellow ones. Anthers of the three stamens stand above the perianth at about the same height as the capitate stigma. As implied by its common name, this species does indeed possess red roots and rhizomes containing a red sap. The approximately one hundred species in the bloodwort family grow mostly in tropical regions. An Australian plant called the kangaroo paw and a few other species are grown as ornamentals."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 95 HAEMODORACEAE Bloodwort Family August 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000105 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/252 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-12-09 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 252 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:152 Resurrection Fern Polypodium polypodioides (L.) Watt N/A Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 N/A 1976-1989 "The resurrection fern if found in habitats also favored by the green-fly orchid and is the only fern in Louisiana that normally grows as an epiphyte. The common name aptly describes the behavior of this plant: brown, dry, and dead in appearance during dry periods, it becomes lush, green, and "alive" in a matter of hours following rain. Numerous roots secure the rhizomes to the tree limbs and aid in the absorption of nutrients from rainwater. Scales that clothe the deeply dissected leaves may also assist the plant in gathering periodically scarce water and nutrients. Sori appear as little, reddish brown dots on the lower leaf surfaces and represent clusters of spore-producing bodies typical of ferns." Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 150 POLYPODIACEAE True Fern Family N/A still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000062 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/248 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 248 8-bit 600 dpi Epidendrum conopseum (Green-Fly Orchid) also appears in this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:153 Rock Rose Helianthemum carolinianum (Walt.) Michx. Smith, Latimore (flowers, fruit)||Reed, Peggy Jo (flowers) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 Tangipahoa Parish (flowers)||St. Helena Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "Rock rose is widely distributed in dry, sandy, upland soils throughout much of Louisiana and the southeastern United States. These hairy stemmed, small plants rarely attain a height of more than twelve inches. A basal rosette of elliptic to obovate leaves is present at least during the early part of the plant's life cycle, and similarly shaped, alternately arranged leaves are attached along the length of the stem. One to a few bright yellow flowers form a loosely arranged inflorescence at the shoot apex. The flowers are composed of five sepals (the outer two are smaller than the inner three), five petals, and numerous stamens. A many-seeded capsule develops from the ovary of the flower. Helianthemum is a genus of approximately one hundred species. Many of them grow throughout the Mediterranean region. Only a few species of rock roses are native to Louisiana and the southeastern states."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 51 ` CISTACEAE Rock Rose Family May 1, 1983 (flowers); May 22, 1983 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000080 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/93 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 93 8-bit 600 dpi The term "seed" appears on drawing in lieu of "fruit."
lsu-sc-msw:154 Rose Gentian Sabatia angularis (L.) Pursh Barton, Paula Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Sabatia, a gentian genus found in the eastern United States and the West Indies, contains about seventeen species. They are all represented in the Southeast, and about a dozen grow in Louisiana. They are small herbs with opposite leaves and display various shades of pink petals, often with a basal yellow spot that makes the corollas yellow-eyed. Typically, the number of petals is five to twelve (depending on the species), the number of stamens is the same as that of the petals, and the two style branches are twisted. In rose gentian (right), the inflorescence branches are opposite, i.e., two grow at each node. Its calyx is not strongly ribbed, and its corolla is composed of five, or occasionally six, pink, rarely white, petals. Rose gentian, an inhabitant of old fields, pastures, prairies, and woodland borders, is reported to grow in all but the coastal parishes of Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 94 GENTIANACEAE Gentian Family May 30, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000180 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/185 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 185 8-bit 600 dpi Sabatia angularis (Rose Gentian) on the right, Sabatia campestris (Meadow Pink) on the left, and Sabatia gentianoides (Pinelands Pink) in the center appear on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:155 Rose Pogonia Pogonia ophioglossoides (L.) Ker-Gawl Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Vernon Parish 1976-1989 "Widespread throughout much of the eastern United States and often locally abundant, rose pogonia is, in general, an uncommon plant. It frequents wet meadows and bogs. In Louisiana, it has been reported in several southeastern and central parishes. The plants typically grow from delicate fibrous root systems. In our area, the stems are about four to five inches tall, and each bears one leaf at its midpoint and a leaflike bract below the inflorescence. Because of its single leaf, rose pogonia resembles the adder's tongue fern, and its specific epithet calls attention to this similarity. One or sometimes a few fragrant flowers individually subtended by a leafy bract are produced per plant. The petal-like sepals are spreading and resemble the two pale pink to rose petals that appear to hover above the column. The third petal is modified into the lip, which is pink with a deep rose fringe around its margins. Along its length, except at the base, are three rows of densely packed, yellow bristles."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 154 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family April 17, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000159 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/163 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 163 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:156 Rose Vervain Glandularia canadensis L. Nutt. [Verbena canadensis (L.) Britt.] Bourque, Vergil||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Assumption Parish 1976-1989 "Masses of rose vervain offer intense springtime floral displays in sandy fields and open pinelands and along roadsides. Slightly convex clusters crowded with flowers develop at the tips of the sprawling stems of this perennial plant. True to its vervain character, the slender corolla tube abruptly expands into five lobes, exhibiting a slight degree of bilateral symmetry. Included within the corolla tube are two pairs of stamens inserted at two different levels. Opposite, deeply lacerate leaves are attached at regular intervals to the four-angled stems. Rose vervain and a few other species are planted for their showy flowers. Gladnularia is often included within Verbena, a genus of approximately two hundred species distributed throughout much of the Americas."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 140 VERBENACEAE Vervain Family April 19, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000223 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/225 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 225 8-bit 600 dpi Drawing notes: "The pink colour used for the flowers may be fugitive."
lsu-sc-msw:157 Roughleaf Dogwood or Swamp Dogwood Cornus drummondii C. A. Mey. Hawkins, Murray (flowers)||Urbatsch, Lowell E. (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 Tunica Hills, Mississippi (flowers)||East Baton Rouge (fruit) 1976-1989 "The roughleaf dogwood and the flowering dogwood constitute our two common native species of Cornus. Both are small trees that have simple, opposite leaves with conspicuous, arching, secondary veins. Major differences between the two species are seen in the floral and fruiting structures. Individually, the flowers of the roughleaf dogwood are more showy, but the inflorescences lack the large white or pink bracts associated with the flower clusters of the flowering dogwood. Fruits of the roughleaf are white to bluish, not the familiar scarlet red of the other species. Roughleaf dogwood grows in a variety of habitats but is more common in wetter, heavier soils. It was named for its discoverer, Thomas Drummond."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 52 CORNACEAE Dogwood Family May 1, 1977 (flowers); August 28, 1980 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000050 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/63 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 63 8-bit 600 dpi Water stain on original.
lsu-sc-msw:158 Running Violet or Walter's Violet Viola walteri House Givens, Florence M.||Tucker, Shirley C. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Running violet forms mats on the forest floor because its stems creep along the ground and root at the nodes, a feature unique among species of Viola in Louisiana. Its small, orbicular to kidney-shaped leaves have purple undersides, and at least when young, they are mottled above with dark green, purple, and sometimes silvery gray markings. Like most of our violets, V. walteri has blue-violet flowers. The spurred petal and the two lateral petals have darker veins and a basal, white to pale-colored blotch. Running violet has been reported growing in virtually all parishes except the coastal ones. Toward the end of its flowering period, specialized cleistogamous flowers are formed. These flowers develop on short stalks, never open, and produce seeds as a result of self-pollination. This flower type occurs in other kinds of violets and other plant species, possibly as the result of stressful growing conditions. The epithet commemorates Thomas Walter, author of Flora Caroliniana, published in 1788."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.186 VIOLACEAE Violet Family March 12, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000219 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/231 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 231 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:159 Saint John's Wort Hypericum galioides Lam. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Most of the approximately twenty-four species of Hypericum reported for Louisiana are herbs. Hypericum galioides is among the six shrubby species, and it may form thickets in swamps and long stream and ditch margins. Its stems frequently grow to six feet in height and branch profusely. The bark of the younger branches is reddish and smooth, but on the larger stems it tends to form thin, rough flakes. The younger twigs are crowded with numerous, small, evergreen leaves that have tiny, circular, surface depressions typical for members of this genus. Making their appearance in the late spring, the flowers consist of five green sepals, five bright yellow petals, numerous stamens, and a three-parted pistil. While Saint John's wort is sometimes grown as an ornamental, other species of Hypericum with larger flowers are generally selected for this purpose."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 98 HYPERICACEAE Saint John's Wort Family June 2, 15, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000090 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/103 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 103 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date as appears on the drawing is 23 June 1978.
lsu-sc-msw:15 Magnolia Macrophylla Big Leaf Magnolia 1976 1989 still image http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/276 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2008-02-07 2017-02-02 MSW 276
lsu-sc-msw:160 Sampson's Snakeroot Psoralea psoralioides (Walt.) Cory Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Sampson's snakeroot is widely distributed in the dry, sandy soils of Louisiana, and it presents an attractive floral display, especially when grown in mass. The numerous, branching stems arising from the tuberous roots of this perennial bear several alternately inserted trifoliolate leaves. Arranged in dense, terminal racemes are its lilac flowers, resembling those of the pea plant. Its legumes, the fruit of Sampson's snakeroot, are tiny pods about one-half inch long. Sometime in the past, a concoction from the roots of this plant apparently was prescribed for the treatment of snakebite. Evidently, the results were not greatly successful. Sampson's snakeroot is colorful while in flower but has a rather short blooming season. Nevertheless, it could provide an attractive, early spring flora display in a naturalistic setting, and perhaps it has potential for use in roadside plantings. Psoralea, a genus of more than one hundred species mainly from tropical and subtropical regions, is sometimes subdivided into several smaller genera. Its name means "scabby" and refers to the glandular dots typically found on its lower leaf surfaces."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 92 FABACEAE Legume Family April 14, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000166 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/170 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 170 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:161 Sassafras Sassafras albidum (Nutt.) Nees Thomas, R. Dale||Urbatsch Lowell E. (flowers, leaves)||Robbins, Jim (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 Lincoln Parish (flowers)||Bossier Parish (fruit)||East Baton Rouge Parish (leaves) 1976-1989 "Sassafras occupies a prominent position among our native culinary plants. Filé, a fine powder of ground sassafras leaves, imparts a distinctive flavor to gumbo, a popular South Louisiana dish. Sassafras tea, made by steeping pieces of the root or bark, has been a popular drink since the early colonization of this country. Sassafras oil, distilled from the bark of the roots, is used to flavor medicines and candy and in scenting some perfumes. Unfortunately, safrole, one major component of sassafras oil, has been shown to be mildly carcinogenic in laboratory animals. Sassfras is a deciduous, dioecious tree common in old fields and woodlands of Louisiana and the eastern United States. Leaves, especially of young trees, are mitten-shaped, and both right- and left-handed "mittens" as well as ones with two thumbs, are produced. Leaves of older trees--which incidentally can become one hundred feet tall with trunk diameters of three to four feet--tend to be unlobed. Both the male and the female flowers are small, yellowish green, and radially symmetrical with six perianth segments. Male flowers have nine stamens and release their pollen by means of tiny, flaplike doors, a feature characteristic of the laurel family. Sassafras fruits are purple drupes supported by a fleshy, enlarged, reddish petiole."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.108 LAURACEAE Laurel Family March 13, 1982 (flowers); July 19, 1985 (fruit); May 25, 1982 (leaves) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000187 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/195 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 195 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:162 Scarlet Rose-Mallow Hibiscus Militaris Cav. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 Ascension Parish 1976-1989 "Magnificent flowers as large as six inches in diameter with white or sometimes pink corollas and rose-colored centers highlight the vegetation of marshy areas of the southeastern United States. In general aspect, the flowers of scarlet rose-mallow resemble those of cotton, also a member of the mallow family. A calyx of five green sepals arises below the showy petals. Within the corolla, and typical of all Malvaceae, is the column that is formed by fusion of the numerous stamen filaments. This plant grows to about eight feet tall and has alternate, glabrous, typically three-lobed leaves. Scarlet rose-mallow is common in Louisiana and bears one of the largest blossoms of our herbaceous wildflowers. A few other native species of Hibiscus are represented in Louisiana, and several exotic ones are used as houseplants or garden ornamentals."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 143 MALVACEAE Mallow Family June 7, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000085 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/98 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 98 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Halberd-leaved Rose-Mallow.
lsu-sc-msw:163 Sea Lavender Limonium carolinianum (Walt.) Britt. [Limonium nashii Small] Lafrankie, Jim||Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 Jefferson Parish 1976-1989 "Profusely branched stems and tiny flowers impart a delicate, lacy appearance to this perennial herb. Long petiolate leaves, whose blades are speckled with tiny salt glands, arise from the base of the plant. Its aerial, somewhat dichotomously branched stems, bearing only small, scalelike bracts, appear leafless. Approximately a dozen flowers develop on one side of each ultimate branch. A narrowly funnelform, five-lobed calyx subtends a similarly shaped corolla, which may vary from lavender to deep purple. Both perianth members are scarious-that is, they are rather dry and paperlike. Because of this quality, flowering stems are readily preserved by drying, making this plant a favorite subject for dried floral arrangements. Sea lavender grows in wet, saline habitats along the coast of North America from northeastern Mexico to Newfoundland, Canada. In Louisiana, this species is found only in the coastal parishes."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 188 PLUMBAGINACEAE Leadwort Family September 20, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000111 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/120 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-02 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 120 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing is Limonium nashii.
lsu-sc-msw:164 Seashore Mallow Kosteletzkya virginica (L.) Presl ex Gray Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Seashore mallow is a perennial herb that superficially resembles hibiscus and differs from it primarily in details of the fruit. Its open, showy, pink flowers feature a prominent staminal column much like that of hibiscus. Below the corolla is a five-parted calyx subtended by a series of narrow involucral bracts. Seashore mallow grows to about four feet in height and has narrowly triangular, often three-lobed leaf blades. The species is adapted to saline conditions of salt marshes and is restricted in Louisiana to the coastal parishes. Under cultivation, this species will grow in nonsaline soils, and if provided with full sunlight, it will flower abundantly. Successful propagation can be achieved by germinating seeds or by rooting stem cuttings. The generic name commemorates Vincenz Kosteletzky, an early nineteenth-century bohemian botanist."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 144 MALVACEAE Mallow Family August 29, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000104 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/246 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 246 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Salt Marsh-Mallow.
lsu-sc-msw:165 Shooting-Star Dodecatheon meadia L. Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "Dodecatheon meadia is the only species of a mostly temperate genus that grows in the southeastern United States. In Louisiana, this rare species is known to grow in a few northern parishes, where it inhabits rich, shady woods. The leaves of this perennial are clustered at the base of the plant. A leafless flower stalk appears in spring and produces an umbel of several, unusual flowers with five delicately colored, reflexed petals and five stamens that surround the style and point towards its apex. Cyclamens, sometimes grown in this region as houseplants, show a similar feature and also are members of the primrose family."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 170 PRIMULACEAE Primrose Family April 16, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000059 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/72 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 72 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:166 Silky Camellia Stewartia malacodendron L. Reed, Clyde L.||Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Considered by many to be one of the most elegant of our native flowering trees, the silky camellia represents one of the few species in this country belonging to the tea or camellia family. This small tree, which is found on rich, wooded slopes mostly of the coastal plain from eastern Texas to Virginia, may grow to twenty feet tall. Its simple, alternate, two-ranked leaves are abundantly covered with silky hairs. In silky camellia, four petals of each flower are white, sometimes with purple markings, while the fifth usually bears a greenish splotch; its numerous filaments are purple and support bluish anthers. The fruit of this species, a somewhat-roundish capsule, contains lustrous, lenticular seeds. Silky camellia, known from about a half-dozen parishes, is relatively uncommon in Louisiana. Although this species would be a highly desirable ornamental, it evidently cannot tolerate a wide range of environmental conditions. The camellia family is abundantly represented in our area by a plethora of cultivars of camellia and sasanqua. Camellia sinensis, native to southeastern Asia, is the source of commercial tea and is widely grown in many areas of the world."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 182 THEACEAE Camellia Family April 25, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000197 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/205 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 205 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:167 Silverbell Halesia diptera Ellis Smith, Emory (flowers)||Urbatsch, Lowell E. (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish (flowers)||Livingston Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "Silverbell, a profusely flowering, medium-sized, deciduous tree, is found in moist woods and along streams from east Texas and Arkansas eastward to Florida and South Carolina. It is quite common in Louisiana and is readily seen in the early spring when covered with pendent, bell-shaped flowers. Sepals and corolla lobes number four each, and the flower contains from eight to sixteen stamens. Elongated hard, dry, pendulous, two-winged fruits are produced in that fall. Leaves of silverbell are alternate and have undivided blades and entire to remotely toothed margins. Within the twigs, the pith of this plant is chambered and offers a valuable diagnostic marker for the tree in a vegetative state. In cultivation, silverbell grows under a variety of conditions and is often used as a substitute where dogwoods cannot be grown."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 204 STYRACACEAE Storax Family March 25, 1981 (flowers); October 2, 1979 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000079 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/92 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 92 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:168 Slash Pine Pinus elliottii Engelm. var. elliottii Womack, Wayne Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Perhaps originally native to the southeastern United States as far west as extreme southeastern Louisiana, the slash pine has had its range greatly expanded because of its importance as a timber species and a landscape plant. It is one of only seven species of gymnosperms and one of five kinds of pine that grow naturally in Louisiana. Like most other pines, it has a single upright trunk and progressively smaller branches upward, giving the tree a conical shape. Ephemeral, purple, pollen cones about two inches long are produced in abundance in the early spring. Much less conspicuous are the seed cones which are only about one-quarter of an inch long at the time of pollination but grow to six inches at maturity. This species is readily identified by its needles, which grow in bundles of twos and threes, and by its stalked, reddish brown seed cone. The national champion slash pine, reported from Florida, is 150 feet tall and has a trunk circumference of 11 feet 3 inches."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 188 PINACEAE Pine Family February 3, 1977; March 21, 1977 (cone) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000155 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/159 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 159 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:169 Small Butterwort and Yellow Butterwort Pinguicula pumila Michx. and Pinguicula lutea Robertus, Al Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Natchitoches Parish 1976-1989 "Aptly named, small butterwort is about one-third the size of the yellow butterwort. Its basal rosette of leaves may be from one to two inches in diameter. The leaves possess adaptations that enable them to prey on insects and other kinds of very small animals. Each of several flowering scapes that develop during the blooming cycle bears but a single flower. The calyx is two-lipped with three lobes composing the upper lip and two the lower. A conspicuous spur abruptly arises from the lower portion of the corolla tube, while the upper part widens out into five broad lobes. Typically pale blue, the corolla may range in color from nearly white to somewhat reddish with yellow markings. Like most insectivorous plants, small butterwort grows in somewhat-boggy savannas. It is known to grow in many of the western parishes in Louisiana, and it ranges from the coastal plain of Texas to North Carolina and into the Bahamas' Islands. Having a keen eye and a knowledge of where to look are required to successfully find this plant in the wild."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 103 LENTIBULARIACEAE Bladderwort Family April 7, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000154 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/158 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 158 8-bit 600 dpi Small butterwort (Pinguicula pumila) is on the left, and Yellow butterwort (Pinguicula lutea) is on the right. Collection date, place and collector name for Yellow butterwort, Pinguicula lutea, (right) as appears on the drawing is March 30, 1984, St. Tammany Parish, and Givens, Florence M.
lsu-sc-msw:16 Magnolia Macrophylla Big Leaf Magnolia Sketch with Color 1976 1989 still image http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/277 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2008-02-07 2017-02-02 MSW 277
lsu-sc-msw:170 Smooth Meadow Beauty Rhexia alifanus Walt. Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Rhexia is the only genus of the large, mostly tropical meadow beauty family to grow in the United States, where it is represented by approximately a dozen species. These are readily recognizable by their four angled stems and opposite, simple leaves with three main veins running from the leaf base to its tip. The flowers of all species are exquisite. Smooth meadow beauty (center), with its glabrous, upright stems that branch only in the inflorescence and its vividly colored flowers, is one of the showiest. Its four rose-lavender petals are about one inch in length, and its eight bright yellow anthers site on filaments having an elbowlike bend. The urn-shaped fruits persist on the plant long after its seeds have been shed. Smooth meadow beauty flowers throughout the summer and provides one of the main sources of color in its native habitat, the wet pine savannas of extreme southeastern and central Louisiana. Although this species has been little used as a garden plant, it has considerable potential in this regard. Most likely it could be propagated from seed and would require moist, but well-drained, acid soil in a sunny location. Rhexia mariana (left) is a common, highly variable species that grows in similar habitats. This species differs from the smooth meadow beauty in having pubescent stems and diverse shades of pink to rose petals."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 132 MELASTOMATACEAE Meadow Beauty Family July 6, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000171 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/176 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 176 8-bit 600 dpi Note on drawing: "Caution! The pink colour may be fugitive if exposed for long periods to the light."
