work makAll play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All
HBAM2016AUG95
Pro 5.0
All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a goodCopyright 1984-1997 Claris Corporation
and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy. All play and no work makes John a good boy.
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HBAM3016AUG95@
000-001
000-002
000-003
000-004
000-005
000-006
000-007
000-008
000-009
000-010
000-011
000-012
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0002-13
0002-14
0002-15
0002-16
0002-17
0002-18
000-001B ZigadenusC
elegansE
Snowbird RidgeF
8/1/79H LILIACEAE
Zigadenus elegans 1
Sheet 225.01R
1526U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
000-002B
VeratrumC
californicumE
Snowbird areaF
8/1/79H LILIACEAE
Veratrum californicum 1
Sheet 225.05R
1523U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
000-003B
CleomeC serrulataE Utah LakeF
9/1/79H
CAPPARACEAEI
Cleome serrulata 1K
Sheet 330.09R
1049U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
000-004B MentzeliaC
laevicaulisE
Salt Lake CityF
10/1/79H LOASACEAEI
Mentzelia laevicaulis 1K
Sheet 330.05
Wasatch Blvd
1549U
0 - Unusable/Duplicatesh
$$-43t
000-005B
PopulusC
tremuloidesE
Zion NPF
10/1/77H
SALICACEAE
Populus tremuloides 1
2414U
10236
6/10/2004
ERROR
FAMILY
GENUS
GERROR
GERRORCODE
GMACOS REGSTRING
GPATHTOCURRENTFILE
GPATHTOIMPORTFILE
GWINDOWS REGSTRING
IMAGE NAME
IMAGES 12 CD
IMAGES 12 HD
IMAGES MINI5 CD
IMAGES MINI5 HD
NOTES
ORDINAL
PATHTOCURRENTFILE
PHOTO LIBRARY
PHOTOGRAPHER
PLACE
RANGE/CATEGORY
ROLL NUMBER
SPECIES
TAXON
USER NOTES
VERSION NOTES
Roll NumberB
GenusB
speciesB
CD-ROM g_G4 Dual:Users:Bill:Desktop:Cyberflora Folder:Cyberflora:Wasatch Flora v. 1.30:Photo Data HD.fp5i
:-100:201139:134d-44-p.jpgq
]#BEGIN TrFile25Mac
Registered-To: Cyberflora
This Troi File Plug-in for Macintosh may only be used by end-users of
Thought it was a LAM. Non-aromatic, stems round, 3' tall. Multiple stems, unbranched until inflor. Some of leaves weakly hastate, about like that shown in Cronq. Spikes up to 20 cm. Leaves grayish green.
A bit ambiguous, but looks like a long-spiked V. hastata.
Originally thought ('96) this was P. procerus, with not enough info. to eliminate P. humilis. Same population in '98, collected new specimen, and it was clearly P. humilis.
Not really sure. Tree to about 12 feet. Green leaves, lighter below. Fresh ones have very narrow tip. Scale app. 100 deg angle, ventral edges fused. Leaves 15 cm or more, toothed, not glaucous below.R
1962U
1032d
134d-42B
SalixC lasiandraE
City Creek Canyon.F
10/15/2002H
SALICACEAEI
Salix lasiandra 5K
Not really sure. Tree to about 12 feet. Green leaves, lighter below. Fresh ones have very narrow tip. Scale app. 100 deg angle, ventral edges fused. Leaves 15 cm or more, toothed, not glaucous below.S
1963U
1032h
$$-43t
134d-43B
BetulaC
occidentalisE
City Creek Canyon.F
10/15/2002H
BETULACEAEI
Betula occidentalis 3K
Not really sure. Tree to about 12 feet. Green leaves, lighter below. Fresh ones have very narrow tip. Scale app. 100 deg angle, ventral edges fused. Leaves 15 cm or more, toothed, not glaucous below.R
Not really sure. Tree to about 12 feet. Green leaves, lighter below. Fresh ones have very narrow tip. Scale app. 100 deg angle, ventral edges fused. Leaves 15 cm or more, toothed, not glaucous below.S
93" high. No fruit available. Much later, 8/30/00, went through character keying to quickly limit it to a Draba. D. stenoloba fits very well: 7.5 cm high, mostly scapose, one plant has one stem leaf similar to basal, leaf shape and size, minimal hairiness, pedicels glabrous, habitat (rocky slope near chair lift).
