Spring flowers 1
Transcription
Spring flowers 1
Spring in the Habitat Garden Flowers in the Forest Fringecup flowers Tellima grandiflora (above) Fringecup and Piggy-back growing together. Piggy-back flowers Tolmiea menziesii (right) False lily-of-the-valley Maianthemum dilatatum Bleeding heart Dicentra formosa with a bumblebee feeding on the flower nectar. Groundcover mix of deer fern, bleeding heart, Siberian miners lettuce and false lily-of-the-valley. Western trillium Trillium ovatum Vanilla-leaf Achlys triphylla Starflower Solomon seal Smilacena stellata Wood sorrel Oxalis oregana Spring in the Habitat Garden Flowering Trees, Shrubs and Vines Tall Oregon grape Mahonia aquifolium (left) Dull Oregon grape Mahonia nervosa (below) Red-flowering currant Ribes sanguineum Thimbleberry Rubus parviflorus Salmonberry flower Rubus spectabilis Western trumpet honeysuckle Lonicera ciliosa Evergreen huckleberry Vaccinium ovatum Black Cottonwood Populus balsamifera Bigleaf maple flowers Acer macrophyllum Spring in the Habitat Garden Meadow Flowers Camas flower and meadow Camassia quamash Wild Violets Viola species Tiger lily (above) Lilium columbianum and Chocolate lily (below) Fritillaria lanceolata Wild onion Allium species and Brodiaea species Siberian miner’s-lettuce also called Candyflower for it’s peppermint striped flower Claytonia sibirica Douglas iris (left) Iris douglasiana with Beach strawberry (Fragaria chiloensis) Kinnikinnik (right) Arctostaphylus uva ursi Spring in the Habitat Garden Flowering Trees, Shrubs and Vines Tall Oregon grape Mahonia aquifolium (left) Dull Oregon grape Mahonia nervosa (below) Red-flowering currant Ribes sanguineum Thimbleberry Rubus parviflorus Salmonberry flower Rubus spectabilis Western trumpet honeysuckle Lonicera ciliosa Evergreen huckleberry Vaccinium ovatum Black Cottonwood Populus balsamifera Bigleaf maple flowers Acer macrophyllum Spring in the Habitat Garden New Growth Sword fern with unfurling fronds Habitat Garden spring flowers classification: (Saxifragaceae) Fringecup: Piggyback: Heuchera: Foamflower: Rose (Rosaceae) Sepals and petals 5, stamens mostly numerous, leaves mostly alternate or basal, Black Hawthorne: Goatsbeard: Strawberry: Wild Rose: Serviceberry: Indian Plum: Oceanspray: Dewberry: Thimbleberry: Lily Family (Liliaceae) Flowers usually in threes (exception False Lily); leaves parallel veins, basal or alternate or whorled; fruit 3 chambered, mostly with rhizomes, fleshy roots or bulbs, Starflower Solomon Seal False Solomon Seal False Lily of the Valley Trillium Camas Honeysuckle Family (Caprifilolaceae) Flowers generally 5 lobed corolla (tubed or cup shaped)double check this, Stamens generally 5, opposite leaves Red Elderberry: Honeysuckle: Snowberry: (Ericaceae) Salal: Kinnikinick: Evergreen Huckleberry: Red huckleberry: Madrone: Barberry Family (Berberidaceae Oregon grape: Inside out flower: (Vancouveria) Vanilla Leaf: Dogwood Family (Cornaceae) Red Osier: Pacific Dogwood: Other families: Siberian Miners lettuce: Purslane Family (Portulacaceae) Red Currant: Bleeding heart: Columbine: Vine Maple: Iris: One of the smallest birds in the forest, usually seen near the forest floor as it feeds on insects. When singing it can be found on high branches and snags. Winter Wren Winter wren has a beautiful, gurgling, clear song with over 100 notes that comes from the darkest parts of our forest throughout the year, especially noticeable in winter. Robins sing ‘cheerily, cheeryme’ rising and falling in pitch. They also call ‘tuttut-tut’ and ‘tseep’. American Robin Bushtit Bushtits busily work in pairs gathering spider webs, moss, feathers and hair to make their unique nests.in spring. Look for flickers flying through the low canopy of the forest in a rythmic, dipping flight, with glimpse of orange as their wings open. Their arrival is announced by a clear challenging call and they attract mates with loud drumming on trunks and utility poles, metal roofs and resonant tree limbs. They raise their young in cavities in trees. Northern Flicker The call note of the Downy is a flat "pik". Its song is a rapid whinny of notes, descending in pitch. Downy woodpeckers eat a variety of insects, especially wood-boring insects. They dig round holes into snags and live trees. Downy Woodpecker Listen for thumping, or rapid drumming while feeding, or a distinctive cheh-cheh-cheh-cheh-cheh increasing in pitch. Pileated woodpeckers create rectangular holes while feeding. Pileated Woodpecker Crows will sometimes "mob" roosting owls or hawks. If you hear or see a flock of crows flying and diving and cawing, check the nearby roosts and you may find red-tail or sharpshinned hawk that they are trying to drive away. American Crow “CAW-CAW” Look for sharp-shinned hawks flying rapidly through the forest understory as they hunt for small birds. Sharp-shinned Hawk Red-tail Hawk Red tails voice is a “keeear’ scream descending from high to low. Anna’s While feeding, males and females alike give out a sharp ‘tzip’. Look for red-tail hawks flying overhead, or perched in tall trees. Rufus The adult male makes a characteristic trilling sound in flight. Hummingbird