lsu-sc-msw:171 Solomon's Seal Polygonatum biflorum (Walt.) Ell. Standifer, Marie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Graceful, arching, leafy stems typify Solomon's seal, a plant of the rich, wooded slopes of eastern North America. From the axils of each leaf are two or sometimes more pendulous flower; each blossom's six-parted perianth is fused into a tubular corolla with tiny lobes. Within the corolla are six stamens, the number typical for members of the lily family. Berries, the fruits of this plant, are fist green, turning dark purple when mature. Shoots and roots of Solomon's seal are said to be edible. Although reported from several parishes, this species is uncommon in Louisiana. Solomon's seal is a relatively easy plant to grow in the shade garden if provided with rich, moist, but well-drained soil. Different accounts have been given for this plant's common name. The leaf scars on the rhizome resemble a seal's impression into the wax used on letters or documents in former times. Alternatively, the ancients thought that medicines prepared from the roots of this plant had magical healing properties like those of the healing acts that could have been performed by Solomon."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 116 LILIACEAE Lily Family April 13, 1986 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000162 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/166 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 166 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:172 Sourwood Oxydendrum arboreum (L.) DC. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Sourwood is well known throughout the eastern United States for its showy clusters of flowers and its brilliant fall foliage. The bark of the older trunks of this medium sized tree in the heath family is dark and deeply furrowed. Its deciduous sour-tasting, simple leaves are bright medium green in summer and turn a brilliant scarlet to reddish purple in autumn. Clusters of slightly arching inflorescence branches, aligned along their lower sides with many small flowers, droop from the twig tips in late spring. Within the urn-shaped corollas, pollen and nectar are produced, providing a valuable source of honey. "Sourwood honey for sale" signs are commonly seen on a drive through the Blue Ridge of the mid-Atlantic states. Although pendulous when in flower, the pedicels grow to an upright position as the capsules mature. Sourwood is a desirable landscape plant, though it is difficult to grow in the lower part of Louisiana because of the lack of well-drained soils."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 55 ERICACEAE Heath Family June 13, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000142 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/146 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 146 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:173 Southern Catalpa Catalpa bignonioides Walt. Pope, Tom Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Catalpa is one of the few medium-sized trees with large, showy flowers native to Louisiana. For a couple of weeks during springtime, this species stands out from the other vegetation along the edges of woodlands and streams. Each broad, pyramidal flower cluster is about one foot in length. The numerous bell-shaped flowers are one to two inches long with purple spotted, white corollas, which have two interior yellow stripes and ruffled margins. Clusters of pods, which individually reach eighteen inches long, subsequently develop and remain on the trees for some time. Also unique to this species are its opposite to whorled, large, heart-shaped leaves. Southern catalpa is sometimes cultivated for its ornamental value, and the tree is well known to fishermen, who claim the catalpa worms (caterpillars) are irresistible to fish." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.38 BIGNONIACEAE Catalpa Family April 6, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000036 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/48 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 48 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:174 Southern Crabapple Malus angustifolia (Ait.) Michx. Singleton, Judith||Stones Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Southern crabapple, a member of the rose family, is indigenous to the coastal and interior regions of Virginia and Florida westward to Texas and Missouri. This small tree is widely distributed on lighter, well-drained soils of Louisiana. Prized for its floral displays, this small tree produces clusters of pink buds in the early spring that soon give way to delicate, fragrant, rose-pink flowers adorning its numerous, slender, somewhat-spiny branchlets. The simple, alternately arranged leaves with toothed to slightly lobed margins, mature soon after flowering. In autumn, the trees bear greenish yellow apples about two inches in diameter that are suitable for apple preserves. Although not frequently seen in cultivation, southern crabapple would be attractive if planted in mass or individually. Cedarapple rust, a potential problem in growing this species, may cause the leaves to become unsightly. Orchard crabapples, those grown for fruit, most likely belong to the species Malus pumila, a plant native to northern China and Siberia. The ornamental, or flowering, crabapples include a number of different species and varieties mostly of oriental origin."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 196 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 24, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000127 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/136 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 136 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Southern Crab.
lsu-sc-msw:175 Southern Crabapple Malus angustifolia (Ait.) Michx. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Southern crabapple, a member of the rose family, is indigenous to the coastal and interior regions of Virginia and Florida westward to Texas and Missouri. This small tree is widely distributed on lighter, well-drained soils of Louisiana. Prized for its floral displays, this small tree produces clusters of pink buds in the early spring that soon give way to delicate, fragrant, rose-pink flowers adorning its numerous, slender, somewhat-spiny branchlets. The simple, alternately arranged leaves with toothed to slightly lobed margins, mature soon after flowering. In autumn, the trees bear greenish yellow apples about two inches in diameter that are suitable for apple preserves. Although not frequently seen in cultivation, southern crabapple would be attractive if planted in mass or individually. Cedarapple rust, a potential problem in growing this species, may cause the leaves to become unsightly. Orchard crabapples, those grown for fruit, most likely belong to the species Malus pumila, a plant native to northern China and Siberia. The ornamental, or flowering, crabapples include a number of different species and varieties mostly of oriental origin."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 196 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 3, 1977 (flowers); May 27, 1977 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000126 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/124 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 124 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Wild Crab-Apple. This drawing is not included in Urbatsch's Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991). Another drawing of Southern Crab Apple appears in the book whose description was applied to this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:176 Southern Magnolia Magnolia grandiflora L. Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "The southern magnolia, perhaps the grandest of our native trees, is a traditionally recognized symbol of the South. Because of its beauty and abundance, this tree's blossom was designated in 1900 as our state flower by the Louisiana Legislature. Southern magnolia is easily distinguished by its glossy, evergreen leaves whose undersides are typically rust colored. Prized for their fragrance, the beautiful, creamy white flowers bloom from April to June. In true magnolia fashion, each flower is composed of several showy, spoon-shaped petals and numerous stamens and pistils disposed in spiral ranks. Fruits, which mature from September through October, are conelike aggregates of follicles. Lustrous, bright red seeds remain suspended for a time by thin threads after the fruit opens and present a colorful display. Southern magnolia, slow growing and long lived, may attain a height of nearly one hundred feet. Along with American beech, it forms a unique climax forest association on the moist, fertile ravine slopes of the Lower South."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 126 MAGNOLIACEAE Magnolia Family May 12, 1970 (flowers); September 17, 1979 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000122 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/132 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 132 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date for flower as appears on the drawing is May 12, 1979.
lsu-sc-msw:177 Southern Tway Blade Listera australis Lindley Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "A degree of skill akin to that required to find four-leaf clovers is needed to see the southern tway blade in the wild. This orchid is often overlooked because of its small stature, its short life span, and its brownish green color, which camouflages it against leaf litter on the forest floor. Rarely more than six inches tall, the slender upright stem of this plant bears two opposite, ovate leaves. The word tway may have been derived from an Old English word meaning "two." Its racemose inflorescence supports from ten to thirty minuscule, greenish purple flowers. The lip, which is split into two lobes, is the most conspicuous part of the flower. Both lateral petals and the three sepals are less than two millimeters in length. Martin Lister, an English physician and naturalist, is commemorated by the generic name, while the specific epithet means "southern." Among the twenty-five species in this genus of temperate distribution, southern tway blade has the most southerly distribution."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 152 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family March 8, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000114 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/122 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-02 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 122 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:178 Spanish Moss Tillandsia usneoides (L.) L. Brown, Clair A. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Garlands of Spanish moss drooping from live oak, cypress, and other kinds of trees characterize the southern landscape. This epiphyte merely uses trees and, in some cases, other objects, such as telephone wires and fences, for support. The long, pliable stems of Spanish moss bear numerous leaves covered with scales that aid the plant in capturing water not readily available in its humid but soilless environment. The flowers of this species have three sepals and three greenish petals and give rise to brownish fruits containing numerous, small, plumose-appendaged seeds that become airborne when released. Designation of this plant as "moss" is a misnomer because it is a flowering plant belonging to the pineapple family. Spanish moss has been used for pillow and mattress stuffing, and the collecting and ginning of this plant was once a viable industry in Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 78 BROMELIACEAE Pineapple Family March 17, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000169 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/214 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 214 8-bit 600 dpi The Spanish moss on this drawing is draped on Live Oak (Quercus virginiana).
lsu-sc-msw:179 Spice Bush Lindera benzoin (L.) Blume Barton, Paula (flowers)||Urbatsch, Lowell E. (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-25 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Spice bush is a frequently encountered shrub of the bottomland hardwood forests. It is most conspicuous in the springtime, when small clusters of tiny yellow flowers appear before the leaves, and again in autumn, when the elliptical, shiny, crimson fruits mature. Spice bush is polygamo-dioecious-that is, pollen-bearing and seed-bearing flowers grow on separate plants, but such individuals may have bisexual flowers as well. The pollen-bearing flowers are the most conspicuous. Their anthers, true to their familial heritage, shed pollen not simply by splitting but by opening flaplike doors. Leaves of Lindera are simple, alternate, and elliptic in outline. When crushed, they emit a spicy fragrance. Chewing the twigs of this plant is said to give some relief from a sore throat. Camphor, an ingredient in many commercial medicines, apparently is the active substance in spice bush. The plants tolerate a broad range of growing conditions and would add an element of interest to the garden."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 102 LAURACEAE Laurel Family March 3, 1979 (flowers); September 23, 1982 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000112 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/121 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-02 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 121 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date for flowers as appears on the drawing is March 5, 1979.
lsu-sc-msw:17 test darkened pencil sketch 1976 1989 still image http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/283 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2008-02-11 2017-02-02 MSW 283
lsu-sc-msw:180 Spider Lily Hymenocallis caroliniana (L.) Herb. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 West Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Spectacular clusters of handsome white flowers of the spider lily dot the wet meadows and ditches throughout much of Louisiana in the springtime. The flowers are strongly fragrant, especially in the evening. Within the flower, a disk-shaped structure called the corona connects the bass of the stamen filaments and serves to readily characterize Hymenocallis. Attached beneath the corona and projecting far beyond its outer rim are six narrow perianth segments that are fused together basally, forming an elongated floral tube. Spider lily fruits are fleshy, three-parted capsules with several large seeds. This plant's strap-shaped, dark green leaves arise from a bulb securely anchored in the wet, marshy soil. Spider lily is an attractive and easily grown garden ornamental. Hymenocallis is represented in the southeastern United States by several other species whose taxonomy is poorly known, making the application of the names difficult."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 3 AMARYLLIDACEAE Amaryllis Family May 10, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000089 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/102 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 102 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:181 Spiny Thistle Cirsium horridulum Michx. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "The intricate color and structure of the spiny thistle, a plant common to the roadsides and pastures of Louisiana, can be appreciated more fully by observing this drawing. This member of the sunflower family is typical in having small flowers arranged in heads that themselves have the appearance of individual flowers. This plant is also called yellow thistle because the flowers are often pale yellow. Flowers in this genus typically are purple. Many parts of this thistle are spiny, including the many smaller leaves surrounding the heads and the tips of the lobes of the numerous stem leaves. Spiny thistle is a biennial. It produces great rosettes of long spiny leaves during the winter months and flowering stalks that bolt upward in the springtime. Young stems of this species are edible and possess a texture and flavor similar to celery. Thistles and their kin are closely related to the artichoke."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.24 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family April 3, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000042 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/55 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 55 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:182 Spotted Beebalm Monarda punctata L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Although the numerous, lavender inflorescence bracts are the showiest aspect of the spotted beebalm, the flowers themselves have an intricate and subtle beauty. The corolla of this plant not only is two-lipped, as in most mints, but has the appearance of a mouth suspended in a wide yawn. Both the common name and the specific epithet call attention to the maroon-spotted, pale yellow, corolla surfaces. Spotted beebalm is widely distributed in Louisiana and the eastern United States. In our area, the plant behaves as an annual or a weak perennial. Except for its tall, rather spindly appearance, it is attractive and may be a useful ornamental in natural areas. Monarda, a North American genus of about twenty species, contains a number of popular garden flowers such as the scarlet-flowered beebalm (M. didyma) and the wild bergamot (M. fistulosa). Most other species of Monarda are well-recognized wildflowers. The leaves of the various species are used in cooking and for making tea because of their minty flavor."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 101 LAMIACEAE Mint Family September 3, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000129 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/138 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 138 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Horsemint.
lsu-sc-msw:183 Spreading Aster Aster patens Ait. Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Spreading aster is an erect perennial that grows to nearly three feet tall. It is quite common in open, dry fields and at the edges of woodlands in Louisiana and the eastern United States. The plant is readily recognizable by its nearly sessile leaves that have a basal pair of earlobe-like structures and by its branches, especially in the inflorescence, which diverge at nearly a ninety-degree angle from the main stem. The epithet refers to this branching pattern. The heads, which terminate the inflorescence, measure an inch or more across when in flower. They have a yellow disk and numerous bluish or sometimes white rays. Attached to the ovary where it joins the corolla is a series of bristles, called the pappus, which assist in the dissemination of the fruit by the wind." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.7 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family October 21, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000018 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/18 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne Capturing Software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 18 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:184 Spreading Pogonia Cleistes divaricata (L.) Ames Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Spreading pogonia is a rare beauty found in wet meadows and bogs, where it grows among pitcher plants and sundews. From one to three flowers sit atop a stem bearing a solitary leaf. The central, tubular part of the flower consists of the lip, or lower petal, and the upper two petals, which close over the top of the lip, completely concealing the column contained within. In contrast to the pink, connivent, upper petals and crimson-veined lip, the deeply reddish purple sepals spread boldly upward and outward. Known in only a few localities in Louisiana, this orchid's rarity may be due to its specialized habitat requirements. More frequent appearances after the sites have been burned suggest that, as with many bog plants, its existence may depend on fire."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.149 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family April 25, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000044 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/57 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 57 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:185 Spring Beauty Claytonia virginica L. Thomas, R. Dale Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 Lincoln Parish 1976-1989 "Spring beauty is a tufted, perennial herb that grows from an underground corm. Its linear leaves, like those of most members of the purslane family, are somewhat succulent. The raceme on each stem produces about a dozen delicate flowers, which are individually composed of two sepals and five petals. Typically pink, the petals may vary from white to rose with purple veins. The purplish stamens number the same as the petals and are attached to them. Spring beauty grows in lawns, fields, and rich sandy woodlands throughout the eastern states and may be grown in the native plant garden for its decorative flowers."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.192 PORTULACACEAE Purslane Family March 5, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000043 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/56 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 56 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:186 Star Bush or Star Anise Illicium floridanum Ellis Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "In some parts of southeastern Louisiana, the star bush forms dense thickets along small streams and in seepage areas of ravines. Although locally abundant, this species has a geographic distribution restricted to an area from the Florida Panhandle to eastern Louisiana. The many-branched stems of this plant bear somewhat leathery, simple, alternate, evergreen leaves crowded near the twig tips. When crushed, the leaves emit an unusual odor that some have described as reminiscent of fresh fish. Stinking laurel and pole-cat tree are names that refer to the odoriferous qualities of star bush. Flowers are produced in abundance, especially on plants receiving somewhat more sunlight. About twenty to thirty dark red, strap-shaped segments form the perianth. Within the flower, about thirty to forty stamens encircle the single whorl of approximately fifteen pistils. The fruit, an aggregate of follicles derived from the pistils of the flower, is reported to explosively discharge its seeds."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 98 ILLICIACEAE Star Bush Family March 14, 1977 (flowers); May 25, 1977 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000094 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/112 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 112 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:187 Stokes' Aster Stokesia laevis (Hill) Greene Givens, Florence M.||Rebertus, Alan||Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Stokes' aster is an uncommon inhabitant of the moist pine woods from South Carolina to Louisiana. Not surprisingly, this species is cultivated for its large heads of blue and white flowers, which are from three to four inches in diameter. The outer flowers of each head are raylike with five-lobed, strap-shaped ligules, and the central flowers are more disk-like. Surrounding each flowering head is a series of bracts with many soft, spiny teeth. Stokes' aster, a perennial herb, grows from a short rhizome and bears glabrous leaves that have a series of pointed, closely-spaced teeth near their bases. This species is readily propagated from seeds, which are available commercially, or from root cuttings. Stokes' aster prefers a sunny location with moist but well-drained soil, and it flowers in summer. Despite its common name, this species is not closely related to the asters but is kin to the ironweeds, Vernonia."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 32 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 13, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000199 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/207 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 207 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:188 Stokes' Aster Stokesia laevis (Hill) Greene Lemke, David Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 Pearl River County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "Stokes' aster is an uncommon inhabitant of the moist pine woods from South Carolina to Louisiana. Not surprisingly, this species is cultivated for its large heads of blue and white flowers, which are from three to four inches in diameter. The outer flowers of each head are raylike with five-lobed, strap-shaped ligules, and the central flowers are more disk-like. Surrounding each flowering head is a series of bracts with many soft, spiny teeth. Stokes' aster, a perennial herb, grows from a short rhizome and bears glabrous leaves that have a series of pointed, closely-spaced teeth near their bases. This species is readily propagated from seeds, which are available commercially, or from root cuttings. Stokes' aster prefers a sunny location with moist but well-drained soil, and it flowers in summer. Despite its common name, this species is not closely related to the asters but is kin to the ironweeds, Vernonia."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 32 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 11, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000198 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/206 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 206 8-bit 600 dpi This is an additional drawing than that which appears in Flora of Louisiana.
lsu-sc-msw:189 Strawberry Bush Euonymus americanus L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. (flowers)||Smith, Emory (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Evangeline Parish (flowers)||East Baton Rouge Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "The spectacularly colorful and unusual fruits of the strawberry bush are a woodland delight. The outer covering of the crimson, tuberculate fruit superficially resembles a strawberry. When the fruit opens, four or five fleshy, reddish orange seeds are exposed. A more romantic common name, which refers to the opened fruits, is "hearts bursting with love." The flowers, appearing in the spring, are much less conspicuous but also exhibit some interesting features. They are associated with of the opposite leaf axils and sometimes give the illusion of being attached to the leaves. A broad, flat disk of nectar-secreting tissue surrounds the ovary and supports five stamens and five greenish yellow petals attached to this outer rim. Given a sunny place in the garden, the strawberry bush will flower and fruit more abundantly than in the shade. In the wild, this species, a favorite of deer, is often severely browsed."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 51 CELASTRACEAE Staff-Tree Family April 20, 1979 (flowers); September 25, 1979 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000066 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/79 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 79 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing is Euonymus Americana.
lsu-sc-msw:18 Bigleaf Snowbell Styrax grandifolia Ait. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Bigleaf snowbell, a small tree found in deciduous, upland woods from Louisiana to Virginia, generally grows on bluffs and slopes bordering streams. In Louisiana, this plant is reported from nearly all parishes except the coastal ones. Leaves of this species are alternate and simple, and range in length from three to six inches. They have slightly serrate to dentate margins and are pubescent with star-shaped hairs. A good diagnostic field characteristic is the presence of two buds at each node. The bell-shaped, bisexual flowers, arranged in drooping, terminal racemes, typically possess five petals with recurving lobes and ten stamens. Small, subglobose capsules are produced from the partially tri-septate ovary. Bigleaf snowbell is cultivated to some extent, but its leaves become chlorotic in unfavorable soils. Styrax, the major genus of the storax family, contains about 130 species of mostly tropical trees or shrubs. Halesia, the silverbell, is another native representative of this family."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 205 STYRACACEAE Storax Family March 26, 1984 (flowers); July 8, 1984 (fruit and seed) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000201 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/209 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 209 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:190 Summer Azalea Rhododendron viscosum (L.) Torr. [Rhododendron viscosum (L.) Torr. var. serrulatum (Small) Ahles] Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Although widespread from Maine to Ohio southward and fairly frequent in wet woodlands and bogs and along the borders of swamps and bays, this species is less well known than the wild azalea. Summer azalea also can grow to about twenty feet tall, and it has alternate, deciduous leaves. Its flower buds, which are formed the previous season and over winter, are covered with a sticky, viscous substance--presumably, the reason for the epithet viscosum. This species flowers in very late spring or in summer after the leaves have matured. In flower, this plant is not as spectacular as the wild azalea; it has fewer flowers, which are somewhat concealed by the leaves, and its less-colorful corollas are creamy white. There is considerable controversy concerning the specific boundaries, and consequently the correct name, for this species. Summer azalea may be an interesting garden plant in moist to wet habitats. It could also provide genetic material for developing later-flowering varieties of azaleas by hybridization with other species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 56 ERICACEAE Heath Family July 10, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000174 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/179 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 179 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Swamp Azalea.
lsu-sc-msw:191 Summer Woodland Orchid Platythelys querceticola (Lindley) Garay [Erythrodes querceticola (Lindley) Ames] Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Wilkinson County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "This delicate, little, terrestrial orchid is found in the rich, moist, oak woodlands of the Tunica Hills near St. Francisville, Louisiana. The bases of the several, evenly spaced, narrow leaves surround and clasp the stem and are reminiscent of dayflower leaves. A conical cluster of small, yellowish to white flowers terminate the leafy stems. Noteworthy features of the flower include the prominent spur formed at the base of the three-lobed lip, and the dorsal sepal and two other petals that arch over the lip. The summer woodland orchid is so named because of its specific epithet querceticola, which means "growing in oak woods," and because it is one of the few orchids of this region to flower in late summer. Some authorities refer this species to the genus Erythrodes."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 153 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family August 25, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000064 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/77 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 77 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing is Erythrodes querceticola.
lsu-sc-msw:192 Sunbonnets Chaptalia tomentosa Vent. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "This unusual, early flowering, little bog-plant with its rosette of leaves and solitary heads of flowers has a form somewhat like that of the common dandelion. However, in detail the two are quite different. Sunbonnets' leaves have a dense, felty mat of white hairs beneath, and their margins are sooth or possess small teeth. Sunbonnets' heads are composed of disk and ray flowers that are unequally lobed. Chaptalia is related to a primarily tropical group of sunflowers and is not close kin to the dandelion. Like many other members of the sunflower family, sunbonnets have heads that respond to light. At night and on cloudy days, the ray flowers form a brim around the nodding head, giving them a bonnetlike appearance. On sunny days, the heads are erect and track the movement of the sun." --Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 9 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family April 8, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000040 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/53 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 53 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:193 Swamp Jessamine Gelsemium rankinii Small Givens, Florence M.||Tucker, Shirley C.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Swamp jessamine, a woody, twining, evergreen vine of the bogs and swamps, ranges from North Carolina to extreme southeastern Louisiana. Leaves of this species are opposite, lanceolate, and dark green, and racemes of showy yellow flowers develop at their upper nodes. Five small, greenish, acutely lobed sepals and five yellow petals fused into a funnel-shaped corolla compose the floral perianth. Attached within the somewhat darker yellow corolla throat are five stamens. Fruits of the jessamine are flattened, two-parted, many-seeded capsules. The swamp jessamine and the Carolina jessamine, which is widespread in Louisiana, are quite similar to each other. The former, however, is a low-growing vine with slightly larger, less fragrant flowers that bloom somewhat later in the spring. Gelsemium rankinii is named in honor of H. A. Rankin of North Carolina, who noted and conveyed the distinctive nature of this species to J. K. Small, preeminent botanist of southeastern flora."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 122 LOGANIACEAE Logania Family March 30, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000074 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/87 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 87 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:194 Swamp Lily Crinum americanum L. Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "The sweetly fragrant, white flowers of the swamp lily dot the coastal marshes in summer and fall. A profusely rooted bulb several inches below the surface of the soil anchors this plant to its marshy habitat. Arising from the bulb are many strap-shaped, dark green leaves and a fleshy stalk tipped with four to six flowers. Each lilylike flower of six arching perianth parts may be as much as six inches in diameter. Reddish purple stamens as numerous as the perianth parts offer a striking contrast to the white petals and sepals. As the maturing fruit gains weight, the stalk supporting it bends to the ground, and the three seeds within begin to germinate. As many as one hundred species of Crinum have been reported from warm, wet regions throughout the world."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 14 AMARYLLIDACEAE Amaryllis Family October 5, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000053 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/66 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 66 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:195 Sweet Pepperbush or White Alder Clethra alnifolia L. [Clethra alnifolia L. var. tomentosa (Lam.) Michx.] Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, England 1976-1989 "Sweetly fragrant, white racemes of flowers are one of the attractions of this shrub that grows in wet pine savannas, baygalls, and bogs. The flowers, five-merous and radially symmetric, have a rather simple structure. The shrub's undivided leaves are alternate and resemble those of Alnus (alder), as suggested by the specific epithet for this species. Sweet pepperbush generally forms thickets as new shoots arise form spreading rhizomes. The many-branched, upright stems may attain twelve feet in height and are covered by a thin, reddish bark. Clethra grows readily under various conditions that may be a major garden attraction through out the seasons. This handsome shrub attracted the attention of early collectors who came to North America. The plant was first illustrated in Leonard Plukenet's Phytographi…, published in London in 1691, and it was included by Mark Catesby in his two-volume work The Nature History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, Volume One, Part Four, published in 1731."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.62 CLETHRACEAE White Alder Family September 23, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000046 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/59 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 59 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Hairy Pepperbush. The drawing also notes: "First introduced to England by MN Drummond of New Orleans. Illustrated "Curtiss Botanical Magazine", T3743, Vol 66, 1840."