M. sonchoides rather than M. torreyi listed for CR NP, but this has all the distinguishing marks of the latter, notably the persistent setae on the achene.S
1658U
1301_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
083-021B
LupinusC
pusillusE'Hanksville, back road towards Henry MtsF
5/9/99H
FABACEAEI
Lupinus pusillus 1S
1659U
1303_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
083-022B
TownsendiaC
incanaE'Hanksville, back road towards Henry MtsF
5/9/99H
ASTERACEAEI
Townsendia incana 2L
PZAlmost certainly T. incana, though no plant collected. Only a short piece of stem visible.R
1660U
1176_
3 - Utahd
083-023B
AstragalusC episcopusE'Hanksville, back road towards Henry MtsF
rotate, 10 mm long. Y tube with strong purple veins, opening into pink throat and purple lobes, latter veined with pale violet. Leaves bristly, 2-3 mm long. Can't judge opp vs alt. S
lentiginosusE'Grand Staircase NP, Hole-in-the Rock RdF
5/8/99H
FABACEAEI
Astragalus lentiginosus 4P
var palaus
fov 40 mmS
1689U
1289_
0 - Unusable/Duplicatesh
$$-43t
084-015B
AstragalusC
lentiginosusE'Grand Staircase NP, Hole-in-the Rock RdF
5/8/99H
FABACEAEI
Astragalus lentiginosus 5P
var palaus
fov 35 mmS
1690U
1289_
2 - Was Front Extended 2001h
$$-43t
084-016B
AstragalusC
sp. 1E
Capitol Reef NP, CainesvilleF
5/9/99H
FABACEAEI
Astragalus sp. 1.3P}Really confusing, couldn't pin it down. Beautiful pink, densely clustered. Slight Se smell? Terrible soil by road.
fov 17 mmS
1691_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
084-017B
MalacothrixC
torreyiE
Capitol Reef NP, CainesvilleF
5/9/99H
ASTERACEAEI
Malacothrix torreyi 2P
M. sonchoides rather than M. torreyi listed for CR NP, but this has all the distinguishing marks of the latter, notably the persistent setae on the achene.
Not really sure. Tree to about 12 feet. Green leaves, lighter below. Fresh ones have very narrow tip. Scale app. 100 deg angle, ventral edges fused. Leaves 15 cm or more, toothed, not glaucous below.R
loose corm. Pair of opposite floating leaves subtending inflor.
Each fl subtended by a pair of pink-tinged bracts. Then [3 sepals and 3 w petals]. Sepals folded, relatively rigid. Fruit a dimpled seed, about 1.5 - 2 mm.
Cronquist retains separation of A. tomentosa into A. tomentosa and A. eastwoodiana. Latter, occupying SE Utah, and having narrow leaves, fits with these specimens.
Plants densely crowded on beach that had been flooded heavily this year. Mostly <15" tall, slender, from black rhizomes. Branched irregularly from the base: branches jointed, but didn't check at site whether they were further branched. Branches hollow rules out E. arvense. Diameter of stems up to about 2 mm. Up to 11 principal ridges. Central cavity ca. 0.5 diameter, not good fit to anything. Sheaths 5-7 mm long, teeth not jointed or deciduous. Saw no cones or remains. Balance seems well iB
Excellent check out, though it took some time. Had to analyze details of flower structure to get family and genus. Species clear from upper petals partly fused.S
1760U
1476_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
104-012B
AllioniaC incarnataE
Virgin River Gorge, AZF 4/21/2000H
NYCTAGINACEAEI
Allionia incarnata 1K
0P'Gorgeous pink. Sand stuck all over it!.S
1761U
1475_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
104-013B
HeliotropiumC
curassavicumE
Virgin River Gorge, AZF 4/21/2000H
BORAGINACEAEI
Heliotropium curassavicum 4K
PGMore purple tint to the edge of flowers than the plants seen in N. UtahR
Not sure id. No fruit. General habit good, and clearly weedy. Glabrous, toothed leaves. Lower leaves petioled, becoming more sessile and possibly clasping upwards.R
River shore on well-established beach. Not collected (NP), so have no detailed look. Dinosaur checklist gives S. diluvialis as the only option. This = S. romanzoffiana var diluvialis in Welsh, and S. cernua in Arnow and in Cronquist.
3290U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
097-017B
SpiranthesC
cernua?E
Dinosaur NP, Lodore CanyonF
8/24/99H
ORCHIDACEAEI
Spiranthes cernua? 3K
River shore on well-established beach. Not collected (NP), so have no detailed look. Dinosaur checklist gives S. diluvialis as the only option. This = S. romanzoffiana var diluvialis in Welsh, and S. cernua in Arnow and in Cronquist.
