Plant of the Week
Plant of the Week Carousel
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Plant of the Week: Nuttall's Violet
The genus name for violets is Viola, which is Latin for violet colored. However, the only violet coloring are the nectar guides – purple stripes on the bright yellow petals.
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Plant of the Week: Jack-in-the-Pulpit
Also commonly called Indian turnip, it's a shade requiring species found in rich, moist, deciduous woods and floodplains.
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Plant of the Week: Red or Eastern Columbine
This plant has flowers with petals which are said to appear like an eagle's claw.
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Plant of the Week: California Poppy
California poppy, the state flower of California, is native to the Pacific slope of North America from Western Oregon to Baja California.
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Plant of the Week: Plants of the Winter Solstice
Plants play an important role in many of our holiday traditions, including the season surrounding the winter solstice.
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Plant of the Week: Wild Ginger
Asarum caudatum, wild ginger [British Columbia wild ginger], is a native perennial forb that is evergreen throughout most of its range.
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Plant of the Week: Apache Plume
Apache plume blooms in the spring, and sometimes again in the fall, with 2 inch white rose-like flowers.
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Plant of the Week: Spoon-leaved Sundew
Spoon-leaved Sundew is an “insectivorous” species, meaning that it traps insects on the sticky hairs of its leaves and then digests them for the nutrients.
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Plant of the Week: Wheel Milkweed
This milkweed occurs in uplands of grasslands across the central and southern United States, where it is apparently rare...
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Plant of the Week: Dwarf Dogwood
Dwarf dogwood, is also known as bunchberry, bunchberry dogwood, and Canadian dwarf cornel.
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Enjoy Your Wildflowers
Thousands of wildflowers grow on our national forests and grasslands, in many shapes, sizes, and colors. A field of wildflowers or colorful plants upon a lush forest floor is a beautiful sight, but so is a single flower or scattered plants growing upon what at first glance may appear to be a dry and desolate landscape.
Celebrating Wildflowers periodically features a different wildflower plant found on our national forests and grasslands.
The Plant of the Week descriptions are organized alphabetically by genus and species.