lsu-sc-msw:196 Sweetbay Magnolia Magnolia virginiana L. Smith, Emory (flowers)||Gladney, Mrs. Frank (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 East Baton Rouge 1976-1989 "Sweetbay magnolia is readily recognizable from some distance by its elliptic leaves covered beneath with silver hairs, which flash like fluttering, silvery tags on a windy day. Although these semi-evergreen trees may become nearly one hundred feet tall with trunks to four feet in diameter, they are typically smaller. Creamy white, fragrant, magnoliaceous flowers appear in the late spring after the new leaves are fully expanded. By late summer, the red seeds formed within the conelike fruits reach maturity. Sweetbay magnolia and associated species, such as black tupelo, red bay, various species of holly, and others, characterize a plant community type called "bays" or "bayhead swamps." This plant association occurs along the borders of swamps and branch heads of streams where soils are inundated throughout most of the growing season. Even though this species is adapted to flooded soils, it grows well as an ornamental on well-drained sites."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 142 MAGNOLIACEAE Magnolia Family May 5, 1980 (flowers); September, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000125 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/244 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 244 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:197 Sweetleaf or Horsesugar Symplocos tinctoria (L.) L'Her Givens, Florence M.||Stones, Margaret||Tucker, Shirley C.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Leaves with the taste and smell of green apples are characteristic of sweetleaf, a common shrub or small understory tree of mesic to wet forests of the southeastern United States. Its alternate leaves are elliptic to oblanceolate, supported by yellowish petioles, and tend to remain on the plant throughout the winter. Sometimes galls are formed in response to a fungal infection, and from a distance these pale, yellow-green, puffy structures look like flowers. The sweetleaf's compact, closely se inflorescences appear prior to the new leaves, near the branch tips of the previous season's growth. Each fragrant flower has five small sepals, five creamy white petals, numerous stamens arranged in fascicles, and a single pistil with a three-parted ovary. Sweetleaf fruits are small, elliptical drupes. Symplocaceae contains only two genera and about five hundred species from the tropics and subtropics. The family is sometimes included in the camellia order or placed with the ebony order. Sweetleaf, often called horsesugar, is sometimes grown for its decorative value."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 205 SYMPLOCACEAE Symplocos Family March 16, 1984 (flowers); July 3, 1984 (leaves and unripe fruit); September 16, 1984 (ripe fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000202 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/210 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 210 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:198 Tall Goldenrod Solidago Canadensis L. Hawkins, Julia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "A profusion of bright yellow blooms is provided each fall by the tall goldenrod in roadside ditches and old fields and along the borders of woods. This robust, perennial plant readily grows in disturbed habitats and later gives way to other types of vegetation, thus representing an early successional species. It rapidly spreads by means of rhizomes, establishing large colonies. Its leafy, aerial stems may grow to seven feet in height and become many branched in the inflorescence. Close examination of the flowering heads shows that they each contain several small ray and disk flowers. Sometimes growing with the rough-leaved tall goldenrod is a similar species, seaside goldenrod, which has smooth leaves and somewhat-larger flowers. Goldenrod is often, though wrongfully, thought to be a common cause of allergies; its pollen, however, is carried by bees and is not airborne. The goldenrods happen to bloom at the same time as ragweed and marsh elder, both notorious for their allergenic properties. Solidago is represented in Louisiana by nearly twenty additional species, including several rare ones."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 45 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family October 2, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000193 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/201 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 201 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Common Goldenrod.
lsu-sc-msw:199 Texas Coneflower Rudbeckia texana (Perdue) Cox & Urbatsch [Rudbeckia nitida Nutt. var. texana Perdue] Brown, Clair A. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Texas coneflower is restricted primarily to seasonally wet pine savannas of western Louisiana and eastern Texas. Relatively large, upright, ovate, basal leaves with long petioles grow from an underground rhizome, which by midsummer produces a robust, flowering shoot. Clasping the upright stem at rather evenly spaced intervals are several, progressively smaller, broadly ovate leaves. Each of its few branch tips supports a large, cone-shaped head with about a dozen showy, reflexed, bright yellow rays. The disk, composed of approximately three hundred individual flowers, is about two inches tall and green in the bud stage but becomes purplish brown as its flowers progressively open. Until recently, the populations in Louisiana and Texas were considered to be a variety of Rudbeckia nitida, whose geographic range extends from southern Alabama and Georgia into northern Florida. Research has shown R. texana to be specifically distinct. Rudbeckia is a genus of approximately twenty species, including the widespread and often cultivated R. hirta."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 45 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family June 19, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000178 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/183 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 183 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Giant Cone-flower. Scientific name as appears on drawing is Rudbeckia nitida.
lsu-sc-msw:19 Bird's-Foot Violet Viola pedata L. Pias, Pat Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "Bird's-foot violet, a popular wildflower, is our largest and perhaps most attractive member of the genus Viola. Its flowers consist of two pairs of upper petals and one lower, spurred petal. Two color forms are seen in the wild: in one, all five petals are uniformly lilac; in the other, which is much rarer, the two upper petals are deep, velvety violet. Clustered in the center of the flowers are five orange-tipped stamens. The three-to five-parted leaves of this plant arise from a short, underground stem and bear some resemblance to a bird's foot--hence, it's common name. Viola pedata, a perennial herb, commonly grows throughout the pinelands of Louisiana and is known from much of the eastern United States. Many other wild species of violets can be seen flowering in various habitats in the springtime. The pansy is a popular ornamental species of violet."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.184 VIOLACEAE Violet Family March 22, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000218 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/230 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 230 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:1 Allegheny Spurge Pachysandra procumbens Michx. Givens, Florence M.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Certain rich, beech-magnolia wooded hillsides in West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, represent the southwestern extent of the geographic distribution of Allegheny spurge. Propagating by horizontal stems, this species forms large colonies on the forest floor. The mottled, variegated leaves, an outstanding feature of this plant, occur only near the upturned branch tips. The rather small, imperfect flowers are clustered together in spikes about three inches long that arise from the base of the leafy stems. The inflorescence varies from being composed entirely of all pollen-producing flowers to having a few seed-producing ones below the staminate flowers. Both the male and the female perianths consist of four sepals and no petals. A three-horned capsule develops from the female flower. Literally, and in reference to the four white, fleshy filaments of each male flower, pachysandra means "having thick, pollen-bearing structures." In appropriate habitats Allegheny spurge provides an attractive ground cover. World wide, approximately one hundred species compose the box family including the often-used hedge plant, boxwood."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 49 BUXACEAE Box Family April 10, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000143 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/147 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 147 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:200 Titi Cyrilla racemiflora L. Barker, Nancy Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Much of the attractiveness of the titi is attributed to the numerous, many-flowered racemes clustered below the alternate, simple, shiny, dark green leaves. Its radially symmetric, fivemerous, white flowers appear in the late springtime. The subsequently developing clusters of small, dry fruits generally persist until the next flowering season and offer a good clue to the plant's identity. Similarly, the somewhat twisted and gnarled trunk with reddish cinnamon bark adds distinction and attractiveness to this plant. Titi is a dominant shrub or small tree along streams and in the bay head swamps of southeastern and west central Louisiana. It also grows throughout the southeastern United States, the West Indies, and northern South America, where it may become a fairly large tree."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 53 CYRILLACEAE Cyrilla Family June 1, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000055 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/68 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.7 KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 68 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:201 Toothwort Dentaria laciniata Muhl. Thomas, R. Dale Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 Lincoln Parish 1976-1989 "Toothwort is one of the early spring, woodland wildflowers. Its delicate stem usually supports three leaves clustered just below the inflorescence. Each leaf is palmately divided into three narrow lobes with toothy margins. A small cluster of about ten white-petaled flowers terminates the mostly naked stem. Typical for most flowers of the mustard family, those of the toothwort have four sepals, four petals, and six stamens. The underground perennial rhizome is rather succulent and edible, with a pleasant, pungent flavor."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 48 BRASSICACEAE Mustard Family March 5, 1984 (plants); April 6, 1984 (capsule) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000057 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/70 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 70 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:202 Tree Huckleberry Vaccinium arboreum Marsh. Odenwald, Neil Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Tree huckleberry is commonly found in upland areas throughout Louisiana, except for the coastal and Mississippi River floodplain parishes. This plant, normally a large shrub, may grow as tall as thirty feet. Its many outstanding qualities include its grayish brown outer bark, which peels off to reveal the reddish bard underneath. Its alternate, elliptic leaves are glossy green in summer, become purple to red in autumn, and are tardily deciduous. In the spring, a profusion of white, pendulous, urn-shaped, lily-of-the-valley-like-flowers appear on leafy racemes. Ten rather complex stamens with a sterile appendage and awns are concealed within the corolla. The dark purplish berries, about one-quarter of an inch in diameter, often persist on the plant well into the winter months. Although this species is a close relative of various commercially grown blueberries, its fruits are rather dry and flavorless. Tree huckleberry provides food for wildlife and has a number of potential uses in the landscape as well."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 56 ERICACEAE Heath Family April 5, 1978 (flowers); September 25, 1982 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000214 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/224 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 224 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Sparkleberry. Collection date for flowers as appears on drawing is April 5, 1982.
lsu-sc-msw:203 Trout Lily or Dog-Tooth Violet Erythronium rostratum W. Wolf Thomas, R. Dale||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Lincoln Parish 1976-1989 "Early spring brings a carpet of yellow trout lily blooms to the moist, rich woods of the southeastern United States. Because of the rareness of Erythronium in Louisiana, this spring spectacle can be observed in only a few localities. Trout lily is colonial: underground, spreading rhizomes give rise to new plants. The individual plants have a rather simple construction. A bulb, often buried several inches in the ground, produces two or three fleshy, unusual but attractive, brownish mottled, green leaves, which are the reason this plant is called trout lily or sometimes fawn lily. A similar pigment pattern is repeated in the six yellow perianth segments, which are flecked with brownish purple. The common name dog tooth violet is a misnomer, because this plant is unrelated to the violets."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 106 LILIACEAE Lily Family March 13, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000065 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/78 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 78 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:204 Trumpet Creeper Campsis radicans (L.) Seem. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Ascension Parish (flowers)||Washington Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "Spectacular clusters of bright, reddish orange, trumpet-shaped flowers announce the presence of trumpet creeper, a common, vigorous, woody vine of fencerows and woodland borders. The stems, which may grow to as much as fifty feet in length, attach themselves to tree trunks and masonry walls by means of aerial roots. This species possesses opposite, pinnately compound leaves with seven to ten coarsely toothed leaflets. Trumpet creeper, like its relatives the crossvine and the catalpa, bears long, slender fruits paced with numerous, papery, winged seeds. Trumpet creeper is cultivated for its flowers and nectar, which attract hummingbirds." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.47 BIGNONIACEAE Catalpa Family June 7, 1978 (flowers); April 8, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000032 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/34 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 34 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:205 Trumpet Honeysuckle or Coral Honeysuckle Lonicera sempervirens L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Lonicera sempervirens is commonly called trumpet honeysuckle or coral honeysuckle. It is a woody, twining or clambering vine widely distributed throughout the eastern United States. This species is often cultivated for its attractive tubular flowers, which are red on the outside and yellowish within. Because of their color, shape, and nectar production, these flowers are attractive to hummingbirds. Spherical fruits of various shades of yellow, orange, and red are produced in late summer and fall. The smooth, undivided leaves of coral honeysuckle occur in pairs. The uppermost pair is fused and completely surrounds the stem. The botanical name Lonicera commemorates the sixteenth-century German physician and naturalist Adam Lonicer. Its specific epithet means "evergreen"; plants grown in mild climate retain their leaves during the winter. Lonicera includes several popular ornamental shrubs and vines, as well as the weedy Japanese honeysuckle that grows abundantly throughout the southeast."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 50 CAPRIFOLIACEAE Honeysuckle Family April 27, 1978 (flowers); September 24, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000117 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/127 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 127 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears in the drawing is Native Honeysuckle.
lsu-sc-msw:206 Tulip Tree or Yellow Poplar Liriodendron tulipifera L. Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-05-05 1989 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, England 1976-1989 "Easily recognized by its apically truncate, four-lobed leaves, tulip tree is widespread on mesic sites in the eastern United States. In certain habitats, it may be a predominant forest species and a giant as well. The national champion tree, growing in Virginia, is reported to have a height of 124 feet and a trunk circumference of 30 feet 3 inches. Its scientific name, which literally means "tulip bearing tulip tree," seems redundant but emphatically calls attention to the tree's attractive flowers. Six yellowish green perianth parts, the same number as in the tulip flower, are each highlighted with a vivid orange basal spot. Three greenish, reflexed stamens unfurl below the petals, and within occur numerous stamens and pistils. The rather conelike aggregates of winged fruits persist on the tree after its leaves have been shed. Tulip tree is an attractive ornamental because of its pyramidal form, its ash gray bark of interlacing ridges, and its unusual flowers and foliage. It is also a useful timber species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 124 MAGNOLIACEAE Magnolia Family June, 1976 (flowers); August 25, 1976 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000113 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/242 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 242 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:207 Violet Ruellia or Wild Petunia Ruellia nudiflora (Engelm. & Gray) Urban Barker, Nancy||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Vermilion Parish 1976-1989 "Long, tubular, funnel-shaped, white, blue, or pink corollas are the trademark of Ruellia, a genus of about two hundred species found mostly in the American tropics and subtropics. Their resemblance to petunia is superficial, because the latter belongs in the nightshade family (Solanaceae). For Louisiana, six species of Ruellia have been recorded. Violet ruellia, an upright to sprawling herb with opposite leaves, grows to about thirty inches tall. Its inflorescences, terminal racemes of several flowers with five-lobed, lavender to violet corollas having four stamens attached within, appear in the summer. Several seeds attached to hooklike projections are formed in the two-parted, capsular fruit. The acanthus family, comprising about 2,500 species, is primarily tropical in distribution. Some species of Aphelandra, Crossandra, and Thunbergia (black-eyed susan), are cultivated as ornamentals. Acanthus leaves are said to have provided the motif for the Corinthian capitals in classical Greek temples."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 1 ACANTHACEAE Acanthus Family July 16, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000179 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/184 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 184 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:208 Violet Wood Sorrel Oxalis violacea L. Haag, Dr. W. G. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2005-08-10 1989 Evangeline Parish 1976-1989 "Violet wood sorrel is a delicate little plant that has been widely reported from dry, open woods throughout much of Louisiana. The trifoliolate leaves of this stemless plant arise from a scaly, underground bulb. Each of the leaflets is somewhat heart-shaped and usually violet to crimson beneath and green or variegated with purplish markings above. Like those of many Oxalis species, the leaflets exhibit sleep movements by folding down at night. Several five-merous, geraniumlike flowers are produced on each flowering stalk. Each of the petals, which may range in color from nearly white to violet, is tipped with an orange gland. Violet wood sorrel normally produces leaves and flowers in the spring, but in the late summer and fall it may flower without leaves. Although toxic in larger amounts, a substance called oxalic acid imparts a rather pleasant, sour taste to the foliage, which may be sparingly used to flavor salads. Oxalis is a genus of several hundred species. Some are useful as garden or indoor ornamentals, while others, such as yellow wood sorrel, are common, weedy species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 155 OXALIDACEAE Wood Sorrel Family April 4, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000141 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/145 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 145 8-bit 600 dpi Note on drawing: "Caution! The pink colour may be fugitive."
lsu-sc-msw:209 Virginia Iris Iris virginica L. Urbatsch, Lowell Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 IRIDACEAE Iris May 1, 1995 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000229 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/254 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-12-09 2017-02-02 24.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 254 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:20 Black Cherry Prunus serotina Ehrh. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Well known for its valuable wood used in making furniture and cabinets, black cherry is a common forest tree found throughout much of eastern North America. Bark on the younger branches characteristically shows horizontal silvery bands, and the older bark is an irregular patchwork of plates. In the vegetative state, this plant can be readily recognized by a line of reddish hairs along either side of the midvein on the lower side of its simple, alternate leaves. Its individual, white, plumlike flowers are arranged in cylindrical racemes. Five small sepals subtend the five white petals surrounding the twenty or so stamens. The cherries, which develop from the single simple pistil, are purplish black and usually less than one-half inch in diameter. Their flavor may vary from bitter to sweet, depending on the individual tree. Black cherry may grow quite large. The national champion, located in Michigan, is 132 feet tall."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 174 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 30, 1979 (flowers); May 25, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000164 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/168 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 168 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:210 Wafer Ash or Hop Tree Ptelea trifoliata L. Landry, Garrie||Reese, Bill (flowers)||Smith, Latimore (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 Lafayette Parish 1976-1989 "Wafer ash, a deciduous shrub or small tree, is known from Ontario, Canada, southward to central Florida and Mexico. Its alternate, trifoliolate leaves vaguely resemble those of poison ivy, which, of course, is a vine. Three kinds of flowers occur on individual plants: bisexual, pollen-bearing, and seed-bearing. All have minute sepals and four to five small, greenish petals. The pistillate flowers have imperfect, sterile anthers, and the staminate ones have nonfunctional pistils. "Wafer ash" describes the fruit, which consist of pale, yellowish green, disk-shaped samaras about the size of quarters. Typically, the fruits occur in relatively large, dense, conspicuous clusters. This species is actually not an ash but a member of the citrus family, and like others in this group, it is very aromatic. Crushed foliage and twigs have a strong musty odor."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 198 RUTACEAE Citrus Family April 29, 1980 (flowers); September 17, 1980 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000167 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/171 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 171 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Common Hoptree.
lsu-sc-msw:211 White Fringed Orchid Platanthera blephariglottis (Willd.) Lindley var. conspicua (Nash) Luer [Habenaria blephariglottis (Willd.) Hook.] Lievens, Alan W.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Although Louisiana is within its geographical range, this species has only recently been documented for pitcher plant bogs in St. Tammany Parish, where a few dozen plants have been observed. Because of their more robust size, the Gulf and Atlantic Coast plants are distinguished, by some investigators, at the varietal level from those of the northeastern United States. Typical plants of the southern variety may grow to about three feet tall and support a raceme of from thirty to fifty showy white flowers. The three sepals are similar in size to one another and are somewhat larger than the lateral petals. Formed by modification of the third petal, the large, fringed, spurred lip is described by the epithet blephariglottis, which means "having a tongue with eyelashes." The long, slightly recurved spur secretes nectar, making the flowers attractive to butterflies and moths, which serve as pollen vectors. The white fringed orchid is similar to the yellow fringed orchid and was once believed to be an albino form of its orange cousin."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 152 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family September 7, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000076 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/89 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 89 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing is Habenaria blephariglottis.
lsu-sc-msw:212 White Gaura Gaura lindheimeri Engelm. & Gray Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "White gaura, a perennial herb, is characterized by an underground, branching, woody stem and liberally branched, upright stems that support numerous narrow, elliptic leaves with coarse, widely spaced teeth. Near sunrise, the flower buds open, displaying four erect white petals and eight long, red-tipped, often drooping stamens. Its four sepals become reflexed, and as its petals age, they turn pink. Fruits forming from the ovary are rather inconspicuous, nutlike capsules. White gaura is sometimes cultivated for its spectacular, early morning floral displays. A few other species of Gaura grow in Louisiana, but they have somewhat less showy, pinkish flowers. The specific epithet commemorates Ferdinand Lindheimer, who resided in New Braunfels, Texas, and who is generally regarded as the father of Texas botany. Gaura, a member of the Onagraceae, is related to the evening primroses and Fuchia."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 148 ONAGRACEAE Evening Primrose Family May 14, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000072 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/85 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 85 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:213 White Indigo Baptisia alba (L.) Vent. [Baptisia lactea (Raf.) Thieret] [Baptisia leucantha Torr. & Gray] Landry, Garrie||Urbatsch Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "This conspicuous herbaceous perennial is generally found flowering in April and May along roadsides and in pastures in Louisiana. The plant may be as much as six feet tall with smooth, waxy, bluish green, zigzag stems and trifoliate leaves. Each plant produces several tall racemes of large, showy, papilionaceous flowers that are either entirely white or have purple-marked banner petals. The bladderlike seed pods, or legumes, produced after flowering are an inch or more in length and dark brown to black at maturity. The name for this plant has been somewhat uncertain. Both B. lacteal and B. leucantha have been used to refer to the species now called B. alba." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.72 FABACEAE Legume Family May 12, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000023 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/25 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 25 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing, Baptisia Leucantha.