134-016
134-017
134-018
134-019
134-020
134-021
134-022
134-023
134-024
134-025
134-026
134-027
134-028
134-029
134-030
134-031
134-032
134d-01
134d-02
134d-03
134d-04
134d-05
134d-06
134d-07
134d-08
134d-09
134d-10
134d-11
134d-12
134d-13
134d-14
134d-15
134d-16
134d-17
134d-18
134d-19
134d-20
134d-21
134d-22
134d-23
134d-24
134d-25
134d-26
134d-27
134d-28
134d-29
134d-30
134d-31
134d-32
134d-33
134d-34
134d-35
134d-36
134d-37
134d-38
134d-39
134d-40
134d-41
134d-42
134d-43
134d-44
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
099-001B
OxalisC
corniculataE
9th AvenueF
9/1/99H
OXALIDACEAEI
Oxalis corniculata 1K
3322U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
099-002B
OxalisC
corniculataE
9th AvenueF
9/1/99H
OXALIDACEAEI
Oxalis corniculata 2K
3323U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
099-003B
UnknownC
UNKNOWNI
Unknown 099 K
3324_
0 - Unusable/Duplicatesh
$$-43t
099-004B
BerteroaC
incanaE
Salt Creek, WYF
9/11/99H
BRASSICACEAEI
Berteroa incana 1K
Annual, 18" tall, white bilobed petals. No basal leaves; stem leaves few, 5-15 mm long x 3-4 mm wide. Appressed stellate-hairy throughout. Silicles with style 2-2.5 mm. Clearly Berteroa incana.
Tap-rooted. Stems w appressed crinkled hairs, ascending. Gr and Wh stripes. Leaves with pustular-based hairs, opposite below, toothed, petioled, 2-3 cm. Lightly aromatic.
Extraordinary heads with dimorphic bracts.S
1761U
1555h
$$-43t
124-013B
DicoriaC canescensE
Coral Pink Sand DunesF 9/23/2001H
ASTERACEAEI
Dicoria canescens 2K
Tap-rooted. Stems w appressed crinkled hairs, ascending. Gr and Wh stripes. Leaves with pustular-based hairs, opposite below, toothed, petioled, 2-3 cm. Lightly aromatic.
Extraordinary heads with dimorphic bracts.S
1762U
1555h
$$-43t
124-014B
DicoriaC canescensE
Coral Pink Sand DunesF 9/23/2001H
ASTERACEAEI
Dicoria canescens 3K
Tap-rooted. Stems w appressed crinkled hairs, ascending. Gr and Wh stripes. Leaves with pustular-based hairs, opposite below, toothed, petioled, 2-3 cm. Lightly aromatic.
A5Misidentified as Senecio integerrimus for a long time
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
023-020B
ErysimumC
asperumE
Terrace HillsF
5-12-97H
BRASSICACEAE
Erysimum asperum 1
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
023-021B AmsinckiaC
retrorsaE
Terrace HillsF
5-12-97H
BORAGINACEAE
Amsinckia retrorsa 1
>Welsh = A. menziesii
5/4/98 Would be good to check another specimen from this area, now I have positive id on A. tessellata from Antelope Island.
5/7/98 Very clear that this is A. retrorsa: Pubescence mainly small appressed hairs with many fewer spreading pustulose ones; calyx is cleaved to base into 5 lobes.
Thought it might be A. chamaejasmae originally, but this seems unlikely.
062005 Perennial, 10 cm h., scapose, uneven umbels, ~13 Fl, 3 mm across. Ribbed membrane in calyx. Leaves ~2cm, glandular, ciliate, in tight rosettes. May not be true umbel as there are bracts inside.
Androsace fits best; only perennial is A. chamaejasme which is smaller (5 cm), and known only from Grand and San Juan counties.
Welsh lists A. septentrionalis as possibly biennial.
Thought it was Ranunculus macounii, then saw the bractlets. Couldn't identify it as a Potentilla. ?Could it be a Geum? As well as can be done, the fit is very good for Geum urbanum.
0P^Keys well to A. cymboides or A. amphioxys; but can't tell these apart definitely without pods.S
1729U
1503_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
114-015B
CastillejaC
scabridaE
San Rafael DesertF 4-18-2001H
SCROPHULARIACEAEI
Castilleja scabrida 1K
1730U
1504_
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
114-016B
CryptanthaC
johnstoniiE
San Rafael DesertF 4-18-2001H
BORAGINACEAEI
Cryptantha johnstonii 1K
64/18 in field. Given the lack of fruit, it keys out quite well, because of pustulate hairs on both sides of leaves. C. longiflora has longer flowers.
