Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition
Originally published in 1999, Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands was the first book to focus on the beauty and diversity of the wetland plants that once covered 1.5 million acres of Iowa. Now this classic of midwestern natural history is back in print with a new format and all-new photographs, just as Iowa’s wetlands are getting the respect and attention they deserve.

In clear and accessible prose, authors Sylvan Runkel and Dean Roosa provide common, scientific, and family names; the Latin or Greek meaning of the scientific names; habitat and blooming times; and a complete description. Plants are presented by habitat (terrestrial or aquatic), then refined by habit (e.g., emergent, floating, or submerged) or taxonomic group (e.g., ferns and allies or trees, shrubs, and vines). Particularly interesting is the information on the many ways in which Native Americans and early pioneers used these plants for everything from pain relief to tonics to soup and the ways that wildlife today use them for food and shelter. Each of the more than 150 species accounts is accompanied by a brilliant full-page color photograph by botanist Thomas Rosburg, who has also updated the nomenclature and descriptions for certain species.

After decades of being considered an enemy of the settler, the farmer, and the citizen, Iowa’s wetlands have come into their own. We are finally caring for these important habitats. Runkel and Roosa’s updated field companion will be a valuable guide to today’s preservation and restoration initiatives.
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Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition
Originally published in 1999, Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands was the first book to focus on the beauty and diversity of the wetland plants that once covered 1.5 million acres of Iowa. Now this classic of midwestern natural history is back in print with a new format and all-new photographs, just as Iowa’s wetlands are getting the respect and attention they deserve.

In clear and accessible prose, authors Sylvan Runkel and Dean Roosa provide common, scientific, and family names; the Latin or Greek meaning of the scientific names; habitat and blooming times; and a complete description. Plants are presented by habitat (terrestrial or aquatic), then refined by habit (e.g., emergent, floating, or submerged) or taxonomic group (e.g., ferns and allies or trees, shrubs, and vines). Particularly interesting is the information on the many ways in which Native Americans and early pioneers used these plants for everything from pain relief to tonics to soup and the ways that wildlife today use them for food and shelter. Each of the more than 150 species accounts is accompanied by a brilliant full-page color photograph by botanist Thomas Rosburg, who has also updated the nomenclature and descriptions for certain species.

After decades of being considered an enemy of the settler, the farmer, and the citizen, Iowa’s wetlands have come into their own. We are finally caring for these important habitats. Runkel and Roosa’s updated field companion will be a valuable guide to today’s preservation and restoration initiatives.
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Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition

Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition

Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition

Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition

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Overview

Originally published in 1999, Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands was the first book to focus on the beauty and diversity of the wetland plants that once covered 1.5 million acres of Iowa. Now this classic of midwestern natural history is back in print with a new format and all-new photographs, just as Iowa’s wetlands are getting the respect and attention they deserve.

In clear and accessible prose, authors Sylvan Runkel and Dean Roosa provide common, scientific, and family names; the Latin or Greek meaning of the scientific names; habitat and blooming times; and a complete description. Plants are presented by habitat (terrestrial or aquatic), then refined by habit (e.g., emergent, floating, or submerged) or taxonomic group (e.g., ferns and allies or trees, shrubs, and vines). Particularly interesting is the information on the many ways in which Native Americans and early pioneers used these plants for everything from pain relief to tonics to soup and the ways that wildlife today use them for food and shelter. Each of the more than 150 species accounts is accompanied by a brilliant full-page color photograph by botanist Thomas Rosburg, who has also updated the nomenclature and descriptions for certain species.

After decades of being considered an enemy of the settler, the farmer, and the citizen, Iowa’s wetlands have come into their own. We are finally caring for these important habitats. Runkel and Roosa’s updated field companion will be a valuable guide to today’s preservation and restoration initiatives.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609382858
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Publication date: 04/15/2015
Series: Bur Oak Guide
Edition description: 1
Pages: 400
Sales rank: 1,048,283
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Sylvan Runkel (1906­–1995) was the coauthor of five books about midwestern wildflowers, including Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie (Iowa paperback, 2009) and Wildflowers of Iowa Woodlands (Iowa paperback, 2009). A vigorous promoter of conservation for many years, he was honored by the dedication of the Sylvan Runkel State Preserve in 1996. Conservationist
 
Dean Roosa has served as Iowa’s state ecologist, board member for the Iowa Chapter of the Nature Conservancy and the Natural Areas Association, chair of the Iowa Natural History Association, and president of the Iowa Ornithologists’ Union. He is the coauthor of Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie and The Vascular Plants of Iowa (Iowa, 1994).
 
Arnold G. van der Valk teaches ecology at Iowa State University and is the editor of the journal Plant Ecology. In 2004, he was named Distinguished Iowa Scientist by the Iowa Academy of Science; four years later, he earned a Merit Award in recognition of his outstanding contribution to wetland science and was elected Fellow of the Society of Wetland Scientists.
 