lsu-sc-msw:214 White Milkweed Asclepias variegata L. Gladney, Mrs. Frank Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 Gloster Arboretum, Amite County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "The white milkweed is another member of the rich asclepiad flora of Louisiana. This stately plant, with its straight stems and broadly ovate, well-spaced, opposite leaves, generally grows in sandy, open woodlands. The spheroid clusters of white, bead-like buds become flowers with brilliant, white, reflexed corollas, spreading hoods, and purple columns. In the proper location, this species makes an interesting garden perennial. As with other milkweeds, transplanting is difficult, and propagation from seeds or by root cuttings is generally more successful." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.7 ASCLEPIADACEAE Milkweed Family May 24, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000016 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/16 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne Capturing Software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 16 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:215 White Texas Trillium Trillium texanum Buckl. MacRoberts, D.T. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Caddo Parish 1976-1989 "The rare white Texas trillium inhabits rich, wet woodlands and is known from a few counties in eastern Texas and from Caddo Parish, Louisiana. It was not discovered in Louisiana until 1977. Because of its rareness, Trillium texanum is being considered for protection under the Federal Endangered Species Act. It is the only species in Louisiana with white flowers and the only one in this state that represents the subgenus of Trillium characterized by stalked flowers. Although several species in the subgenus have nodding flowers, white Texas trillium has upright flowers. Like other trilliums, its leaflike bracts, sepals, petals, and pistil are three-parted, and its stamens number six. The bracts of white Texas trillium are not mottled like those of other trilliums in Louisiana but uniformly green. The few populations in Caddo Parish occur in remote areas and apparently are not in imminent danger of extinction, unless forestry activities significantly alter the sites. Trilliums would make interesting garden plants if grown in natural habitats. Propagation by seeds is usually successful, but two or three years are required for plants to flower."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. LILIACEAE Lily Family April 4, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000210 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/218 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 218 8-bit 600 dpi Plant on left
lsu-sc-msw:216 White Violet Viola primulifolia L. Hawkins, Mrs. R. M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Allen Parish 1976-1989 "The white violet (right) is exceedingly common in wet habitats such as bogs, ditch banks, and woodland streams throughout most of Louisiana. It is a stemless, white-flowered species that is readily distinguished from Viola lanceolata by its broader, shorter leaves and often heart-shaped leaf bases. Its spurred lower petal and its two lateral petals have violet to somewhat brownish veins. The lateral petals may bear several crowded hairs at their bases, forming a so-called beard. Its fruit, like that of other violets, is a three-parted capsule that opens rather explosively in order to disseminate its seeds more widely. Violets are relatively easy to grow as ornamentals if planted in a rich, moist, somewhat-shady habitat."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 208 VIOLACEAE Violet Family May 15, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000217 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/229 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 229 8-bit 600 dpi Viola lanceolata ssp. Vittata (Narrow-Leaved White Violet) on left and Viola primulifolia (White Violet) on right. Common name as appears on drawing is Primrose-Leaved Violet.
lsu-sc-msw:217 White Water Lily or Alligator Bonnet Nymphaea odorata Ait. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "White water lily is one of the most common and best known of our aquatic plants. It is commonly found growing in ponds, lakes, and ditches from Arizona northward to eastern Canada. A substantial rhizome system generally forms on the substrate beneath the water. Often called "lily pads," the floating leaf blades are circular and about ten inches in diameter. The cup-shaped, generally fragrant, floating flowers are composed of numerous petals; the inner ones are transitional to the many yellow stamens. On sunny days, the flowers open wide during morning hours but close in the afternoon. Upon pollination by insects, the flowers close and the flower stalks coil, withdrawing the young fruit below the water's surface, where it matures. The genus Nymphaea comprises approximately fifty species, which grow in temperate and tropical regions. Numerous hybrids and plants in a variety of color selections are grown as ornamentals, but the use of native species for this purpose should not be overlooked."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 136 NYMPHAEACEAE Water Lily Family May 13, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000134 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/141 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 141 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:218 Whorled Pogonia Isotria verticillata (Muhl. Ex Willd.) Raf. Phillips, Eloyce Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Winn Parish 1976-1989 "Whorled pogonia is a delicate perennial found along streams in rich woodlands throughout much of the eastern United States. Although generally regarded as rare to uncommon, this orchid may often be overlooked because of its short stature and inconspicuous but large flowers. A single, upright, hollow stem about ten inches tall typically supports a whorl of five leaves and one large flower borne on a relatively long pedicel. Each of the three slender, spreading sepals is about two inches long and purplish. The column, a specialized structure composed of the stamens and the pistil, is surrounded by the lateral petals and the lip. Both lateral petals are a pale yellowish green, the same color as the central part of the lip, which is also edged in purple. Whorled pogonia's early springtime appearance has been recorded in several central and northern parishes in Louisiana. Plants seen in the vegetative condition in St. Tammany Parish also appear to be this species. Colonies of whorled pogonia are reported to lie dormant for ten or more years until conditions become conducive for flowering."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 151 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family April 9, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000102 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/118 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 118 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Large Whorled Pogonia.
lsu-sc-msw:219 Wild Azalea Rhododendron canescens (Michx.) Sw. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "This well-known, large, deciduous-leaved shrub inhabits moist, sandy soils along many of the streams in Louisiana and the southeastern United States. Mature individuals may be nearly twenty feet tall. Their alternate leaves range from one to four inches long and are often crowded near the branch tips. A tangled mass of small, soft hairs typically cover this plant's twigs and lower leaf surfaces. Flowering buds are formed by midsummer and remain a prominent feature of this plant after its autumnal leaf drop. Immediately preceding or occurring with the new leaves in early spring, innumerable clusters of tubular, fragrant flowers completely cover the plant. Because of the shape of its corolla and its floral fragrance, this plant is sometimes called honeysuckle azalea. Colors of the petals vary from nearly white to a deep pink, depending on the genetic constitution of the individual. Wild azalea grows well in cultivation in moist, sandy acid soil and needs a sunny location to flower profusely."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 70 ERICACEAE Heath Family April 8, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000173 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/178 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 178 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:21 Black Locust Robinia pseudoacacia L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Originally native to the Appalachian and Ozark Mountains, black locust is now naturalized throughout much of the United States and Europe. This often-cultivated ornamental produces copious amounts of seed, and unless controlled, it will generally form thickets by means of root sprouts once it is established. Wood from the trunks is said to be highly resistant to decay and is useful for posts and pilings. Black locust is a medium-size tree normally growing to about sixty feet tall. Leaves of this species are alternate and pinnately compound with as many as twenty-five leaflets. At the base of the leaf stalk and modified from the stipules is a pair of sharp spines that may be up to one inch in length. Appearing in the spring, its lovely, delicately fragrant flowers hang in pendulous racemes. The petals of the pealike flowers are a creamy white, and the standard bears a yellow patch. When fully formed, black locust bears beanlike pods about four inches long."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 92 FABACEAE Legume Family April 10, 1979 (flowers); October 1979 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000175 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/180 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 180 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:220 Wild Ginger Hexastylis arifloia (Michx.) Small Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Wild ginger grows in the rich, moist soil of shady hardwood forests of southeastern Louisiana. Long petioles, which arise from a short underground stem, support mottled, fleshy, evergreen, triangular leaf blades. Typically, one or two such leaves are formed each season, but with good growing conditions, several leaves develop. The unusual, fleshy, reddish brown flowers are found in the leaf litter and are generally seen only by the informed, alert naturalist. Lacking petals, the flowers consist of a fleshy calyx fused into a jug-shaped structure that contains the stamens and pistils. Wild ginger has a pleasant, gingerlike aroma and, reportedly, has been used as a seasoning. Under certain garden conditions, this plant may be a useful and interesting groundcover."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 6 ARISTOLOCHIACEAE Birthwort Family April 8, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000084 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/97 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 97 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:221 Wild Hyacinth Camassia scilloides (Raf.) Cory Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "The wild hyacinth has attractive racemes of pale blue or lavender flowers that may reach two feet in height. Like many liliaceous flowers, the wild hyacinth has sepals that are colorful and as large as the petals. The numerous, rather fleshy, grasslike leaves are crowded near the base of the stem, which grows from an underground bulb. Wild hyacinth is rare in Louisiana, growing only in the extreme northwestern part of the state. The specific name draws attention to the resemblance of wild hyacinth to the cultivated species of Old World Scilla." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.105 LILIACEAE Lily Family April 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000031 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/33 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 33 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:222 Wild Hydrangea or Seven Bark Hydrangea arborescens L. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Wild hydrangea is widespread in the deciduous forests of the eastern United States. It is known from only a few localities in Louisiana, which is on the southwestern edge of this species range. Wild hydrangea is generally a shrub, but it may have weak stems that trail along the ground and root at the nodes. Bark of the older, larger stems is brown and, when it exfoliates, forms thin, papery patches. Leaves of wild hydrangea are opposite and simple, with mostly ovate blades, conspicuously serrate margins, and lighter green, somewhat-pubescent lower surfaces. At the ends of the branches are fairly large, convex clusters with a mixture of tiny fertile and sterile flowers. The sterile flowers develop on the ends of the inflorescence clusters and consist of three to four broadly elliptic, petal-like sepals. Beneath the sterile flowers are the fertile ones, which are bisexual with a fivemerous perianth and eight to ten stamens. The strongly ribbed ovary forms a brown, cup-shaped capsule. Wild hydrangea is readily distinguished from oakleaf hydrangea, which sometimes grows in the same habitat, by its unlobed leaves and convex inflorescence. Wild hydrangea makes an interesting plant in the shade garden, and various selections with more numerous, showy, sterile flowers are available."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 200 SAXIFRAGACEAE Saxifrage Family May 20, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000086 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/99 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 99 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:223 Wild strawberry Fragaria virginiana Duchesne Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "Although wild strawberry has been reported in scattered localities, the species is rather uncommon in Louisiana. The wild species is similar to the familiar cultivated type. Both kinds develop runners that produce new plants and have ternately compound leaves with long petioles that attach at the base of the plant. Their leaflet margins are conspicuously toothed. Clusters of white-petaled, yellow-centered flowers are similarly long-stalked. The generic name Fragaria refers to the luscious fragrant fruits that are smaller, but much sweeter, than those of most cultivated types."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 196 ROSACEAE Rose Family April 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000070 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/83 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 83 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:224 Wind Flower Anemone caroliniana Walt. Carroll, Neil Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "In central and northern Louisiana, isolated patches of alkaline soils restrict tree growth, allowing prairielike vegetation to flourish. In this region, the wind flower is one of the earliest wildflowers to appear among the brownish mats of last season's grasses and prairie herbs. The showy, solitary flowers appear on stems from a few to several inches tall, lack petals, but have from ten to twenty strap-shaped, white to rose sepals. The outer ones are lavender to dark purple beneath. The leaves number from one to three and are divided into narrow segments. Each cone-shaped flower produces scores of densely pubescent fruits, which erupt at maturity and form globular, woolly masses. The wind removes the cottony propagules individually or in small aggregates and carries them away from the parent plant." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.193 RANUNCULACEAE Buttercup Family March 25, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000008 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/42 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 42 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:225 Woodland Red Trillium Trillium recurvatum Beck MacRoberts, D.T. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Caddo Parish 1976-1989 "Woodland red trillium, like red trillium, has three mottled, leaflike bracts and a single, sessile, upright flower. Woodland red trillium, however, is somewhat taller, often growing to about fifteen inches in height, and has larger bracts and larger flowers with strongly reflexed sepals, a feature noted in its specific epithet. The flowers of the Trillium recurvatum lack the strong, unpleasant, carrionlike odor of red trillium. Woodland red trillium has petals that bow outward in the middle and anthers that curve inward. This species grows more abundantly in Illinois and Indiana and reaches the southern limit of its geographic range in northern Louisiana, where it has been recorded from about seven parishes. Trillium is a genus mostly of temperate areas. Approximately forty of its fifty species grow in North America; the remainders are found in Asia. The genus is traditionally divided into two groups: one with stalked flowers, the other with stalkless flowers. Four of the five species, native to Louisiana, belong to the latter group."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 118 LILIACEAE Lily Family April 4, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000210 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/219 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 219 8-bit 600 dpi Plant on right
lsu-sc-msw:226 Yellow Butterwort Pinguicula lutea Walt. Brown, Clair A. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Although small in stature and deceptively attractive, the insectivorous yellow butterwort must seem like a menacing monster to a variety of insects. Glandular hairs secrete a viscous fluid that entraps and subsequently digests small creatures that alight on the plant's leaves. The leaf margins roll upward-a mechanism that seems to aid this plant's eating habits. Insectivory provides yellow butterwort with nutrients and is a means of survival in its native habitat, the nutrient-poor, wet pine savannas and bogs of the coastal plain from extreme southeastern Louisiana eastward to North Carolina and Florida. Flowers of this species, which are held about six inches above its rosette are large and showy and are characterized by a large, nectar-secreting spur petal. If provided with appropriate light and moisture conditions, yellow butterwort can be propagated from seeds and planted in the garden."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 103 LENTIBULARIACEAE Bladderwort Family March 13, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000153 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/157 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 13.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 157 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:227 Yellow Candy Root Polygala nana (Michx.) DC. Givens, Florence M.||Tucker, Shirley C. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 East Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Yellow candy root (left) normally develops a basal rosette of blunt-tipped leaves from which several ascending to upright stems arise. The branch apices terminate in dense clusters of lemon yellow flowers. Of the five sepals composing the calyx, two are considerably larger than the other three and are petal-like. Its corolla is fused along two-thirds its length and bears a lobed crest. An aril, a fleshy appendage typical of the candy root, is seen on the shiny, black seeds of this species. Polygala nana has somewhat the same appearance as the orange candy root, but it is shorter, a fact noted by the specific epithet nana, meaning "dwarf." Yellow candy root grows in wet, sandy soils of bogs and pine savannas and blooms throughout the summer. Although many are attractive wildflowers, species in Polygala are of limited economic importance. Snake root (P. senega) of eastern North America has been used by the Seneca Indians as a cure for snakebites."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 190 POLYGALACEAE Milkwort Family April 2, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000161 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/250 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 250 8-bit 600 dpi Polygala nana (left) and Polygala lutea (right) both appear in this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:228 Yellow False Foxglove Aureolaria dispersa (Small) Penn. Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-27 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Aureolaria dispersa may be found from late summer through autumn in open, sandy pine-oak woods in the lower one-half of Louisiana and also in Texas eastward to Alabama. The plant's lower leaves are often deeply pinnately lobed, and its large, glossy, yellow flowers cling solitarily or in pairs, forming racemes at the numerous branch tips of this perennial. The corollas may be as long as two inches and are suitable for visitation by certain bees. Four anthers, located near the entrance in the upper part of the corolla, are positioned to apply pollen to the backs of such visitors. Like many species in the figwort family Aureolaria is a root parasite on other kinds of plants." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.201 SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family September 8, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000021 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/21 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 21 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:229 Yellow Fringed Orchid Platanthera ciliaris (L.) Lindley [Habenaria ciliaris (L.) R. Br.] Smith, Latimore||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Although yellow fringed orchid is known to exist in a number of localities throughout much of Louisiana, it is nevertheless uncommon. This species grows mainly in bogs and wet pine savannas, where its apricot-colored flowers dot the late-summer landscape. Roots of this plant are tuberous, and each plant typically develops a single, upright stem with two to four glossy green leaves. From thirty to sixty flowers compose the terminal racemes. As with most orchids, flowers of the yellow fringed orchid have three sepals and three petals. The cup-shaped dorsal sepal nearly conceals the tiny, fringed, lateral petals, and the other two sepals project laterally from the flower's center. Like the white fringed orchid, this species has flowers that bear a long, curved spur and an intricately fringed, tongue-shaped lip. Nectar secreted within the spur mainly attracts swallowtail butterflies, the plant's principal pollinator."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 160 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family August 22, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000077 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/90 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 90 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name given on the drawing is Habenaria ciliaris.
lsu-sc-msw:22 Black Titi or Buckwheat Tree Cliftonia monophylla (Lam.) Britt. Ex Sarg. Pope, Tom Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Black titi is a rather common shrub of the acid bogs and wet woodlands of the southeastern coastal plain, but only recently were about fifty plants discovered in St. Tammany Parish in Louisiana. Black titi often forms dense stands. Its rounded form is created by many-branched twigs that bear numerous dark green, leathery, shiny, mostly evergreen leaves. One to several racemes of flowers appear in the late spring from near the branch tips that were formed in the previous season. Petal color may vary from white, which is the most common, to pink. Subsequent to flowering, this plant develops small, dry, two-to five-winged fruits that resemble those of the unrelated buckwheat, thus accounting for this plant's being called the buckwheat tree."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.53 CYRILLACEAE Cyrilla Family March 25, 1987 (flowers); October, 1981 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000047 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/60 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 60 8-bit 600 dpi The drawing's dates could be read 1981 or 1987.
lsu-sc-msw:230 Yellow Fringeless Orchid Platanthera integra (Nutt.) Gray ex Beck [Habenaria integra (Nutt.) Spreng.] McInnis, Nelwyn Gilmore||Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Compared with the fringed orchids in Louisiana, the yellow fringeless orchid is smaller and differs in several floral features. Its racemes of golden yellow flowers appear from mid-to late summer, and they are conical in the bud stage and cylindrical when in flower. Unlike the fringed orchids, this plant has a floral lip with a margin that is merely scalloped, and the specific name integra describes this condition. The lateral sepals spread at right angles to the lip and to the dorsal sepal, which arches over and surrounds the lateral petals and the column of the flower. Yellow fringeless orchid closely resembles Platanthera cristata, the crested orchid, which grows in similar habitats. Yellow fringeless orchid is known to grow in only four or five locations in Louisiana. It is one of the many rare species of plants that grow in boglike habitats, giving additional support to their significance as a home for unusual flora."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 153 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family July 16, 1989 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000078 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/91 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 91 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing is Habernaria Platanthera integra.
lsu-sc-msw:231 Yellow Lady's Slipper Cypripedium kentuckiense C. F. Reed [Cypripedium calceolus L.] Barton, Paula||Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 Natchitoches Parish 1976-1989 "Yellow lady's slipper orchid is rare in the rich, deciduous woods of central Louisiana. The unusual yellow, pouchlike slipper is formed by the lower petal, or lip, which differs considerably from the other two lance-shaped, spirally twisted, purple-brown petals. Contained within the slipper is the column, composed of two functional stamens, the stigma, and the style. The three sepals are similar in color to the lateral petals but are broader. Three to five pleated leaves are supported on stems that may reach two feet tall. Until recently, the yellow lady's slippers in the eastern United States had been called Cypripedium calceolus, but investigations suggest that the plants found from Louisiana to Kentucky make up a distinct species that should be called C. kentuckiense. Beautiful and unusual, the yellow lady's slipper is difficult to grow because of its specific requirements."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 158 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family April 24, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000054 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/67 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 67 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:232 Yellow Meadow Beauty Rhexia lutea Walt. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Yellow meadow beauty is the only species of Rhexia to have yellow flowers. Like the smooth meadow beauty, it inhabits pitcher plant bogs and wet pine savannas from northern Florida westward to eastern Texas. It is a bushier plant that grows to about fifteen inches in height and bears more numerous, but somewhat smaller, flowers with short, straight stamens. This species also would provide and interesting, colorful, summer flowering ornamental if given a suitable location. The name Rhexia was taken from some of the ancient naturalist who used it for an unknown plant. Melastomataceae is a family of about four thousand species mostly of shrubs and small trees with a circumtropical and subtropical distribution. They are richly represented in the Brazilian flora. Several of the profusely flowering species of melastomes are grown in their native tropics, but unfortunately they would not be hardy where low temperatures occur."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 145 MELASTOMATACEAE Meadow Beauty Family May 13, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000172 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/177 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 177 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Yellow Rhexia.
lsu-sc-msw:233 Yellow Passion Flower Passiflora lutea L. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 Lafourche Parish 1976-1989 "Yellow passion flower and maypop represent our two common native species of Passiflora. The two differ in a number of features. Yellow passion flower vines are smaller and less vigorous, and their leaves are smaller with three, shallow, rounded lobes. Flowers of yellow passion flower are about one inch in diameter and more delicate. Their five showy sepals and five petals are a pale yellow to yellowish green. The corona is composed of two series of filaments that vary in color from pale yellow to pinkish to white. Within the central part of the flower is a stalk, called the androgynophore, supporting the stamens and the pistil with its prominently three-lobed stigma. The edibility of the fruits, which are dark purple berries about one inch in length, is unknown. Yellow passion flower is quite common in moist, shady habitats and would be an interesting garden plant in such areas."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 166 PASSIFLORACEAE Passion Flower Family August 22, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000145 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/149 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 149 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:234 Yellow Pitcher Plant Sarracenia alata Wood Brown, Clair A. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "The yellow pitcher plant is a colorful and unusual plant found in bogs and wet savannas. Pitcher plants are carnivorous, i.e., they are capable of 'trapping' and digesting insects and small animals. Their remarkable, funnel-like leaves are well adapted to attract and entrap prey. Provided with nectar glands and intricate patterns of bright coloration, they lure insects into the pitchers. A slippery surface around the mouth of the pitcher causes small creatures to lose their footing and fall inside the leaf. Downward-pointing hairs lining the pitcher's inner surface inhibit prey from escaping. The lid, reflexed over the top of its tubular leaf, does not snap down to entrap small animals, contrary to popular belief, but seems to prevent rainwater from diluting the digestive enzymes inside. Flowers of the yellow pitcher plant occur singly at the apices of long, leafless, nodding scapes. Each flower possesses three bracts, five small sepals, five pendulous, bright yellow petals, and numerous stamens. The large, inverted, umbrella-like style, unique to pitcher plants, encourages cross-pollination by forming passageways for insects to enter and leave the flower."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 178 SARRACENIACEAE Pitcher Plant Family March 30, 1977 (flowers); April 12, 1977 (leaves) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000184 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/192 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 192 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:235 Yellow Pond Lily or Cow Lily Nuphar luteum (L.) Sibth. & Smith ssp. macrophyllum (Small) Beal Hawkins, Julia||Hawkins, Murray Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Yellow pond lily commonly grows in the shallow, sluggish water of bayous, ditches, ponds, and swamps of Louisiana and the eastern United States. Extensive rhizomes serve to firmly anchor the plants to the mud of such habitats. Their dark green, broadly oval leaf blades may vary in length from ten to twenty inches, and petioles two to three times as long secure them to the rhizome. The leaves may be immersed in water, float on its surface, or emerge from it. Submerged leaves, however, have a generally thinner and somewhat more crisped blades than do emergent ones. Typically, the golden yellow flowers, which float on or just below the water's surface, are tethered to the rhizome by long peduncles. Six or more rather fleshy, concave, petal-like sepals composed the perianth, which subtends the numerous stamens. The compound ovary forms a many-seeded fruit. Even though these plants are called lilies, they are very distantly related; in fact, they are not monocots but dicots."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 146 NYMPHAEACEAE Water Lily Family May 12, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000132 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/140 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 140 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Yellow Cow-Lily.