4/23 with photos: prefer C. johnstonii because: obvious multi-stemmed, old leaf bases, margins long-ciliate (114.017). Pustulate only on lower surface thoguh.
AJGood key to Camelina, except none of leaves are auriculate.
Roadside weed.
3215U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
095-008B SaponariaC
officinalisE
Burns, Harney Co., ORF
8/12/99H
CARYOPHYLLACEAEI
Saponaria officinalis 3K
Double flowersR
3216U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
095-009B
Plagiobothrys
CryptanthaC
mollis
cinereaE
Malheur, Harney Co., ORF
8/12/99H
BORAGINACEAEI+Plagiobothrys mollis 1
Cryptantha cinerea 1K
No mature fruits. Plants very bristly, growing in drying ponds and ditches.
Favor Plagiobothrys mollis, but can't rule out C. cinerea var. abortiva (Cronquist). Equiv to Oreocarya suffrutescens var. abortiva according to Malheur list.
Millcreek CanyonF
5-23-97H
BRASSICACEAEI
Arabis sp. K
Growing on sloping rock face with very moist conditions. Picture blurry.
Thought it was A. lyallii, but stem leaves claping; probably too low down also.S
0PdVery pallid specimen. Only very immature fruits, but these are OK - strictly ascending, cylindrical.S
1741U
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
114-027B
StreptanthellaC
longirostris?E
San Rafael DesertF 4-18-2001H
BRASSICACEAEI
Streptanthella longirostris? 4K
1742U
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
114-028B
StreptanthellaC
longirostris?E
San Rafael DesertF 4-18-2001H
BRASSICACEAEI
Streptanthella longirostris? 5K
1743U
3 - Utahh
$$-43t
114-029B
CryptanthaC
flavoculata?E
San Rafael DesertF 4-18-2001H
BORAGINACEAEI
Cryptantha flavoculata? 1K
id not confident. Fits with C. rollinsii, but lacks strong pustulose character; ventral surface of immature nutlets is smooth, which doesn't fit well with C. flavoculata.
Glabrous. Leaves very tough, toothed. Many basal, but stems* leafy also. Heads small, invol 7 mm h x 5 mm w; 2-3 series, imbricate. Bracts lanc, green-tipped, somewhat recurved, otherwise chart, tough. Receptacle a little chaffy.
Keys well to Haplopappus, but the 5 candidates from this area don't fit exactly:
H. acaulis Lvs 3-veined, entire?
H. carthamoides Heads
discoid, invol 11-20 mm
H. hirtus Tomentose
H. lanceolatus Invol 9-22
d mm; heads in flat-topped cluster
H. stenophyllus Lvs linear, < 2 cm
* Prob not stem, but woody aerial caudex; actual stems are short, almost leafless, and with a single flower. Good for H. acaulis , and Welsh says "leaves 1-3 veined, sharply mucronate". Not perfect, but close.
8/2/02 H. lanceolatus small plants have only 1-4 heads; leaves toothed
Wet soil by riverside. Only about 2-3" long, and clearly flowering in its first year. Capsule wider than long 1.5 x 2 mm), but immature; not notched, style 3 mm.S
Picture got left off of CD 4194, and only discovered later. Not with other images on this roll. Then got removed from 3921 & not transferred to 0934!!
Thought it was Armoracia. Lost track of population, and could not check; in meantime had come to suspect it might be Lepidium latifolium. Found it again in Aug 2002, and it clearly is the Lepidium. Silicles are compressed at right angles to replum, disc-like, one seed per compartment. Patch seems to be self-limiting.
Thought it was Armoracia. Lost track of population, and could not check; in meantime had come to suspect it might be Lepidium latifolium. Found it again in Aug 2002, and it clearly is the Lepidium.
V. similar to 030.013, which was interpreted as R. alismaefolius. Photograph shows no 2-3 lobe bracts subtending the flowers, so this is also interpreted that way. Notes say "black styles" which fits.
Thought it might be V. edulis for a while, but there was confusion between "inflor > 4 cm" and "heads > 4 cm". After finding clear V. occidentalis (7/98), revised this to the same. Leaves are pinnate, not merely pinnatifid.
10/23/02 Think it's more likely V. edulis - basal leaves don't have clear distinction between petiole and blade (see IMF), and inflorescence looks like that.
Not collected to check out, but because of two distinct types of head thought it was A. dimorpha. However, it clearly has stems, heads are not single. Best guess is A. microphylla, which is the sexual diploid of A. rosea (included in that by Cronquist).