A professor of ecology and botany at Drake University, Thomas Rosburg has served as president of the Iowa Academy of Science and as a member of the board of directors for the Iowa Chapter of the Nature Conservancy. Winner of the Sierra Club Environmental Educator Award, the Prairie Advocate Award, the Governor’s Iowa Environmental Excellence Award, and many other distinctions, he is also the photographer for many University of Iowa Press publications, including Trees in Your Pocket (2012) and Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie (2010). He has published over 360 images in a wide range of books, magazines, calendars, and brochures, including National Geographic, Sierra, The Iowan, and the American Journal of Botany.

Table of Contents

Publisher's Note to the Second Edition xi

Forewor Arnold van der Valk xiii

Preface xv

Acknowledgments xix

Disclaimer xxi

Introduction 1

Terrestrial Flowering Herbs

Skunk cabbage 47

Marsh marigold 49

Spring cress 51

Bogbean 53

Water parsnip 55

Tall cotton-grass 57

Giant manna grass 59

Fox sedge 61

Cattail sedge 63

Lacustrine sedge 65

Woolly sedge 67

Tussock sedge 69

False hop sedge 71

Hop sedge 73

Yellowfruit sedge 75

Squarrose sedge 77

Gray's sedge 79

Water hemlock 81

Angelica 83

Canada anemone 85

Tufted loosestrife 87

Northern leafy green orchid 89

Marsh cress 91

Dark green bulrush 93

Curly dock 95

Small white lady slipper 97

Reed canary grass 99

Blue flag iris 101

Cattail 103

Yellow monkey flower 105

Watercress 107

Fog fruit 109

Reddish spikerush 111

Fringed loosestrife 113

Marsh bellflower 115

Arrow grass 117

Joe Pye weed 119

Arrow arum 121

Hard-stemmed bulrush, soft-stemmed bulrush 123

Grass of Parnassus 125

Swamp milkweed 127

Monewort 129

Water plantain 131

Whorled loosestrife 133

Winged loosestrife 135

Boneset 137

Stinging nettle 139

Swamp loosestrife 141

Water horehound 143

Marsh skullcap 145

Water smartweed 147

Tear thumb 149

White vervain 151

Purple loosestrife 153

Sweet flag 155

Yellow nut grass 157

Pendant bulrush 159

Bog twayblade 161

Seedbox 163

Cardinal flower 165

Barnyard grass 167

Acuminate rash, Dudley's rush 169

Wood nettle 171

Torrey's rush 173

Mint 175

Blue vervain 177

Ditch sronecrop 179

White turtlehead 181

Sundew 183

Prairie cord grass 185

River bulrush 187

Wool-grass 189

Jewelweed 191

Brook lobelia 193

Tall coneflower 195

Sneezeweed 197

Pink turtlehead 199

Red-rooted cyperus 201

Blue lobelia 203

Reed grass 205

False dragonhead 207

Burhead, tall burhead 209

Water willow 211

Monkey flower 213

Umbrella sedge 215

Meadow beauty 217

Mountain mint 219

Hedge nettle 221

American germander 223

Rose mallow 225

Riddell's goldenrod 227

Ladies' tresses 229

Stick-tight 231

Fringed gentian 233

Closed gentian 235

Ferns, Fern Allies, and Lower Vascular Plants

Adder's-tongue fern 239

Cinnamon fern 241

Common horsetail 243

Crested wood tern 245

Marsh, fern 247

Meadow spikemoss 249

Mosquito fern 251

Royal fern 253

Sensitive fern 255

Spinulose wood fern 257

Water clover 259

Water horsetail 261

Woodland horsetail 263

Trees, Shrubs, and Vines

Black ash 267

Black willow 269

Bog birch 271

Buttonbush 273

Cottonwood 275

Elderberry 277

Indigo bush 279

Meadow sweet 281

Red-osier dogwood 283

Riverbank grape 285

River birch 287

Sage willow 289

Sandbar willow 291

Silky dogwood 293

Silver maple 295

Sycamore 297

Herbs Growing in Water: Emergent, Floating, or Submerged

American lotus 301

Arrowhead 303

Bladderwort 305

Bur-reed 307

Coontail 309

Curly pondweed 311

Elodea 313

Flat-stemmed pondweed 315

Greater duckweed 317

Lesser duckweed 319

Long-leaved pondweed 321

Pickerel weed 323

Red-head pondweed 325

Sago pondweed 327

Spatterdock 329

Star duckweed 331

Water hyssop 333

Watermeal 335

Water milfoil 337

Watershield 339

Water stargrass 341

White waterlily 343

Wild celery 345

Wild rice 347

Yellow water crowfoot 349

Glossary 351

Selected Bibliography 355

Index 361

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