lsu-sc-msw:236 Yellow Star-Grass Hypoxis hirsuta (L.) Cov. Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "Referring to this species as a grass is clearly a misnomer. Although leaves of this plant are long and grasslike, its large yellow flowers place it in the amaryllis family or, according to some, in its own family, the Hypoxidaceae. The densely hairy leaves of this stemless plant arise from a cormlike rhizome often buried deep within the soil. On well-established plants, several flowering stalks, each with numerous flowers, are produced. Its perianth is indeed starlike, with six well-spaced, bright yellow segments. The stamens also number six, and the three-parted pistil within the flower matures into a capsule with many, rather rough, black, shiny seeds. Yellow star-grass usually grows on well-drained soils in open woodlands, meadows, and pastures."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 3 AMARYLLIDACEAE Amaryllis Family April 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000091 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/109 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 109 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:237 Yellow lotus Nelumbo lutea (Willd.) Pers. Hawkins, Julia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Yellow lotus, an emergent aquatic plant of fresh and brackish water, grows in ponds, bayous, and quiet streams throughout the eastern United States. This species is characterized by horizontal, underwater stems and large, disk-shaped leaf blades that rise above the water on long, stout stalks. Its solitary, showy, yellow flowers are about six to ten inches in diameter and are composed of numerous perianth parts and spirally inserted stamens. Featured within the flower's center is an enlarged receptacle with several pistils partially embedded in it. At maturity, the receptacle, with its nutlike fruits, becomes brown and woody and is often used in dried-flower arrangements. Its underwater stems are edible, and so are its seeds, which may be eaten--raw or boiled--at an immature or mature stage. Yellow lotus may be cultivated for its attractive flowers and fruits. Nelumbo nucifera, the ornamentally grown sacred lotus of the Old World, is characterized by pink flowers and is occasionally seen in the wild."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 134 NYMPHAEACEAE Water Lily Family September 5, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000130 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/243 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.5 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 243 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:238 Zigzag Stemmed Iris Iris brevicaulis Raf. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Zigzag stemmed iris is commonly found growing along the edges of freshwater ponds and swamps throughout southern Louisiana, where it blooms from April to June. Unlike the other native blue irises, this one is short, growing to about two feet. It is further characterized by its slender, underground rhizome and its numerous leaves that overtop the flowers. The large, attractive flowers of this species have deep blue to purple perianth parts and generally occur singly on short stalks that arise from near each leaf base. The sepals are large with yellowish crests; the petals are slightly smaller, generally upright, and lack crests. The plant's fruiting capsules are about one to two inches long and contain numerous seeds. Iris brevicaulis grows from eastern Texas to Alabama and northward to Kansas and Ohio. Like other species of iris, this one is a popular horticultural subject and is easily grown, provided it receives sufficient moisture."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 84 IRIDACEAE Iris Family May 22, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000097 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/114 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 114 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:23 Blazing Star Liatris pycnostachya Michx. Barker, Nancy||Givens, Florence, M.||Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Long, cylindrical spikes crowded with heads of pinky purple flower characterize the blazing star, a species found in moist, prairielike habitats of the midcontinent. Blazing star mostly grows in colonies and offers a colorful show when in flower. One to several unbranched, upright, copiously pubescent stems of this plant arise from a cormlike, underground rhizome. Numerous long, narrow leaves cluster at the plant's base, and abundant, progressively shorter leaves crowd the full length of the stem to the inflorescence base. Each of the heads is surrounded by green to purple bracts and contains approximately eight separate flowers. Liatris pycnostachya is one of our most common species of blazing star. Several other Liatris species grow in the wild in Louisiana, and all offer considerable potential as attractive ornamentals."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 44 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 17, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000106 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/236 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 236 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:24 Bloodroot Sanguinaria canadensis L. Thomas, R. Dale||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Lincoln Parish 1976-1989 "Rich woodlands at higher latitudes of eastern North America abound with this representative of the poppy family that flowers in early spring. Northern Louisiana, where only a few populations of bloodroot are known, represents the southernmost point in the geographic range of this northern plant. The delicate nature of bloodroot offers several admirable qualities from the time its palmately divided, blue-green leaves unfold and its short-lived flowers drop their many creamy white petals until the formation of its narrowly elliptic, upright capsules. Both its generic and its common names denote the reddish sap profusely exuded by injured rhizomes. During the past few years, Sanguinaria has practically become a household word because of the discovery of a substance from its roots that, when used as a toothpaste additive, helps control dental plaque. Bloodroot is an interesting ornamental if planted in a natural wooded setting. The Papaveraceae, a family of about 250 species of mostly north temperate distribution, includes many popular ornamentals such as prickly poppies and the California poppies. The many alkaloids produced by the opium poppy, P. somniferum, are of great medicinal value."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 155 PAPAVERACEAE Poppy Family March 5, 1984 (flowers); March 14, 1984 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000183 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/191 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 191 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date for fruit as appears on image is March 14, 1979.
lsu-sc-msw:25 Blue Jasmine or Blue Leather Flower Clematis crispa L. Hawkins, Julia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Bell-shaped, cerulean blue flowers adorn the branches of this vine found in the rich, moist soils of marshes and woodland borders. Although the flowers lack petals, they are nevertheless attractive because of the four rather fleshy, petal-like sepals, which have attenuate, upturned tips. Within the calyces are numerous stamens and pistils, which form rather long-tailed fruits. Blue jasmine has opposite, pinnately compound leaves with three to five leaflets. This perennial herbaceous vine is worthy of cultivation for its attractive, unusual flowers. A number of other interesting and colorful leather flowers grow in Louisiana and adjacent states. For example, C. texensis of central Texas is a species with scarlet flowers. The more commonly cultivated species of Clematis, with the large, disk-shaped flowers, are imports mostly native to China."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.193 RANUNCULACEAE Buttercup Family April 30, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000045 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/58 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 58 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as a[[ears on drawing is Leather-flower. Collector name as appears on drawing is Mrs. Murray Hawkins.
lsu-sc-msw:26 Blue Larkspur Delphinium carolinianum Walt. Derstine, Kittie S. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "Stately racemes of large, pale blue to violet flowers of the larkspur sit atop upright stems that bear alternate, palmately dissected leaves. The flowers have unusual, colorful, petal-like sepals; the upper one forms a long spur in which nectar is produced. The petals are much smaller and less showy, and the upper two may also form spurs that fit inside the spur of the upper sepal. The ovary is three-parted, and at maturity, each segment forms an upright follicle containing many seeds. Blue larkspur is a perennial found throughout the southeastern United States. In Louisiana, it may grow abundantly in very restricted, specialized habitats such as the calcareous prairie openings that dot the north-central part of this state. Delphinium, with approximately two hundred species, is a diverse genus primarily of the Northern Hemisphere. Several species of Delphinium, including D. carolinianum, are generally available for use in ornamental plantings."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 172 RANUNCULACEAE Buttercup Family June 7, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000056 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/69 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 69 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:27 Blue Mist Flower Eupatorium coelestinum L. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Undoubtedly the blue mist flower, which grows along the edges of woods and in wet meadows and roadside ditches, is one of the most conspicuous of the autumn wildflowers. Its numerous compactly clustered heads of disk flowers have bright, ageratum blue corollas. Their elongated branches give the flower clusters a diffuse, misty appearance. The specific epithet coelestinum means heavenly and refers to the attractiveness of this plant's floral features. The opposite leaves of this species typically exhibit long petioles and triangular leaf blades. Blue mist flower may be planted in the garden or allowed to proliferate in natural settings. Its habit is perennial, and it may be propagated by root cuttings or from seed."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 11 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 28, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000067 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/80 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 80 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Mist Flower.
lsu-sc-msw:28 Blue Water Lily Nymphaea elegans Hook. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 Cameron Parish 1976-1989 "Blue water lily inhabits canals, marshes, ponds, and swamps near the Gulf Coast from northeastern Mexico to Florida. This species is frequently seen in Cameron Parish, Louisiana, but appears to be rare or absent elsewhere in the state. A short, tuber-bearing rhizome anchors the plant to the mud in relatively shallow water. Its floating, orbicular to broadly oval-shaped leaf blades are dark green above and may be red to purple beneath, and they resemble those of the more common white water lily. The faintly fragrant flowers of blue water lily are generally supported above the water and have several pale blue petals that intensify in color when dried. In typical water lily fashion, the central part of the flower contains many yellow stamens. Numerous small seeds are formed in the somewhat-globose capsules. Like other species of Nymphaea, this one would provide an attractive addition to the garden pond."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 147 NYMPHAEACEAE Water Lily Family September 16, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000133 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/245 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 245 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:29 Blue-Eyed Grass Sisyrinchium atlanticum Bickn. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Growing in many-stemmed clumps in meadows and pastures and along roadsides, blue-eyed grass creates colorful springtime floral vistas. The ephemeral flowers, usually lasting a day or part of a day, are arranged in umbrella-like clusters and arise from between a pair of bracts called spathes. The perianth has a yellow center, or eye, and is composed of six petal-like, blue-violet members, each with a small point. Although several species of Sisyrinchium are indigenous to Louisiana, knowledge of their taxonomy is poor, making the application of correct names difficult. Some of the species are rather weedy, small annuals with white, yellow, or dingy violet flowers. Indeed, the name blue-eyed grass is misleading not only because the flower color varies but also because this species is not a grass but a member of the iris family. This plant's relation to the irises is supported by details of its floral structure: the six perianth members, three stamens, and inferior ovary."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 100 IRIDACEAE Iris Family April 17, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000191 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/199 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 199 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:2 American Bluehearts and Florida Bluehearts Buchnera americana L. and Buchnera floridana Gandog. Smith, Latimore (americana)||Tucker, Shirley C. (floridana) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Tangipahoa Parish (americana)||St. Tammany Parish (floridana) 1976-1989 "Two species from the same family appear on this watercolor drawing. In late spring and summer, spikes of small, bluish flowers of the bluehearts commonly appear among the diverse flora of the wet pine savannas of the coastal plain of Louisiana and the Southeast. As many as six flowers may appear on each spike; each flower is composed of five, somewhat-unequal petals. Along the stems, which may attain a height of two feet, are several pairs of opposite, lance-shaped leaves. The number of veins in the leaves is an important characteristic in distinguishing between the two species of bluehearts, which may grow in mixed colonies. American bluehearts (right) have single-veined lower leaves, and the Florida bluehearts (left) have three-veined lower leaves. The genus Buchnera contains about one hundred species, which mostly inhabit the Old World tropics and subtropics." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p. 202. SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family May 13, 1981 (americana); May 15, 1981 (floridana) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000027 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/29 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 29 8-bit 600 dpi Two plants of the same family with slightly different names appear on this watercolor drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:30 Bog Camas Zigadenus leimanthoides Gray Givens, Florence M.||Lemke, David Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Bog camas has a bulbous base covered with a fibrous coat formed from the bases of previous leaves. Its several, long, tapering, grasslike leaves rise from near ground level. Except for a few bracts, the flower stalk, which grows to about three feet tall, is leafless. The flowers, compactly arranged in branching racemes, are nearly one-half inch across. Each has a six creamy white to greenish perianth segments bearing a darker yellow spot and one or two basal glands (a feature alluded to by the generic name). The lower flowers of the inflorescence are functionally bisexual and form capsular fruits. The upper flowers contain either stamens alone or stamens and nonfunctional pistils. Bog camas inhabits wet, sandy, pine savannas and bogs mostly in the coastal plain of the southeastern United States. This plant is rare in Louisiana, reported only from St. Tammany Parish. Zigadenus contains approximately fifteen species that are commonly called camas because of their similarity to another liliaceous genus, Camassia. The foliage and roots of Zigadenus are reported to be toxins to sheep and other grazing animals, and the nectar of the flowers is said to contain poisonous alkaloids. There are some reports of humans being poisoned after camas bulbs were mistakenly consumed as onions."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 140 LILIACEAE Lily Family May 1, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000222 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/234 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.5 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 234 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Feather Bells.
lsu-sc-msw:31 Bog Sunflower Helianthus heterophyllus Nutt. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Unlike the annual sunflower, which is widely distributed in the wild and grown commercially and in gardens, several species of Helianthus are rare to uncommon and restricted to specialized habitats. Bog sunflower is primarily a Gulf Coastal Plain perennial that inhabits wet pine savannas and flatwoods. In Louisiana, it is known to grow in three southeastern parishes. Flower heads, which appear in late summer, are about two inches across and consist of numerous yellow rays and many purple disk flowers. Several long, lance-shaped leaves form a basal rosette. The leaves progressively become much reduced and more widely spaced up the stem. The epithet heterophyllus describes this condition of having different sorts of leaves."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 44 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 23, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000082 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/95 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 95 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:32 Broad-Leaved Bulltongue Sagittaria platyphylla (Engelm.) J.G. Sm. Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Broad-leaved bulltongue (left), one of our most common plants in the shallow waters of ditches, ponds, marshes, and swamps, has been reported from every parish in Louisiana. Like most other Sagittaria, it has basal, erect leaves and is monoecious, with staminate and pistillate flowers on the flowering scape. In broad-leaved bulltongue, the inflorescence is overtopped by the unlobed, elliptic to ovate leaves. This feature, along with the recurved stalks of the fruiting heads, serves to distinguish this species from other Sagittaria. Sagittaria graminea, another common species found in similar habitats and sometimes including S. platyphylla at the varietal level, differs in having ascending to spreading, fruiting stalks. The generic name Sagittaria refers to the arrowhead-shaped leaves characteristic of some species. The water plantain family embraces only about one hundred species. Many are important sources of wildlife food, and a few species are grown as decorative plants in garden pools."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 2 ALISMATACEAE Water Plantain Family May 19, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000181 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/189 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 189 8-bit 600 dpi Sagittaria lancifolia (Lance-Leaved Bulltongue) on the right and Sagittaria platyphylla (Broad-Leaved Bulltongue) on the left appear on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:33 Butterfly Pea Centrosema virginianum (L.) Benth. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "When grown in full sunlight, the butterfly pea produces a profusion of violet-colored flowers. Unlike most legumes, its flowers are inverted, i.e., the banner, the large showy petal, projects downward. Within the flower are the much smaller wing and keel petals, which surround the stamens and the pistil. The long, linear pods typically possess a slender, tapering beak. Three-parted leaves arise along the twining, herbaceous stems of this perennial vine. Butterfly pea, which grows in clearings and along woodland borders throughout much of the southeastern United States, has potential for cultivation as a flowering ornamental." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.58 FABACEAE Legume Family September 11, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000037 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/104 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 104 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:34 Butterfly Weed Asclepias tuberosa L. Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 Allen Parish 1976-1989 "Found in dry, sunny sites mostly east of the Rockies, the butterfly weed is well known to wildflower enthusiasts. Dense clusters of various shades of brilliant orange flowers bloom from the ends of numerous branches of this rather low-growing, weak-stemmed plant. A cloak of coarse hairs gives the leafy stems a rough texture. Unlike most milkweeds, this species does not produce a milky latex. Perhaps the common name has been given to this plant because butterflies are attracted to the copious nectar of the flowers or because from some distance the flowers give the appearance of clouds of orange butterflies hovering near the ground. Butterfly weed is a popular garden ornamental. Its large-branched taproot, however, makes transplanting a futile exercise. Greater success in propagation comes from germinating wild collected seed or from root cuttings." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.6 ASCLEPIADACEAE Milkweed Family May 15, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000015 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/105 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 105 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:35 Cardinal Flower Lobelia cardinalis L. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 Lafourche Parish 1976-1989 "The richness of its vivid scarlet flowers indeed rivals that of a cardinal's breeding plumage. One of our most recognized wildflowers, cardinal flower generally grows along streams in moist, shady woods. The two-lipped flowers are borne on upright racemes that appear in late summer and fall. Projecting from the two-lobed upper lip and surrounding the style is a collar of five purplish anthers. Such a configuration places the pollen in a position where it can be deposited on the heads of hummingbirds and butterflies as they collect nectar from within the corollas; the pollen is then transferred to other flowers. Because of its increasing rarity, cardinal flower should never be transplanted from the wild. It can be readily propagated from seeds or stem cuttings. Once the cardinal flower is established in the garden, its side shoots, which develop at the base of the current season's withering stem, must not be covered by fallen leaves or mulch. These new shoots must receive sunlight in order to live and produce the following year's growth."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 49 CAMPANULACEAE Bellflower Family June 1, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000116 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/126 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 126 8-bit 600 dpi Drawn September 16, 1981.
lsu-sc-msw:36 Carolina Buckthorn Rhamnus caroliniana Walt. Odenwald, Neil Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Fruits of Carolina buckthorn are an outstanding and colorful feature of this small tree. The small, grape-sized, berrylike drupes are at first red and then black. Because the drupes mature at different times, various colors are typically present in each cluster. Flowers of this species are rather small and five-merous with yellowish green petals. Their bright green color, elliptical shape, and prominent veins make Carolina buckthorn leaves attractive and distinctive. Found throughout the southeastern United States, this species grows in the understory and at the borders of rich, moist, deciduous woodlands. The largest individual tree is reported to be nearly fifty feet tall; most trees, however, rarely attain thirty feet. Although little used as a landscape plant, Carolina buckthorn has considerable potential for this purpose. Rhamus is a genus of about one hundred species widely distributed in temperate and tropical regions. Some species are used in the manufacture of dyes, others have medicinal uses, and a few are cultivated ornamentals."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 194 RHAMNACEAE Buckthorn Family October 25, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000170 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/175 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 175 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date for flowers as appears on drawing is May 5, 1980.
lsu-sc-msw:37 Carolina Jessamine Gelsemium sempervirens (L.) St. Hil. Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Flowers of the familiar, high-climbing Carolina jessamine suffuse the thickets of woodland borders and fencerows in the early spring with brilliant yellow. The species is common throughout most of Louisiana and the southeastern United States. Its high-climbing habit, earlier flowering period, and delicately scented flowers distinguish Carolina jessamine from the similar swamp jessamine. Carolina jessamine is a popular garden ornamental often grown on trellises, fences, and mailbox posts. In direct sun, the plant forms a more compact habit and flowers more abundantly. The species is readily propagated from seeds, cuttings, and divisions. Its epithet sempervirens means "evergreen." Alkaloids contained in the roots, leaves, and nectar are toxic and may cause poisoning if consumed. Carolina jessamine reportedly was introduced into England in 1640 and illustrated in that year by John Parkinson in his Theatrum Botanicum ( http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2003&res_id=xri:eebo&rft_id=xri:eebo:image:22703) ."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 141 LOGANIACEAE Logania Family March 10, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000075 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/88 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 88 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Native Jasmine.
lsu-sc-msw:38 Carolina Lily or Turk's Cap Lily Lilium michauxii Poir. Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Although widely distributed throughout the southeastern United States, the Carolina lily is uncommon over much of its range. It frequently grows on remote, dry hillsides accessible to only the most determined naturalists. This majestic native species is as spectacular as its domestic counterparts but is less well known. One to four flamboyant, but gracefully nodding, purple-spotted, reddish orange to yellow flowers with six rich, rusty stamens are borne on stems one to four feet tall. Leaves of the Carolina lily are arranged in whorls, with each of the one to three whorls consisting of three to seven leaves. Much smaller and less numerous leaves characterize the upper part of the stem. Beneath the ground, scores of bulblets are produced, and each has the potential to grow into a new plant. The scientific name for this species commemorates Andre Michaux, an eighteenth-century French botanist and explorer of North America, whose collections first made this plant known to science."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 114 LILIACEAE Lily Family July 24, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000109 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/241 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 241 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:39 Carolina Moonseed Cocculus carolinus (L.) DC. Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 Iberville Parish 1976-1989 "The bright red clusters of berrylike fruits draw attention to this vine, which otherwise blends into the greenery of fencerows and woodland margins. Carolina moonseed is dioecious. Its attractive fruits appear only on the female plants and result from clusters of tiny, yellowish flowers. Pollen plants produce similarly small, but more ephemeral, flowers containing only stamens. The simple, alternate leaves are palmately veined and vary in shape from triangular to ovate. Their lower surfaces generally are densely pubescent. Tendrils are lacking on this plant, which twines as its means of support."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.145 MENISPERMACEAE Moonseed Family October 18, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000048 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/61 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 61 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date as appears on drawing is October 8, 1981.
lsu-sc-msw:3 American Snowbell Styrax americana Lam. Fryling, Charles||Reich, Robert S. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Iberville Parish 1976-1989 "Typically a shrub, or occasionally reaching tree size, American snowbell grows in moist to wet habitats with standing water, such as swamps and wet woodlands. This species differs from the big leaf snowbell in a number of features besides habitat preference. The leaves of American snowbell are somewhat smaller, and its pendulous flowers occur singly or in pairs in the axils of the leaves and at the tips of short branches. Like those of its sister species, American snowbell flowers have recurved tips and ten yellow stamens closely clustered around the downward-pointing style. This species possesses double buds at each node. It appears to be more tolerant of different soils, and if planted in a somewhat sunny location, it will flower abundantly. Propagation of this plant is somewhat difficult but normally is achieved by germinating seeds or by air-layering branches. American snowbell is fairly common throughout Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 204 STYRACACEAE Storax Family April 7, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000200 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/208 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 208 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Swamp Snowbell.