Closest from limited resources is a Synthyris. S. pinnatifida is listed, but the leaves are very different. S. laciniata fits better, but its leaves are much more deeply cleft and twisted. Welsh makes S. laciniata as a variety of S. pinnatifida .
Checklist gives A. kentrophyta (var tegetaria), A. limnocharis, A. lonchocarpus, A. miser, and A. tenellus. Only the first seems a reasonable fit, though leaves are flaccid (OK for this variety).R
Not sure id. No fruit. General habit good, and clearly weedy. Glabrous, toothed leaves. Lower leaves petioled, becoming more sessile and possibly clasping upwards.R
1783U
1 - Was Front Local 1980d
106-001B
LoniceraC tatarica?E
Perry's HollowF 5/14/2000H
CAPRIFOLIACEAEI
Lonicera tatarica? 1K
V PYPICT image designations for 106.001 and 106.002 are reversed. These pictures are correct.R
1784U
1484_
2 - Was Front Extended 2001d
106-002B
LoniceraC tatarica?E
Perry's HollowF 5/14/2000H
CAPRIFOLIACEAEI
Lonicera tatarica? 2K
V"PYPICT image designations for 106.001 and 106.002 are reversed. These pictures are correct.R
Widely-flaring white flowers. Hairy only on veins, ciliate. Revisited and found red fruit, occasionally paired, mostly single. Suggests L. fragrantissima , but not definitive. Didn't notice fragrance particularly.
Good fit, although specimen was too fragile to check out the bifid style properly. Flower is white rather than pink. Not mentioned in books is band of yellow hairs at base of calyx, clearly evident in photo.
021029 Doesn't look like the plant foumd 0206 (126-009) which Noel Holmgren id.
Originally thought was Aster perelegans, but reviewing photographs I saw the typical Mach. bracts, and more ray fkowers than expected for A. perelegans.
Choice is probably between Ar. purp. and Hordeum vulgare. Awns enormously long, > 6". Plants 3'6" - 4'. Inflorescence consistently very ragged and sparse.
Critical look at pictures shows: no sign of hastate leaves; no sign of protuberances on achene; stems simple below the inflor.; inflor. ~ half height of plant; leaves reduced upward.
Site in Tuolumne Meadows was not disturbed: probably R. paucifolius rather than R. acetosella.
A. arbuscula, but was at much lower elevation than indicated by Arnow. 11/2/97 Hiked up Black Mt and found a lot of a very low Art., which was much better fit to the various descriptions.
"Very coarse and hairy, pustulose based. Calyx 4-5 mm long, completely into 5 (some may be 4 or damaged). Corolla rich Y, 2-3 mm diam; overall ~5mm. 5 stamens, just included; ovary deeply 4-lobed, 1 style, further enclosed.
Leaves up to 20 cm x 3-4 cm. Strong basal rosette. Prominent veins, some circumferential.
Corolla venation v. diff to pick out, but def not 20. Keys into Amsinckia , but no good fit to any, even in Cronquist.
id not 100%. There were a few leaves on stem, and inv. bracts were markedly hairy.
8/6/02 Long thought this might be Townsendia montana but that is normally acaulescent. At high mag the involucral bracts appear uniform; rays are at upper end of range, about 30. Probably a low Erigeron.
+Population was mostly less than 6" tall, each head having only 2-5 ray flowers (3-lobed) and few disk flowers. Thought at first it might be Layia, but only a white-flowered from has been found in our area. Expect Madia to be taller and more densely-flowered, so these may be immature plants. Return.
Unable to identify from plant. Another plant from elsewhere had many similarities.
Rooted aquatic,
loose corm. Pair of opposite floating leaves subtending inflor.
Each fl subtended by a pair of pink-tinged bracts. Then [3 sepals and 3 w petals]. Sepals folded, relatively rigid. Fruit a dimpled seed, about 1.5 - 2 mm, encased in 3-valved capsule.
**************
Good general fit to Portulacaceae, with Montia sibirica known from Pacific Northwest and California. var bulbifers looks verB,y good. Family not yet covered in Cronquist.
UjPAMeadow. Outer bract 12 mm, inner, 14 mm. Capsule minimally hairy.R
3288U
1319_
2 - Was Front Extended 2001d
097-015B
SpiranthesC
cernua?E
Dinosaur NP, Lodore CanyonF
8/24/99H
ORCHIDACEAEI
Spiranthes cernua? 1K
River shore on well-established beach. Not collected (NP), so have no detailed look. Dinosaur checklist gives S. diluvialis as the only option. This = S. romanzoffiana var diluvialis in Welsh, and S. cernua in Arnow and in Cronquist.