lsu-sc-msw:40 Carolina Rose Rosa Carolina L. Pope, Tom Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Caldwell Parish 1976-1989 "Delicate, pink flowers grace the branch tips of the shrubby Carolina rose. Arising from underground runners, its sparingly branched stems are generally armed with a few to many somewhat-hooked prickles. In typical roselike fashion, leaves of the Carolina rose are pinnately compound with five to seven leaflets. Unlike most cultivated forms, the wild roses each have but a single whorl of five petals that open at right angels to the flower's axis. Each petal is somewhat heart-shaped and varies in color from pink at the tip to white at the base. Forming the center of the flower are numerous yellow stamens and style branches. The hip, which is composed of the floral cup surrounding the achenes, is red at maturity with persistent reflexed sepals. Carolina rose is one of the natives worthy of cultivation. It requires full sun and well-drained soil. It is widespread in eastern North America, and it was first described by Linnaeus from plants collected in the Carolinas."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 197 ROSACEAE Rose Family May 4, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000176 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/181 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 181 8-bit 600 dpi Note on drawing: "Caution! The pink colour may be fugitive if exposed for long periods to light."
lsu-sc-msw:41 Catchfly Gentian Eustoma exaltatum (L.) Salisb. ex G. Don McKenzie, Paul||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 Cameron Parish 1976-1989 "The catchfly gentian may be found near the Gulf of Mexico in Cameron Parish and sporadically in some of the other coastal parishes and states. Preference for wet alkaline of saline soils may be a factor restricting its distribution. This annual species commonly grows to two feet tall, and its evenly spaced, obovate pairs of leaves clasp the stems. Both the stems and the leaves are covered with a waxy substance that gives the plants a bluish color. In summer, large, showy, bell-shaped flowers open from spindle-shaped buds produced singly form the tips of long pedicels. Their petal lobes vary from bluish to lavender, while the petal bases are a deeper shade of purple. The stamens typically number five and are a vivid yellow. Numerous lustrous, chestnut brown seeds develop from inch-long capsules."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 95 GENTIANACEAE Gentian Family July 4, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000069 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/82 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 82 8-bit 600 dpi Collection date as appears on the drawing is July 9, 1985.
lsu-sc-msw:42 Celestial Lily Nemastylis geminiflora Nutt. Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "The sky blue flowers of the celestial lily usually occur in pairs, as suggested by its specific epithet geminiflora, which means "twin flower." The generic name Nemastylis is Greek and refers to the six slender, threadlike style branches arising from the central part of the flower. Although spectacular, the flowers are ephemeral and can be seen only from midmorning until they fade a few hours later. Its flower stalks, which grow to two feet in height, arise from an underground bulb and support two to three narrow, pleated leaves. This plant is a member of the iris family and is not a lily, as suggested by its common name. Celestial lily, found in open woods and prairies from central Texas, Louisiana, and Alabama northward to Kansas and Missouri, appears to be uncommon in the wild. This plant has received little attention as an ornamental plant, but it probably would be suitable for the native plant garden. The genus Nemastylis contains three other species found in the southern United States and another in Mexico."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 88 IRIDACEAE Iris Family April 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000131 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/139 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 139 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:43 Chapman's Holly Ilex decidua Walt. var. longipes (Chapm. Ex Trel.) Ahles Gladney, Mrs. Frank Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Amite County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "Chapman's holly is similar to deciduous holly in most aspects. It is a small tree with smooth, light gray bark and simple, alternate, deciduous leaves. The plants are dioecious, and both staminate and pistillate flowers typically have four-merous, greenish white corollas. Unlike deciduous holly, this variety seems to grow in somewhat drier habitats. Its female flowers typical occur singly in the leaf axils, and the scarlet fruits are supported by long, thin stalks. Chapman's holly is cultivated especially for its attractive fruits. Some investigators give this entity specific recognition as Ilex longipes."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 4 AQUIFOLIACEAE Holly Family April 14, 1980 (flowers); October 21, 1979 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000093 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/111 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 111 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:44 Coral Bean Erythrina herbacea L. Smith, Emory (flowers)||Odenwald, Neil (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish (Flowers)||West Baton Rouge Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "Coral bean is naturally distributed in sandy woodlands throughout the southeastern United States and northeastern Mexico. This species is herbaceous in the colder parts of its range but becomes shrubby in frost-free areas. Recurved prickles may be borne on the stems and on various parts of its trifoliate leaves, which have broadly triangular to hastately lobed leaflets. In the late spring, spires of red, leguminous flowers are displayed atop upright stems. The somewhat-cylindrical, red corollas are approximately two inches long. The most distinctive feature of this species is the scarlet, bean-like seeds displayed along the margins of the opened, dark brown pods. Most of the approximately forty species of Erythrina are tropical trees with showy flowers."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 59 FABACEAE Legume Family June 5, 1978 (flowers); November, 1977 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000063 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/76 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 76 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Mamou. Collection place of fruit as it appears on drawing is Winn Parish.
lsu-sc-msw:45 Coral Greenbriar Smilax walteri Pursh Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Coral greenbriar is a deciduous vine that usually grows in fresh water or at least in places that are flooded for long periods of time. Because of its aggressive growth habits, it may form impenetrable thickets. Coral greenbriar has stems that are much less spiny than those of some of its relatives. Blades of its leaves are green above and somewhat paler below, ovate to lanceolate-ovate in outline, and supported by short, usually reddish petioles. Species of Smilax are dioecious, i.e., pollen-producing and fruit-bearing flowers occur on different individuals. Both types of flowers are produced in umbels on stalks arising from the axils of the leaves. Their perianths are composed of six greenish yellow, petal-like segments; the staminate flowers have six stamens, and the pistillate flowers have a single, three-parted pistil. Its bright red berries persist on the plant and reach maturity after leaf fall in autumn. Nearly a dozen species of Smilax grow in Louisiana, and several, such as catbriar, greenbriar, and bullbriar, have numerous, very sharp spines, grow in great abundance, and may make a hike in the woods an unpleasant experience."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 107 LILIACEAE Lily Family September 4, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000192 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/200 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 200 8-bit 600 dpi Common names as appears on the drawing is Greenbriar.
lsu-sc-msw:46 Cow Oak or Basket Oak Quercus michauxii Nutt. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Cow oak is common deciduous forest tree of the rich, mesic slopes and river bottom forests subject to floods of short duration. The bark of its straight, upright trunk is light gray and shaggy, somewhat like that of white oak. Leaves of cow oak, which clearly place it in the chestnut oak group, are usually six to eight inches long and have about a dozen large teeth along each edge and several evenly spaced, secondary veins running from the midvein to the margin. Flowers of both sexes occur on the same tree. The staminate flowers form dense, drooping catkins, and the seed-producing ones are borne singly or in small clusters. Relatively large acorns with caps about one-half their length mature in one season. Cow oak is a desirable shade tree and timber species. Because the wood splits evenly into thin strips, it is used for basket-making and for shingles. Late in the season, the leaves of cow oak become red, and it is one of the few species in the Deep South to dependably provide autumn coloration. The scientific name for this species has been the source of confusion over the years. Quercus prinus, a name often used for cow oak, is no longer in use."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 76 FABACEAE Beech Family March 9, 1981 (flowers); April 14, 1981 (leaves); October 16, 1981 (acorn) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000168 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/172 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 172 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Swamp Chestnut Oak.
lsu-sc-msw:47 Crane Fly Orchid Tipularia discolor (Pursh) Nutt. Givens, Florence M.||Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Wilkinson County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "Crane fly orchid, a plant found in rich, deciduous woodlands, has an unusual life cycle. In autumn, as the trees begin to lose their leaves and more sunlight reaches the forest floor, the crane fly orchid develops a new leaf and corm from its underground tubers. Typically three to four inches long, this solitary leaf is deep green above, a rich, satiny purple below. It lives until the next spring, when it withers and eventually dies. By late summer, following a period of dormancy, the inflorescence emerges, and the upper two-thirds of its leafless axis are occupied with flowers. Their perianth parts are colored with various shades of green and purple. Its three sepals and two of its petals are similar in size and shape, while the lip is three-lobed and possesses a basal spur about one inch long. The flowers, handing askew on the inflorescence, resemble crane flies. In fact, the orchid name is based on the generic name for crane flies. Within a large population of leaves, only a few inflorescences are seen each year, suggesting that individual plants flower infrequently."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 162 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family August 24, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000206 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/213 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 213 8-bit 600 dpi Additional credit as appears on drawing: Collection date: April 9, 1983; Place Collected (leaf): Winn Parish; Collector (leaf): Phillips, Eloyce.
lsu-sc-msw:48 Crested Coral-Root Hexalectris spicata Pruski, John (flowers)||Givens, Florence M. (flowers, fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 Wilkinson County, Mississippi (flowers)||West Feliciana Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "Crested coral-root is extraordinary, since it is one of the few orchids that does not make its own food. This plant is a saprophyte, i.e., its organic nutrients are derived not from photosynthesis but from the rich, humic soils in which it grows. Having adopted this mode of nutrition, crested coral-root exhibits a syndrome of unusual adaptations. It has no need for large leaves; instead, the plant has reduced, scalelike bracts along its yellowish brown to purple stem. Living in shady, moist habitats has apparently reduced the plant's need for large amounts of water and, consequently, has resulted in its loss of roots. It develops fleshy, succulent rhizomes underground. Atop its upright stems, which may be as tall as three feet, spikes of from five to twenty-five gaudily decorated flowers typically appear midsummer or later. The color of its sepals and petals ranges from yellow to yellow-brown, and they are purple striped. Five fleshy crests characterize the enlarged lip of this species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 151 August 24, 1982 (flowers); September 21, 1982 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000083 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/96 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 96 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:49 Crossvine Bignonia capreolata L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. (flowers)||Welles, John (fruit)||Brown, Clair (stems) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "This high-climbing, woody vine grows in various habitats, including fence rows and woodland borders. It belongs to a family of mostly tropical trees that typically produce variously colored, trumpet-shaped flowers. Crossvine corollas are reddish orange externally and yellow within. The unusual compound leaves, which are oppositely arranged, consist of a pair of leaflets and branched tendrils. Other notable features of the crossvine and other members of this family are the long pods and the winged seeds. This plant's name refers to the crosslike configuration formed by various tissues within the stem." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.36 BIGNONIACEAE Catalpa Family April 8, 1978 (flowers); August, 1980 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000025 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/27 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 27 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:4 American Wisteria Wisteria frutescens (L.) Poir. [Wisteria macrostachya Nutt. ex Torr. & Gray] Welles, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "American wisteria is a deciduous, woody, twining vine that grows in wet soil along streams, ponds, and bayous. The alternate, pinnately compound leaves of this species are normally composed of from nine to fifteen leaflets. Conical, pendulous racemes up to ten inches long develop after the leaves have matured. Flowering begins at the base of the inflorescence and then progresses toward its apex. A five-lobed calyx surrounds the bilaterally symmetric corolla, which is made up of five bluish to lilac petals. The largest petal is the broadly elliptical banner, which projects at right angles to the pair of wing petals surrounding the two petals of the keel. Enclosed by the keel is one free stamen and nine others fused by their filaments. The ovary forms a many-seeded, legume-like fruit that may be several inches long. Although not in common use, American wisteria is an exceedingly attractive vine suitable for growing on fences and arbors. The commonly grown, more aggressive Asian wisterias flower before, or simultaneously with, new leaf development and they have somewhat different fruits."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 93 FABACEAE Legume Family April 24, 1980 (flowers); April 26, 1980 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000220 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/232 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 232 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on drawing is Wisteria macrostachya. Common name as appears on drawing is Wild Wisteria.
lsu-sc-msw:50 Cucumber Magnolia Magnolia acuminata L. Smith, Emory (flowers)||Gladney, Mrs. Frank (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish (flowers)||Gloster Arboretum, Amite County, Mississippi (fruit) 1976-1989 "Cucumber magnolia, one of the five Magnolia species native to Louisiana, is fairly common on rich, wooded hillsides, throughout much of the eastern United States. It may become a large tree, achieving a height of about seventy-five feet and a trunk diameter of more than three feet. Like other magnolias, its leaves are simple and alternate, but deciduous-unlike those of southern magnolia, which are evergreen. Flowers of the cucumber magnolia appear in early spring just as the new leaves begin to unfold. Their typically nine, pale, greenish yellow perianth parts are slender and arch gracefully upward. Many short-lived, spirally attached stamens lie between the perianth and the numerous pistils. Each flower forms a conelike aggregate fruit that is somewhat cucumber-shaped. Cucumber magnolia is a desirable, but seldom used, ornamental shade tree that has a form somewhat like that of the tulip tree."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 142 MAGNOLIACEAE Magnolia Family April 1, 1981 (flowers); August 17, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000121 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/131 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 131 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:51 Deciduous Holly or Possum Haw Ilex decidua Walt. var. decidua Odenwald, Neil Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Madison Parish 1976-1989 "Deciduous holly is a large shrub or small tree that grows on fertile, moist soils in the understory of hardwood forests and in thickets along streams and fencerows. Functionally, deciduous holly plants are dioecious, i.e., individuals produce either pollen or fruit. Flowers appear in the spring either singly or in small clusters in the axils of new leaves. Both pollen- and seed-bearing flowers have four to five small, yellowish green petals. When fully developed, the alternate simple leaves of this species are generally broadest above the middle and have a few small teeth along their margins. Late in the season, after the leaves have fallen and throughout the winter months, persistent, spherical red fruits give deciduous holly high visibility. Several horticultural selections with various shades of fruit color are available for ornamental plantings."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 18 AQUIFOLIACEAE Holly Family April 14, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000092 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/110 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 110 8-bit 600 dpi Other collection dates that appear on the drawing: 11 March 1981 (fruit); early April 1981 (flowers); April 14, 1981 (some leaves).
lsu-sc-msw:52 Devilwood or Wild Olive Osmanthus americanus (L.) Gray Tucker, Shirley C.||Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Givens, Florence M. (ripe fruit, male flowers)||Urbatsch, Loweel E. (unripe fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "Perhaps more familiar to most Louisianans than our native devilwood is its exotic and often cultivated relative, the sweet olive. Devilwood appears to be restricted in Louisiana to the Florida Parishes, and it is rather common in certain localities. This generally small tree reportedly can grow to nearly forty feet tall with a trunk diameter approaching two feet. Like sweet olive, its leathery leaves are opposite and simple. The flowers of devilwood are contained in small, scaly bracted, branched clusters, and though not as fragrant, they are similar to those of sweet olive in size and construction. Devilwood flowers are polygamous, meaning that bisexual and unisexual flowers are produced on the same plant. Fruits of devilwood are purplish drupes similar in appearance to small olives. Although rarely seen in cultivation, devilwood has potential as a useful landscape plant."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 147 OLEACEAE Olive Family March 16, 1984 (male flowers); July10, 1984 (unripe fruit); September 16, 1984 (ripe fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000140 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/144 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 144 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:53 Downy Phlox Phlox pilosa L. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Downy phlox is common along the edges of woods and in clearings throughout much of the eastern United States. This herbaceous perennial has several pairs of narrow, lanceolate leaves oppositely arranged along its somewhat-downy stems. Supported at the apex of each simple stem is a branched cluster of five-merous flowers whose corollas in the bud stage are twisted in characteristic fashion. Each of the five sepal lobes tapers to a narrow point. The lavender to purple petals are fused into a long, slender tube that abruptly flares into five broad, flattened lobes. Within the corolla tube and attached to it at different levels are the five tiny stamens. Their capsular fruits contain numerous, tiny seeds. Various species of Phlox are among our most popular species of yard and garden flowers. They are easy to grow and dependably give spectacular floral displays when planted in mass."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 189 POLEMONIACEAE Phlox Family April 30, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000151 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/155 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 155 8-bit 600 dpi Note on drawing: "Caution! The pink colour may be fugitive if exposed for long periods to light."
lsu-sc-msw:54 Downy Service Berry Amelanchier arborea (Michx. f.) Fern. Welles, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "White to pinkish flower clusters with a sweet plumlike fragrance clothe the leafless branches of this small, graceful, deciduous tree in the early spring. The individual flowers, except for their ribbon-shaped petals, are similar in construction to those of this plant's relative, the apple. Downy service berry fruits also have the appearance of tiny, red to purplish apples but are rather dry and flavorless. The downy service berry is found along stream banks in Louisiana and throughout the eastern United States and is sometimes cultivated as an accent tree in the landscape." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.194 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 7, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000006 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/40 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 40 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:55 Drum Heads or Candy Root Polygala cruciata L. Cox, Patricia Pias||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "This showy annual plant grows in wet meadows and bogs. Its leaves, typically in whorls of four, form a crosslike configuration at each node, a formation that probably accounts for its specific epithet. Dense, oblong to cylindrical racemes, nearly an inch tall and broad, terminate the stem's apex. Somewhat resembling legume blossoms, each of drum head's flowers show a number of unusual modifications typical for the milkwort family. Its sepals are of two types: three very small outer ones, and two, longer, inner, petal-like ones often referred to as the wings. In Polygala cruciata, the three petals are somewhat smaller than the wings and are covered by them. Within the perianth are eight stamens fused by their filaments forming a tube that is split on one side. The single pistil is characterized by a bent style and a two-lobed stigma. Polygala in Louisiana is a diverse group represented by nearly twenty species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 191 POLYGALACEAE Milkwort Family September 26, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000160 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/164 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 164 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:56 Drummond's Red Maple Acer rubrum L. var. drummondii (H. & A.) Sargent Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-06 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "One of the early signs of spring is the small, bright red flowers and the conspicuous, crimson, winged fruits of Drummond's red maple, which stand out against the gray, leafless trees of the Louisiana bottomland forests. The leaves of the red maple drawn for the Louisiana Flora Project are larger than those of the typical variety and are more densely covered with small, matted, white hairs on their lower surfaces. Both varieties of red maple are grown for ornamental and shade purposes. To grow this maple for the colorful fruits, a female tree must be selected because the pollen-producing and the fruit-producing flowers commonly appear on separate plants." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.12 ACERACEAE Maple Family February, 1977 (male flowers); February, 1976 (young fruit); May, 1977 (leaves); March 4, 1980 (habit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000001 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/35 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.0 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 35 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:57 Eardrop Vine Brunnichia ovata (Walt.) Shinners Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish (flowers)||Tangipahoa Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "Large clusters of pinkish to tan fruits call attention to this vigorous vine, which grows in forest and stream borders and in clearings. The inch-long, eardrop-like structures are formed when the flowering calyx enlarges and surrounds the triangular fruit within. The vines themselves are herbaceous to somewhat-woody, perennial, high climbers supported by tendrils from the branch tips and the leaf axils. Its simple, alternate leaves are somewhat triangular to hear-shaped. Although attractive in fruit, the flowers are quite small and not very showy. The genus Brunnichia, a member of the buckwheat family, contains only this one species." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.191 POLYGONACEAE Buckwheat Family September 20, 1979 (flowers); October, 1979 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000026 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/28 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.4 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 28 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on drawing is Brunnichia cirrhosa.
lsu-sc-msw:58 Eastern Prickly Pear Opuntia humifusa (Raf.) Raf. [Opuntia compressa (Salisb.) J. F. Macbr.] Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "The elliptic to obovate, flattened pads of the prickly pear are modified stems. Branches are represented by the clusters of spines that arise from the regularly spaced nodes, called areoles, of the stem. Also associated with the circular areoles are hairlike, often barbed spines called glochids, which will lodge in the skin, causing considerable irritation. Leaves of the eastern prickly pear may subtend each node and are tiny, short-lived, often triangular-shaped bits of tissue. Flowers of the prickly pear are produced around the upper margins of the pads. Their bright, lemon yellow perianth segments are about one and one-half inches long and surround masses of showy stamens. Fruits of this and of most species of cactus are edible. However, they need to be singed to remove the glochids. Although not common in Louisiana, the eastern prickly pear grows in dry, sandy soils and dunes sometimes associated with streams."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 40 CACTACEAE Cactus Family May 11, 1982 (flowers); August 31, 1982 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000138 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/135 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 135 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:59 Fairy Wand or Devil's Bit Chamaelirium luteum (L.) Gray Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Although fairy wand occurs widely throughout the eastern United States, it is quite rare in Louisiana, where only a few plants have been found on a few rich, wooded hillsides. This member of the lily family develops a basal rosette of leaves and, at flowering, produces elongated flowering stalks with reduced leaves. Each of the numerous flowers is composed of six petal-like perianth parts. Pollen- and seed-producing flowers grow on separate plants. Pollen plants appear every year, while seed-producing ones may flower every two or three years. The name devil's bit seems inappropriate for this elegant woodland wildflower. Apparently, the name was familiar to English immigrants, who applied it to a vaguely similar plant in their new land." --Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 106 LILIACEAE Lily Family April 22, 1985 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000039 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/52 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 52 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:5 Annual Sunflower Helianthus annuus L. Stones, Margaret Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-21 1989 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, England 1976-1989 "The annual sunflower is one of the most familiar of all flowering plants. It commonly grows along roadsides and around the edges of fields and woodlands. During the fall, the plant becomes conspicuous because of its large heads of flowers that resemble the sun. In fact, its generic name is derived from the Greek words helios, meaning "sun," and anthos, meaning "flower"; the specific epithet denotes the plant's annual habit. The head of the sunflower is a cluster of many small flowers of two types. Ray flowers, with their long, strap-shaped corollas, surround the margin of the head. They produce no pollen or fruit but serve to attract insect pollinators. In the center of the head are the disk flowers; these have radially symmetrical corollas and function to produce pollen and seed. Archaeological evidence suggests that the annual sunflower had been domesticated by various American Indian cultures; it is the only native plant species domesticated in what is now the United States. On a world wide scale, the sunflower is second to the soybean as the most important source of vegetable oil."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 30 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family July 9, 1976 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000081 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/94 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 94 8-bit 600 dpi A note appears on the drawing: "Sections taken from young flower-head."
lsu-sc-msw:60 False Foxglove Agalinis fasciculata (Ell.) Raf. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 West Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "This wiry stemmed, diffusely branched annual grows in old fields and along the edges of woods and roadsides. Its relatively large, intricately patterned, bell-shaped flowers undoubtedly attract the attention of even the most casual observer of the late summer flora of the southeastern United States. Its flowers are similar in design to the well-known foxglove, which belongs to another genus in this plant family. The fifty to sixty other species of Agalinis are similar to one another. Positive identification of the false foxglove and its kin often tries the patience of even the professional botanist because the minute, technical features that separate the different species. Agalinis plants are somewhat parasitic and form root attachments to various kinds of herbaceous and woody plants." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.201 SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family August 31, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000003 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/37 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 24.6 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 37 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:61 False Liatris Carphephorus pseudo-liatris Cass. Barker, Nancy||Givens, Florence M.||Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "As suggested by the scientific and common names, this plant resembles species in the related genus Liatris, the blazing stars. Both kinds of plants have lavender flowers clustered together in heads, a typical formation for members of the sunflower family. The heads of false liatris form rather compact, flat-topped clusters, whereas the heads of blazing star generally form cylindrical clusters. The basal leaves of false liatris are long and narrow. The numerous stem leaves are also narrow and become progressively shorter toward the top of the stem. False liatris grows in wet pine savannas of the Gulf Coastal Plain and flowers in late summer and autumn." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.9 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family September 17, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000034 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/46 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 46 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:62 Fetterbush Lyonia lucida (Lam.) K. Koch Givens, Florence M.||Tucker, Shirley C. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Fetterbush is a handsome, evergreen shrub generally found in lighter soils around bogs, bays, and swamps. Its gracefully arching, strongly angled, leafy branches support simple, alternate, dark green, glossy leaves whose undersides are paler and more abundantly covered with minute, punctuate dots. Its entire leaf margins are somewhat revolute and characterized by a marginal vein. In the early spring, abbreviated clusters of flowers blossom from the leaf axils of the previous season's stems. Each of the somewhat pendant flowers is composed of a small, five-lobed calyx and an urn-shaped corolla, which may range in color from white to nearly red. The globose capsule contains many small seeds. Fetterbush may be propagated by seeds and cuttings, but in cultivation it will perform well only in habitats approximating those found in nature."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 55 ERICACEAE Heath Family April 9, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000120 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/130 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 130 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:63 Fire Pink Silene virginica L. Pruski, Jennifer||Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 Franklin County, Mississippi 1976-1989 "Vivid, crimson, star-shaped flowers up to two inches across are the outstanding feature of the fire pink. Its five petals arise above the cylindrical calyx tube, and where the petals flare out at right angles, they each possess two small appendages. Because of a prominent notch at their apices, the petals appear to be more numerous than they are. Normally, ten stamens and three styles are seen in the perfect flowers of Silene virginica. This short-lived perennial has a few pairs of opposite stem leaves and a basal rosette of leaves that often disappears by the flowering period. Fire pink is most common in the mountains and piedmont of the southeastern United States and reaches its western limit in northern Louisiana. Another crimson-flowered species, S. subciliata, occurs in a few parishes in southwestern Louisiana. Silene is related to the commercially popular carnation, Dianthus caryphllus, and to baby's breath, a species of Gypsophila. Other well-known plants in the pink family are the nearly cosmopolitan weeds, chickweed and mouse-eared chickweed."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 60 CARYOPHYLLACEAE Pink Family March 29, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000190 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/198 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 198 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:64 Flatwoods Plum Prunus umbellata Ell. Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "Flatwoods plum grows along riverbanks and sandy hillsides throughout much of Louisiana and the southeastern United States. It is a small tree, attaining only about thirty feet in height. In the spring, somewhat round-topped clusters of white, fragrant flowers with colorful stamens appear. Chickasaw plum (Prunus angustifolia) is a similar native species, but several features offer useful diagnostic markets. The small teeth along the margins of Chickasaw plum leaves are tipped with red or yellow glands, and those of flatwoods plum are glandless. One bite of the fruit will readily identify the species. Flatwoods plum fruit are very bitter and distasteful, while the other species has tart, pleasant-tasting plums. Both species would provide interesting ornamental accent plants. Chickasaw plum is sometimes grown for the fruit, which is desirable for preserves or for eating raw."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 197 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 17, 1981 (flowers); September 30, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000165 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/169 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 169 8-bit 600 dpi Date collected for fruit as appears on the drawing is September 30, 1981.
lsu-sc-msw:65 Floating Bladderwort Utricularia inflata Walt. Hawkins, Julia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Baldderworts are aquatic, usually rootless, carnivorous plants often having whorls of feathery branches. Sophisticated traps attached on short stalks along the branches are adapted to catch very small animals. The traps are tiny, sacklike structures in which develops negative pressure, caused by the activities of associated glands. A small insect or crustacean swimming near the entrance to the trap will brush against the several bristles, stimulating a flap of tissue-the door-that guards the entrance to open suddenly. Water flows into the trap, sweeping the animal with it. The door closes, entrapping the tiny creature, which is subsequently digested. Floating bladderwort grows in shallow ponds and ditches in the coastal plain of the Southeast. From its base radiate several branches with swollen stalks and midribs that function as flotation devices supporting the flower stalks. Located along the branches are the numerous traps. Its inflorescence consists of from five to fifteen flowers. The corollas are golden yellow, spurred, and two-lipped, and the lower lip is often streaked or dotted with red."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.110 LENTIBULARIACEAE Bladderwort Family March 23, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000212 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/222 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 222 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:66 Floating Hearts Nymphoides aquatica (S. G. Gmel.) Kuntze Givens, Florence M.||Ouchley, Amy Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-31 1989 Cameron Parish 1976-1989 "As suggested by its generic name, floating hearts resembles the water lilies. The similarity is seen in the leaves, which have floating, bluntly heart-shaped to kidney-shaped blades and apparently long petioles that may appear to be continuous with their long, slender rhizomes. Umbel-like clusters of flowers arise from the juncture of the rhizome with the petiole, and late in the season, several fleshy roots may also form at this point. Although floating hearts and water lilies have leaves that are similar in appearance, their small, white, cup-shaped, floating flowers are quite different. Rather than having many separate parts typical of the water lilies, floating hearts have sepals, petals, and stamens that number five each. Their fruits are thin-walled, two-parted capsules with many seeds. This remarkably distinctive, aquatic, coastal plain plant is restricted to about the southern one-third of Louisiana. Twenty some species of Nymphoides are known worldwide and constitute about half of the Menyanthaceae, a small plant family with a nearly cosmopolitan distribution."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 146 MENYANTHACEAE Bogbean Family September 16, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000135 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/142 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-07 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 142 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:67 Flowering Dogwood Cornus florida L. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Perhaps the most prized of our native trees, the flowering dogwood occurs throughout the upland forests of Louisiana. This widely grown species is attractive throughout the year. In springtime, layered clusters of small, greenish yellow, fourmerous flowers surrounded by four large, white or pink, petal-like bracts are produced in profusion before the leaves expand. Dark green foliage and the checkered bark of the main trunk characterize this tree during the summer months. Red to bronze leaves and red, berrylike fruit appear in the fall. Two important provisions for growing flowering dogwoods are semishaded conditions and well-drained soils."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 66 CORNACEAE Dogwood Family April 3, 1978 (flowers); October, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000051 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/64 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 64 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:68 Fragrant Ladies' Tresses Spiranthes cernua (L.) L.C. Rich var. odorata (Nutt.) Correll Smith, Peter||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 St. Mary Parish 1976-1989 "When he named this plant in 1834, Thomas Nuttal referred to it as the largest and finest Spiranthes in the United States, a distinction it still holds. Fragrant ladies' tresses grow in wet woods, marshes, and wet prairies from Texas to Virginia. Its narrowly oblanceolate leaves are mostly borne along the lower half of its slender stems, which may attain heights of three feet. According to some observers, its creamy white flowers, which are arranged in several vertical ranks, have a vanilla-like fragrance that intensifies during the evening hours. Each flower, subtended by a floral bract, is composed of three sepals that resemble the two upper petals. The lower petal is modified into the larger, reflexed lip and has a yellowish center and a somewhat crenulate margin. Within the connivent perianth parts is the column composed of the modified anthers, the stigma, and the style. Spiranthes, a genus of about two hundred species, is widely distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere, tropical Asia, and Chile. Approximately ten other species have been reported for Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 154 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family October 23, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000195 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/203 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 203 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on the drawing is Lady's Tresses.
lsu-sc-msw:69 Fringe Tree Chionanthus virginicus L. Landry, Garry||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 Natchitoches Parish (flowers)||Tangipahoa Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "The intricate and delicate, lacy appearance achieved in this drawing of the fringe tree in flower exemplifies the exquisite talents of Stones. Note that each flower of the large cluster has four long, white petals and two stamens. Black, olivelike fruit mature by the middle of summer. Fringe tree leaves are opposite and simple with purple leaf stalks. This attractive, small, deciduous tree of the olive family is a popular ornamental and is often the showpiece of the garden. In the wild, fringe tree grows throughout the upland forests of Louisiana and the eastern United States."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.138 OLEACEAE Olive Family April 15, 1978 (flowers); September 20, 1978 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000041 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/54 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 54 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:6 Arrow Arum Peltandra virginica (L.) Schott & Engel. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Except for having green leaves rather than variously colored ones, arrow arum somewhat resembles its relative, the commonly cultivated caladium. Both plants have arrowhead-shaped blades supported on long petioles. Under favorable conditions, arrow arum may grow to three feet in height from a tuberouslike rhizome. Its unisexual flowers are borne on a specialized inflorescence called a spadix. Both types of flowers are small and lack sepals and petals. The female flowers are located near the base of the inflorescence axis and essentially consist only of a pistil. Represented by tiny, shield-shaped scales each supporting four to eight anthers, the pollen-bearing flowers occupy the apical part of the axis. The generic name is descriptive of this plant's peculiar, shield-shaped anther supports. Surrounding the spadix is a leaflike bract called a spathe, which may range from green to yellowish in color. At maturity, the berrylike fruits may remain green or turn brown. Arrow arum is also related to jack-in-the-pulpit, green dragon, and golden club."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 5 ARACEAE Arum Family April 30, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000147 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/151 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 151 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:70 Frog's Bit Limnobium spongia (Bosc) Steud. Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-09 1989 Lafourche Parish 1976-1989 "Frog's bit commonly forms dense, floating mats in shallow, quiet ponds or roots in the wet mud of marshy habitats. Each plant consists of a rosette of nearly heart-shaped leaf blades supported by relatively long petioles. Spongy, air-filled tissue composes the leaves, increases the plat's buoyancy, and facilitates gas exchange with the atmosphere. As a means of vegetative propagation, the plant develops runners upon which plantlets are formed. Seeds are also produced in the female flowers of this monoecious species. Both the staminate and the pistillate flowers possess three sepals and three petals. The flowers appear one at a time in the leaf axils. Six to twelve stamens with fused filaments characterize the male flower while the female is recognizable by its typically six, deeply divided stigmas and its inferior ovary, which forms a berrylike fruit."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 96 HYDROCHARITACEAE Frog's Bit Family August 29, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000110 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/238 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 238 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:71 Giant Blue-Flag Iris giganticaerulea Small Hawkins, Julia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Cameron Parish 1976-1989 "Giant blue-flag inhabits the swamps and marshes from Louisiana and southeastern Texas to Florida. Growing to six feet in height, it is the tallest of our iris species. Except for being larger, its flowers are similar to our other irises. The expanded blades of three sepals are colored a rich purple, while the narrowed basal portion, the claw, is yellowish green with darker lines. A central, yellow crest extends from the claw onto the base of the expanded blade. Its three petals are similar to the sepals but slightly smaller. Like the other species of Iris, giant blue-flag has been a favored subject for flower gardens. In the past, numerous color forms and natural interspecific hybrids grew in great profusion in Louisiana, but changing land use and intensive collecting have resulted in the demise of such colorful vistas. Some investigators maintain that Florida and Louisiana populations of giant blue-flag represent a single species whose correct name is I. hexagona. Others suggest that the Louisiana populations are a different species properly called I. giganticaerulea. Additional research should help resolve this controversy."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 99 IRIDACEAE Iris Family April 25, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000099 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/116 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 116 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on the drawing is Iris hexagona.
lsu-sc-msw:72 Giant Ironweed or Meadow Queen Vernonia gigantea (Walt.) Trel. ex Branner & Cov. Doty, Gresdna Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Giant ironweed grows along roadsides and in pastures and becomes conspicuous in the late summer and the autumn by its tall, somewhat flat-topped clusters of purple heads. This member of the sunflower family has crowded, alternate, lanceolate leaves along its unbranched, upright stem that may grow to twelve feet tall. Its branching inflorescence, like that of other members of this plant family, contains many heads composed of numerous individual flowers. In the case of giant ironweed, only disk flowers with radially symmetric, five-lobed corollas occur in the heads. Attached immediately outside the corolla's base are numerous bristlelike structures, collectively called the pappus, which function in dispersing the attached fruit. Giant ironweed and some of its relatives, because of their aggressive growth characteristics, tend to become weedy in pastures that are overgrazed and may be indicators of abusive land practices. Vernonia, a genus of about a thousand species, is most diverse in South America and Africa. Approximately eighteen species are known from the eastern United States, and four of these grow in Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 46 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family October 9, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000215 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/226 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 226 8-bit 600 dpi Common name that appears on drawing is Ironweed. The drawing notes, "Caution! This colour may be fugitive." Common name as appears on the drawing is Ironweed.
lsu-sc-msw:73 Goldcrest Lophiola americana (Pursh) Wood [Lophiola aurea Ker-Gawl.] Barker, Nancy||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Goldcrest grows in the bogs and wet pine savannas of the coastal plain from Louisiana to the northeastern United States. Its irislike leaves arise from white to brownish rhizomes. A single flowering stalk bears reduced leaves upwardly and a many-branched inflorescence at its apex. Its numerous, small, bisexual flowers possess six stamens and a three-carpellate pistil with a capitate stigma. Six segments of equal length constitute the perianth. The inner surfaces of both the sepals and the petals are bright yellow and are covered with numerous hairs, which also densely clothe the inflorescence stalk and branches. Goldcrest and the related redroot are the only members of the bloodwort family growing in Louisiana. Most plants in this family are found in the Southern Hemisphere."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 80 HAEMODORACEAE Bloodwort Family May 20, 1982 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000118 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/128 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 128 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:74 Golden Canna Canna flaccida Salisb. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 St. Charles Parish 1976-1989 "Spreading, subterranean rhizomes give rise to colonies of golden canna, a plant that grows in swamps and marshes scattered about Louisiana and the southeastern United States. Racemes of large yellow flowers sit atop stems that may reach six feet in height. Golden canna leaves are large and elliptic, much like the ones of cultivated cannas. The six perianth parts are yellow and petal-like, as are two of the three stamens and the style. Only one of the three stamens bears pollen. The ovary, being inferior, develops below the showy parts of the flower and forms a three lobed, green fruit covered with succulent protuberances. The cannas popular in cultivation are generally red-flowered and represent the Asian species Canna indica, which has become naturalized and occasionally can be seen in the south Louisiana marshes." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.42 CANNACEAE Canna Family July 6, 1989 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000033 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/45 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 45 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:75 Golden Club Orontium aquaticum L. Givesn, Florence M.||tucker, Shirley C.||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-10 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "An aquatic plant of the coastal plain of the southern and eastern United States, golden club grows from stout rhizomes buried in the mud of ditches, shallow streams, and swamps. Its bluish green, elliptical leaves may float on the water's surface or emerge above it. Water beads up on the leaves' surface, and leaves removed from water appear to be dry. For this reason, golden club is sometimes called by the common name "never wet." Like other members of the arum family, golden club has tiny, unisexual flowers clustered along an inflorescence axis called a spadix. These conspicuously displayed, golden yellow and white spikes present a colorful show in the swamps and bogs of Louisiana's Florida Parishes. Because of its attractive leaves and inflorescences, this species is a prized addition to the garden pond. Orontium is a genus of only one species. Other native relatives of the golden club include jack-in-the-pulpit and green dragon."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 20 ARACEAE Arum Family March 16, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000139 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/143 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-11 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 143 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:76 Golden Colic-Root Aletris aurea Walt. Barton, Paula Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-08 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Aletris aurea lends its golden riches to the diverse wet pine savannas in late spring and early summer. The wands of small flowers add bright yellow to the landscape at a time of year when it is colored with shades of pink, orange and white by candy roots, meadow pinks, prairie pinks, white top sedges, and many other species. Resembling the form of miniature century plants, the golden colic-root has basal rosettes that give rise to flowering spires. Reportedly, a tonic made from the underground parts of Aletris was used in American colonial times as a sedative." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.105 LILIACEAE Lily Family June 13, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000004 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/38 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.2 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 38 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:77 Grass Pink Orchid Calopogon tuberosus (L.) B.S.P. Murry, Robert E., Jr. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Vernon Parish 1976-1989 "'Gift of the meadow' is the meaning of Limodorum, a Greek name first used for this plant that grows in sunny wet meadows and savannas. This little orchid with its rose-pink to nearly crimson flowers is truly a jewel. The lip, one of the specialized petals of the orchid flower, is uppermost in the grass pink and has a fishtail-like apical portion. Somewhat below this is a beard of yellow hairs that arises from a white background. The two sepals on either side of the lip are large, colorful, and petal-like. The remaining two petals and the third sepal compose the lower portion of the flower. The column, which comprises the stigma, style, and stamens, projects from the central part of the flower and curves upward. For certain reasons, Calopogon is now the correct generic name for this plant and refers to the colorful beard on the lip. The specific epithet tuberosus refers to the underground, tuberlike roots from which the shoots develop. Although the grass pink orchid is common in parts of the southeastern United States, it is generally uncommon in Louisiana, probably being restricted by special habitat requirements." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.149 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family April 21, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000030 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/106 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 106 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on drawing is Calopogon pulchellus.
lsu-sc-msw:78 Green Dragon Arisaema dracontium (L.) Schott Thomas, R. Dale (flowers)||Landry, Garrie (fruit) Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 Morehouse Parish (flowers)||West Feliciana Parish (fruit) 1976-1989 "The green dragon is a close relative of the jack-in-the-pulpit, and the plants are quite similar in appearance. However, green dragon's one leaf is divided into five to fifteen segments, and jack-in-the-pulpit's, three to five segments. Green dragon's spadix is long and tapering and projects from a reduced spathe (the leaflike structure that surrounds and arches over the spadix of tiny, pollen- and seed-bearing flowers). Green dragon and jack-in-the-pulpit frequently grow together in mixed populations in moist, open woods with abundant leaf litter. Both species also have small underground corms containing calcium oxalate crystals and produce clusters of scarlet red fruit in the autumn." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.4 ARACEAE Arum Family May 1, 1979 still image watercolor drawings jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000011 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/13 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne Capturing Software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 13 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:79 Green Hawthorn Crataegus viridis L. Smith, Emory Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-18 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Green hawthorn is a small, rounded tree that grows in bottomland forests and swamps. The attractive cinnamon-brown color of its sinewy trunk is revealed by thin, exfoliating sheets of outer, grayish bark. Generally, but especially in juvenile plants, the numerous twigs are armed with long, slender, sharp thorns. Its leaves vary considerably in size and shape, ranging from ovate to oblong with several coarse teeth and a variable number of lobes. Rounded clusters of delicate, white to pink flowers with many stamens, somewhat resembling plum blossoms, cover the tree in late spring. Despite their visual appeal, the flowers have an objectionable, unpleasant odor. Mature fruits are oblong, red to reddish orange, and rather dry and tasteless, unlike those of the highly prized mayhaw, Crataegus opaca."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 195 ROSACEAE Rose Family March 20, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000052 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/65 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 65 8-bit 600 dpi Collection dates as appears on drawing: March 20, 1981 (flowers) and July 12, 1985 (fruit).
lsu-sc-msw:7 Arrowleaf Morning Glory Ipomoea sagittata Poir. Pruski, John Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-08 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "A denizen of the brackish marsh, arrowleaf morning glory is distributed in Louisiana in a narrow band along the coast. The arrowhead-shaped leaves of this plant are often visible above the surrounding marsh vegetation; its twining stems wrap around reeds, shrubs, and other objects for support. Throughout the summer and autumn months, vivid lavender-rose flowers with darker, reddish purple centers appear near the stem tips. The funnel-shaped corollas are about two inches in diameter and surround the five stamens inserted on the lower portion of the corolla tube. The fruit, a globose capsule, contains one to a few large seeds. The diverse genus Ipomoea comprises approximately fifteen hundred species, including I. batatas, the sweet potato, or yam, a plant that is commercially grown in Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 52 CONVOLULACEAE Morning Glory Family October 14, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000096 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/237 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-11-04 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 237 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Morning glory. A note on drawing appears, "Caution! Pink colour may be fugitive."
lsu-sc-msw:80 Green-Fly Orchid Epidendrum conopseum R. Br. Cole, Harriet||Vandarneck, Patricia Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 St. Helena Parish 1976-1989 "In southeastern Louisiana, the boughs of live oak and southern magnolia commonly provide suitable habitat for the slender, creeping rhizomes and numerous roots of the green-fly orchid. This species is epiphytic, not parasitic, since its nutrients are obtained from the rainwater in which it bathes. The aerial stems typically bear two or three dark green leaves and may terminate with a cluster of as many as twenty yellowish green flowers. Except for the three-lobed lip, each perianth segment has a linear to oblanceolate shape. Numerous tiny seeds are produced in each ellipsoidal capsule. The green-fly orchid ranges from east Texas to North Carolina and southward into Florida. It is the only epiphytic orchid in the Western Hemisphere that grows north of Florida."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 150 ORCHIDACEAE Orchid Family August 2, 1978 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000062 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/75 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.9 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 75 8-bit 600 dpi Collection dates and collection places as appears on drawing: 1975, St. Helena Parish; and then flowered and drawn on August 2, 1978 at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, England. Polypodium polypodioides (Resurrection Fern) also appears in this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:81 Hairy Spiderwort Tradescantia hirsutiflora Bush Robbins, Jim Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 Bossier Parish 1976-1989 "Tradescantia or spiderworts are quite common, readily recognized, and often cultivated plants. Typically, they have slender, grasslike leaves with bases that sheathe the stem, and flowers in terminal clusters subtended by a leaflike bract. The flowers consist of three green sepals, three white, pink, or blue petals, six stamens supported on hairy filaments, and a single, three-parted pistil. On sunny days, the flowers are open early in the morning, but by midday, the petals actually seem to melt, leaving a droplet of bluish liquid. Hairy spiderwort is a relatively short, clumped perennial that usually has an abundance of nonglandular hairs on the stems and sepals. Its flowers are among the largest of our native species of spiderworts and range in color from deep purple to rose to white. Hairy spiderwort is known from all but some of the coastal parishes and those in the Mississippi River floodplain. Five other species of Tradescantia are reported for Louisiana, and the differences among them are rather technical."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.64 COMMELINACEAE Spiderwort Family April 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000207 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/215 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.3 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 215 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Spider-wort.
lsu-sc-msw:82 Hairy Tangleberry Gaylussacia mosieri Small Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Hairy tangleberry, a deciduous to semievergreen shrub that may grow to three feet in height, inhabits the wet pine savannas and pitcher plant bog margins of extreme southeastern Louisiana and the Gulf Coastal Plain. Its small, simple, alternate leaves and branching clusters of urn-shaped flowers are reminiscent of the blueberries, to which it is related. However, berrylike fruits of the former are hard, dry, and inedible, unlike the succulent ones of blueberry. Another species, Gaylussacia dumosa, or dwarf huckleberry, often grows with hairy tangleberry, but it does not possess the numerous long, silky hairs seen on the flower stalk, or the floral tubes below the calyx lobes of the latter species."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 54 ERICACEAE Heath Family April 9, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000073 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/86 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 21.0 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 86 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Tangleberry.
lsu-sc-msw:83 Horned Bladderwort Utricularia cornuta Michx. Barker, Nancy||Givens, Florence M.||Rebertus, Alan Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Horned bladder wort grows in water, in floating mats, and on land. When growing in a terrestrial habitat, it has creeping stems near the soil surface, and its narrow, simple, filiform leaves can be seen only if the soil is gently washed away from the stems. Its bladders, or traps, are minute and are borne along the leaf margins. Upright scapes to about one foot tall appear from summer to fall and normally support from one to as many as nine flowers. Its bright yellow corollas are about one inch wide with a helmet shaped lower lip and a down turned spur about one-half inch long. Horned bladderwort grows in the shallow water of ponds and ditches and in the wet soil of bogs and wet pinewoods of the eastern United States and southeastern Canada. Utricularia is a large, worldwide genus of mostly aquatic or wetland plants, but some South American species grow as epiphytes. Approximately ten other species of bladderworts are known to grow in Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 104 LENTIBULARIACEAE Bladderwort Family August 22, 1983 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000211 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/220 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 220 8-bit 600 dpi Purple bladderwort (Utricularia purpurea) also appears on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:84 Hydrolea Hydrolea ovata Nutt. Clay, Keith||Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 Rapides Parish 1976-1989 "Hydrolea, a rhizomatous herbaceous species, grows along the margins of swamps and in wet ditches, where it may form extensive colonies. When in bloom, its showy clusters of brilliant blue flowers attract considerable attention. Hydrolea's bell-shaped corollas are composed of five petals that are about one-half inch in length. The five anthers of each flower are supported by long, arching filaments that attach to the corolla tube by dilated glandular bases. Individuals eager to pick one of these attractive plants are rudely surprised by sharp spines associated with each of the plant's ovate leaves. Hydrolea is a genus of about twenty species found primarily in tropical America."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 97 HYDROPHYLLACEAE Waterleaf Family July 20, 1984 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000088 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/101 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 20.7 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 101 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:85 Indian Blanket or Firewheel Gaillardia pulchella Foug. Harris, Elizabeth||Cox, Patricia Pias Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-20 1989 Jefferson Parish 1976-1989 "Because of its gaudy, reddish purple heads with yellow-tipped rays, this species of Gaillardia has been appropriately called Indian blanket and firewheel. Color may vary considerably among the individual rays, from those that have broad, yellow tips to those that are completely reddish. This plant grows as a robust annual with alternate, smooth-margined or lobed, pubescent leaves. Indian blanket grows abundantly on coastal sand dunes and sandy cheniers, where it flowers almost year round. It grows in localities scattered throughout Louisiana, and its widespread distribution undoubtedly is due in part to the popularity of this species as a garden ornamental. The genus name honors an amateur French botanist, and the specific epithet means 'beautiful' or 'handsome.'" --Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 28 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family March 20, 1989 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000071 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/84 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-28 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 84 8-bit 600 dpi Collection year as appears on the drawing is 1987.
lsu-sc-msw:86 Indian Paint Brush Castilleja indivisa Engelm. Dupre, David Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 Evangeline Parish 1976-1989 "Although Indian paint brush carpets vast areas of southeastern Texas with its bright red floral displays, it is rather uncommon in Louisiana. The few reports of this plant come from scattered areas in the western part of Louisiana and may represent accidental introductions from Texas. Indian paint brush is an annual that may grow in dense colonies. Individual plants are about one foot in height and have numerous narrow leaves. The most colorful part of the flowering spikes are structures called bracts that are yellow with brilliant red tips, giving the appearance of having been dipped in paint. The flower petals are pale yellow and contribute little color to the plant. Castilleja, named in honor of the Spanish botanist Domingo Castillejo, is primarily a genus of the western United States, where some 250 species exhibit a perplexing degree of variability." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.202 SCROPHULARIACEAE Figwort Family April 8, 1987 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000035 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/47 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB ajb Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 47 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:87 Indian Pink Spigelia marilandica L. Carroll, Neil Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 St. Helena Parish 1976-1989 "Vivid, red, trumpet-shaped flowers with yellow inner surfaces typify the Indian pink, which inhabits rich, moist, somewhat shady woods throughout the Southeast. Indian pink grows up to two feet tall and produces several pairs of opposite, simple leaves along its upright, unbranched stems. Its five-merous flowers are arranged in a terminal, one-sided spike with the oldest flowers at the base and progressively younger ones towards the apex. Indian pink, a favorite of native-plant gardeners, returns from its underground rhizome year after year, consistently producing its floral display. It was an early introduction to England and was discussed in Philip Miller's Gardeners Dictionary, published in several editions prior to 1797. Spigelia, a genus of about fifty species that grow in the Western Hemisphere, is represented in this country by about three other species. Some botanists treat Spigelia as belonging to its own family, but more commonly it is placed in the Loganiaceae. This largely tropical family is represented in Louisiana by yellow jessamine and a few other species. Buddleja, a popular ornamental, and Strychnos, the source of the highly toxic strychnine, are often considered members of the logania family."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 141 LOGANIACEAE Logania Family March 30, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000194 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/202 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 19.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 202 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:88 Indian Plantain Cacalia suaveolens L. Urbatsch, Lowell Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-17 1989 Natchitoches Parish 1976-1989 ASTERACEAE Aster May 6, 1995 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000228 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/253 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-12-09 2017-02-02 24.6 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 253 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on drawing: Cacalea plantaginea
lsu-sc-msw:89 Jack-in-the-Pulpit Arisaema quintatum (Nutt.) Schott [Arisaema triphyllum. (L.) Schott ssp. quinatum (Nutt.) Huttleston] Givens, Florence M. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Found throughout eastern North America, the jack-in-the-pulpit is probably one of the most widely recognized wildflowers. In this coastal species, the spathe is green and the primary leaf is divided into five leaflets. In the more northerly jack-in-the-pulpit, A. triphyluum, the spathe is purple and the primary leaf if composed of three leaflets. Scarlet clusters of fruit, along with the withered leaves of the native American species, are commonly found on the forest floor in autumn. The underground corm, when properly prepared, may be eaten; raw corms, however, contain calcium oxalate crystals that cause an intense burning sensation in the mouth and throat. Jack-in-the-pulpit is an excellent plant for a natural shade garden provided the soil is rich and constantly moist." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.5 ARACEAE Arum Family March 31, 1982 (flowers); August 30, 1982 (fruit) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000012 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/107 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.3 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 107 8-bit 600 dpi Scientific name as appears on drawing is Arisaema triphyllum.
lsu-sc-msw:8 Bald Cypress Taxodium distichum (L.) L. C. Rich. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-23 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Although a great diversity of habits occurs in Louisiana, visions of this state usually include vast swamps of picturesque cypress trees draped with Spanish moss. Appropriately, then, bald cypress has been designated the state tree. This tree is widely recognized by its knees and its deciduous branches bearing short, needlelike leaves and spherical seed cones. The smaller, pollen-bearing cones are supported in dense, drooping clusters and usually appear in January or February, long before the appearance of the bright green leaves. The function of the knees is as yet not completely clear to plant scientists, who suggest they might be pneumatophores (breathing organs), food storage depots, or a means of supporting such huge trees in the soft, wet muck of the swamp. There is also controversy about the taxonomic status of bald cypress because two forms can be found. Do we have one variable species, one species with two varieties, or two species? The most obvious difference between the two entities is the spread of the leaves; plants with leaves closely appressed to the stem are sometimes referred to as pond cypress, Taxodium ascendens. The national champion bald cypress, with a circumference of fifty-three feet eight inches and a height of eighty-three feet, is found on Cat Island, located in a relatively remote region of West Feliciana Parish."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 206 TAXODIACEAE Bald Cypress Family February 8, 1982; May 25, 1982 (leaves) still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000203 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/211 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 211 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:90 Jewel Weed Impatiens capensis Meerb. Smith, Latimore Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-24 1989 East Feliciana Parish 1976-1989 "Jewel weed, an inhabitant of the shady, moist woodlands of Louisiana and the eastern United States, is readily identifiable by its unusual, colorful flowers. A large, saclike sepal with one end fashioned into a recurved spur is the most conspicuous part of the pendulous flower. The three petals are visible from the mouthlike, open end of the sepal, and five stamens are concealed within it. When touched, the mature fruits will open explosively to release their many seeds. Cupped within one's hand, unopened fruits will soon begin to jump about as they split into five segments, giving one the sensation of holding some crawling insect. The watery sap of the stems and leaves of this species is said to offer an effective treatment for poison ivy and warts. The epithet capensis was bestowed on this species because it was initially, but mistakenly, thought to be from the Cape of Good Hope, Africa."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 46 BALSAMINACEAE Touch-Me-Not Family October 11, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000095 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/113 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-01 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 113 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:91 Joe-Pye-Weed Eupatorium fistulosum Barratt Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Cox, Patricia Pias Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-19 1989 Vernon Parish 1976-1989 "Among our many species of Eupatorium, the Joe-Pye-weed, which easily reaches ten feet in height, is the tallest. Other distinctive features include its long, lanceolate, whorled leaves and great, dome-shaped clusters of flowers. Each of its numerous heads contains five to eight lilac-pink flowers. The epithet fistulosum refers to the plant's hollow stems. Its curious common name is derived from Joe Pye, who is said to have been a native American who used the plants in medicinal practices. This common name is generally applied to three other, similar species variously distributed in the eastern United States. Although not widely used as a garden plant, Joe-Pye-weed makes an attractive background for other, smaller native wildflowers and may be propagated from seeds or by root cuttings."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 11 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family July 24, 1989 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000068 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/81 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-07-26 2017-02-02 20.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 81 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:92 Lady Lupine Lupinus villosus Willd. Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-07-27 1989 Washington Parish 1976-1989 "The lady lupine has magnificent, tall spikes of showy flowers that arise in clusters from dense clumps of greenish gray leaves. Being a typical member of the legume family, lady lupine has flowers that consist of a keel, two wing petals, and a lavender banner with a dark purple spot. Lady lupine is a perennial herb with unifoliate leaves, and unusual feature for lupines, which generally have compound leaves with numerous leaflets. Its fruits are similar in structure to those of peas. An abundance of hairs gives the vegetative parts of the plants and the fruits a shaggy, silvery gray appearance. Lupinus villosus grows in sandy soils of the coastal plain from Florida to Louisiana, where it is known from a few locations in Washington and St. Tammany parishes. Some species of Lupinus are popular ornamental plants, and this species seems to have such potential as well, but little apparently is known about its culture characteristics. The generic name Lupinus comes from the Latin lupus, "wolf," because a crop of lupines was thought to destroy soil fertility. About two hundred species of lupines are known to occur mostly in temperate regions of the world."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 74 FABACEAE Legume Family April 15 (flowers), May 20 (unripe fruit), 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000119 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/129 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-08-03 2017-02-02 21.1 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 129 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:93 Lance-Leaved Bulltongue Sagittaria lancifolia L. [Sagittaria falcata Pursh] Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Vast areas of brackish or fresh coastal marsh are predominantly occupied by lance-leaved bulltongue (right), which also grows in ditches and along ponds and streams mostly in southern Louisiana. The plants are conspicuous not only by their numbers but also by their upright, lanceolate to elliptic, long-petiolate leaves, which arise from stout rhizomes rooted in the mud. Tall flower stalks surpassing the leaves bear two kinds of unisexual flowers in whorls of three. Pollen-producing flowers with many yellow stamens compose the upper portion of the inflorescence, and seed-producing flowers with a large number of green pistils the lower. Both types of flowers have a superficially similar appearance, with three sepals and three, broadly elliptic, delicate, white petals. Eight of the approximately twenty mostly New World species of Sagittaria are reported for Louisiana. Most species are relatively common, wetlands plants and provide an important source of wildlife food. Roots of S. latifolia, arrowhead, were eaten by Native Americas, and an Asian species, S. sagittifolia, is grown for its edible, starchy, underground parts."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 2 ALISMATACEAE Water Plantain Family May 19, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000181 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/188 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-17 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 188 8-bit 600 dpi Sagittaria lancifolia (Lance-Leaved Bulltongue) on the right and Sagittaria platyphylla (Broad-Leaved Bulltongue) on the left appear on this drawing. Scientific name as appears on drawing is Sagittaria falcata.
lsu-sc-msw:94 Late Blue Aster Aster praealtus Poir. Urbatsch, Lowell E.||Landry, Garrie Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-02-15 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Autumn's last splash of color in Louisiana is spent on the late blue aster, which is seen around the edges of woods, along roadsides, and in old fields. Profuse masses of yellow- to purple-centered, pale blue-rayed heads cause the slender stems to arch over and to often rely on neighboring vegetation for support. The late blue aster is a widespread perennial in the eastern United States and is one of more than two dozen native species of aster found in Louisiana." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p.8 ASTERACEAE Sunflower Family October 19, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000019 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/19 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.5 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB clg Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 19 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:95 Live Oak Quercus virginiana Miller Brown, Clair A. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-19 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Live oak is native to the coastal regions from eastern Texas to Virginia, but because it is highly prized for its spreading form and attractive foliage, it has been extensively planted on more inland sites. Its thick, glossy leaves, which are shed each spring about the time flowers and new leaves appear, have pubescent lower leaf surfaces and smooth or slightly toothed to lobed margins. Live oak flowers are unisexual; pollen-producing ones are clustered in pendulous catkins, and the much fewer seed-producing ones are borne individually or in small clusters. Because of their adaptation for wind pollination, the flowers lack petals and are not showy. Elongated acorns are often produced in abundance in the fall. Live oak is long-lived and can grow to enormous size. The national champion tree, growing in Louisburg, Louisiana, is thirty-six feet seven inches in circumference. Live oak often provides suitable habitat for various epiphytes such as Spanish moss and resurrection fern."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 78 FAGACEAE Beech Family February 2, 1976 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000169 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/173 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 21.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 173 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Southern Live Oak. Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides) also appears on this drawing.
lsu-sc-msw:96 Lizard's Tail Saururus cernuus L. Tucker, Shirley C. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-09-16 1989 East Baton Rouge Parish 1976-1989 "Dense colonies of lizard's tail become conspicuous in the late springtime in swamps and wet ditches as the flowers on the long, tapering, drooping inflorescences come into bloom. Surprisingly, the showy, white, usually fragrant flowers lack sepals and petals and owe their color largely to the filaments of their numerous stamens. The simple, heart-shaped leaves are alternately arranged, and at each node a narrow scar encircles the stem. Only one other species is contained in the genus Saururus, S. chinensis of the Philippines and eastern Asia. In fact, the Saururaceae embraces a total of seven species. Anemopsis californica is native to southwestern North America, and Houttuynia cordata, an Asian plant sometimes used as an ornamental ground cover and for salads, has been recorded as a recent introduction to Louisiana."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p.199 SAURURACEAE Lizard's Tail Family May 12, 1977 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000188 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/196 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-24 2017-02-02 18.8 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 196 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:97 Longleaf Pine Pinus palustris Miller Landry, Garrie||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Pinus palustris is the principal tree on the upland soils and the seasonally wet, sandy flatlands of the southeastern coastal plain. The longleaf pine plant community, believed to have occupied seventy million acres stretching from southeastern Texas to Virginia prior to European settlement, has been greatly reduced in size and otherwise modified. Adaptation to fire has been one of the major reasons for the success of longleaf pine. One special modification making it so adapted is its "grass stage," which is characterized by initial slow growth and a single, unbranched stem supporting a cluster of long needles. The needles and the clusters of silvery scales surrounding the terminal bud protect it from heat as fires race through the grassy understory. Among our native pines, this species is recognized as having the longest leaves and the largest cones. Longleaf pine is an important timber species, and its resin is a valuable source of turpentine and other naval stores. This species also provides a home for many animals, including the rare red-cockaded woodpecker, which lives in hollows of old trees."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 168 PINACEAE Pine Family March 12, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000157 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/161 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 20.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 161 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:98 Longleaf Pine Pinus palustris Miller Landry, Garrie||Urbatsch, Lowell E. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-08-12 1989 Tangipahoa Parish 1976-1989 "Pinus palustris is the principal tree on the upland soils and the seasonally wet, sandy flatlands of the southeastern coastal plain. The longleaf pine plant community, believed to have occupied seventy million acres stretching from southeastern Texas to Virginia prior to European settlement, has been greatly reduced in size and otherwise modified. Adaptation to fire has been one of the major reasons for the success of longleaf pine. One special modification making it so adapted is its "grass stage," which is characterized by initial slow growth and a single, unbranched stem supporting a cluster of long needles. The needles and the clusters of silvery scales surrounding the terminal bud protect it from heat as fires race through the grassy understory. Among our native pines, this species is recognized as having the longest leaves and the largest cones. Longleaf pine is an important timber species, and its resin is a valuable source of turpentine and other naval stores. This species also provides a home for many animals, including the rare red-cockaded woodpecker, which lives in hollows of old trees."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 168 PINACEAE Pine Family March 12, 1980 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000156 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/160 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-14 2017-02-02 20.4 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 160 8-bit 600 dpi
lsu-sc-msw:99 Louisiana Bear Grass Yucca louisianensis Trel. Pope, Tom Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-10-07 1989 Vernon Parish 1976-1989 "Louisiana bear grass, a member of the lily family, occurs in dry, sandy soils in central and northwestern Louisiana and adjacent parts of Arkansas and Texas. The stout stems of this plant may grow to eighteen inches tall and support a rounded cluster of leaves whose white-bordered margins are somewhat shredded into filaments. The flowers are about one inch long and are composed of six similar, petal-like members, six stamens, and a three-parted pistil. Various species of Yucca have in the past been a valuable resource to Native Americans and early settlers. The flower buds, flowers, young inflorescences, and fruits of some species are edible. Their leaves have served as a source of fiber and their roots as a source of soaplike substances. Yucca contains about thirty species, found mostly in the arid regions of North America, and some are grown as ornamentals. Variation among and between species is not well studied, making the application of the scientific names somewhat difficult. The yuccas are similar to agaves, and the two are sometimes placed together in the same plant family. Yuccas differ, however, in having a superior ovary."--Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. 120 LILIACEAE Lily Family April 5, 1981 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press. Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000221 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/233 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-10-28 2017-02-02 19.2 MB KAS Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas : Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 233 8-bit 600 dpi Common name as appears on drawing is Bear Grass.
lsu-sc-msw:9 Bartonia Bartonia verna (Michx.) Muhl. Tucker, Shirley C. Stones, Margaret 1976 Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.). Libraries 2006-03-31 1989 St. Tammany Parish 1976-1989 "Bartonia generally goes undetected by most observers of nature because of its small stature and late-winter flowering period. The plant seldom grows more than ten inches tall and bears tiny, scalelike leaves on its wiry, purple stems. The flowers, which may open in Louisiana as early as January, provided the weather has been warm enough, each consist of four sepals, four white petals, and four stamens. At maturity, numerous minute seeds form within tiny capsules. Bartonia inhabits bogs and wet pine savannas and can generally be found where pitcher plants grow." -- Lowell Urbatsch, in The Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1991), p. 93 GENTIANACEAE Gentian Family March 10, 1979 still image watercolor drawing jp2 Approx. 57 x 38 cm en Louisiana State University Libraries, Special Collections ( http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special ) http://lsu.louisianadigitallibrary.org/lsu-msw%3Acollection Native Flora of Louisiana - Watercolor drawings by Margaret Stones LUU Louisiana State University: LSU Libraries http://lib.lsu.edu Hill Memorial Library: Special Collections E-mail [email protected] with questions or comments. See instructions for ordering reprints of this item here: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/services/duplication.html Mention the "Item number" or "Item URL" in your request. Image copyright Louisiana State University. 'Description' reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones with Botanical Descriptions by Lowell Urbatsch. Copyright 1991 by Louisiana State University Press, Native Flora of Louisiana: Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, Louisiana Digital Library, Baton Rouge, La. ms000024 http://cdm16313.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/MSW/id/26 Transformed into MODS from extended Dublin Core by the LDL Development Team at Louisiana State University. 2006-05-04 2017-02-02 21.7 MB ANH Contrast and brightness adjusted to match original. Color RGB kas Imagery digitally captured with Sinar 4 in. by 5 in. Large Format Camera with a PhaseOne 4 in. by 5 in. Digital Studio Camera System Back. Software used includes PhaseOne capturing software and Adobe Photoshop. MSW 26 8-bit 600 dpi