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Celebrating Wildflowers

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Title: Celebrating Wildflowers


1
Celebrating Wildflowers
  • Hike leader booklet

2
Shrubs
3
Mountain Maple(Acer glabrum)
  • Maple Family Aceraceae
  •  
  • Habitat Tall shrub draws, forest and woodland
  •  
  • Description A large shrub or small tree with
    gray bark. Its young twigs are smooth and dark
    red its winter buds are bright red. The leaves
    are palmately 3 to 5 lobed, sharply toothed. Its
    small, chartreuse-colored flowers are fragrant.
    Always grow as several trunks in a clump. Fruits
    are twin-winged.
  •  
  • General Leaves turn vivid red in autumn.
    Montana Indians used the wood for arrow shafts.
    Deer, elk, moose and mountain sheep browse the
    sweet foliage and twigs. The young shoots and
    leaves and the seeds are edible.

4
Western Serviceberry(Amelanchier alnifolia)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Tall shrub draws
  •  
  • Description Is a shrub or small tree, up to 20
    feet tall. Flowers are white with five rounded
    petals and five sepals, and appear before the
    leaves. They are borne in multiple clusters at
    the ends of branches and appear in early spring.
    The leaves are round toothed above the middle.
    The dark blue to purple berries ripen generally
    in July. Bark reddish-brown, grayish when older,
    branchlets hairy.
  •  
  • General Native people considered this plant an
    important berry crop, plentiful enough to store
    for winter use. Lewis and Clark mentioned that
    some Serviceberry loaves weighed as much as 10 or
    15 pounds. Its stems were also used for arrow
    shafts. Bear, grouse, and other species eat the
    berries.

5
Silver Sagebrush(Artemisia cana)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description Silver-gray to yellowish shrub 1-3
    feet tall. Has turpentine-like odor. Stems
    branch freely to form rounded bushes, older stems
    have dark brown, fibrous bark. Leaves
    silky-haired, long, narrow, with pointed tips.
    Flower heads yellowish in narrow, leafy clusters
    5-12 inches long. The leafy appearance of the
    upper stem tends to obscure the small flowers.
  •  
  • General Silver Sagebrush is the most common
    large sage found on Mount Helena. It is well
    adapted to fire and resprouts from surviving buds
    found on horizontal stems below the surface.

6
Rabbitbrush(Chrysothamnus nauseosus)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry slopes in the valleys, foothills
    and montane forests
  •  
  • Description A shrub usually from 1-3 feet tall.
    Twigs covered with dense, white, feltlike hair.
    Leaves narrow less than 2.5 inches long. Flowers
    are rayless heads with 5 yellow disk flowers per
    head.
  •  
  • General There are six specimens of rabbitbrush
    in the Lewis and Clark Herbarium more than any
    other species. An original label in Lewis hand
    reads No. 32, specimens of aromatic plants on
    which the
  • antelope feeds. During the rubber shortage of
    World War II, scientists became interested in the
    latex and found that a high-quality rubber could
    be produced, but not in high quantities needed at
    that time,
  • nevertheless, the name rubber rabbitbrush stuck.

7
Common Juniper(Juniperus communis)
  • Cypress Family Cupressaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Forest and woodland
  •  
  • Description Low spreading shrub, never more
    than 2-3 feet in height, often spreading up to 6
    feet. The sharp-pointed leaves are green with a
    white line on the upper surface. The round
    berries are blue when ripe.
  •  
  • General A circumpolar species, found over the
    whole northern hemisphere. It is commonly used
    in landscaping.

8
Rocky Mountain Juniper(Juniperus scopulorum)
  • Cypress Family Cupressaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Forest and woodland
  •  
  • Description Is a tree or shrub, sometimes
    reaching 50 feet in height, and much branched at
    the base. The leaves are scale-like, somewhat
    glandular and arranged in twos. The fleshy,
    bluish cones are about a quarter inch in
    diameter, and mature the second year.
  •  
  • General As incense, juniper ranks as one of the
    most important in Montana. Indians placed these
    leaves on fire to produce a sacred, purifying
    smoke in many religious ceremonies. Juniper
    provided native people with a vast storehouse of
    cures for common ailments such as colds, fevers,
    and pneumonia. Its wood was considered to make
    an excellent bow.

9
Mock Orange(Philadelphus lewisii)
  • Hydrangea Family Hydrangeaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Tall shrub draws
  •  
  • Description This is an erect shrub, up to 9
    feet tall and densely branched. On older stems
    the reddish-brown bark cracks open at a right
    angle to the stem and eventually falls away in
    small pieces, revealing the gray bark underneath.
    The leaves are in pairs,
  • opposite each other on the stems. Each flower
    has 4 petals, many stamens, 4 styles, and a
    sweet, orange blossom aroma. The fruit is a hard
    capsule that remains on the shrub through the
    winter.
  •  
  • General Is the state flower of Idaho, where it
    is often called Syringa. In 1814, it was named
    in honor of Meriwether Lewis, from specimens that
    Lewis
  • collected in 1806.

10
Chokecherry(Prunus virginiana)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Prefers damp ground and fairly rich
    soil. Often found in exposed locations.
  •  
  • Description Heavy crooked shrubs to small
    trees. Abundance of dark green leaves and
    drooping pencils of flowers or berries. Rough,
    grayish-brown bark.
  • Leaves sharply pointed and finely saw-toothed.
    White flowers with dense, cylindrical clusters
    near ends of the limbs. Dark berries in masses.
  •  
  • General Berries are very puckery to the taste.
    Some Native Americans blend them with meat to
    make an important food called pemmican. The
    bruised bark gives off a pungent smell.

11
Bitterbrush(Purshia tridentata)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry slopes in the valleys, foothills
    and montane forests
  •  
  • Description Shrub with a spreading structure of
    stiff, awkward branches. The wedge-shaped leaves
    are green on the upper surface and appear
    gray-green
  • beneath. The leaves are so tiny that the outline
    of the limbs is quite distinctive. Flowers are
    yellow and fragrant. The shrub flowers early,
    while the leaves are just starting to emerge.
  •  
  • General Although it is bitter, this shrub
    provides an extremely important food source for
    deer, especially in winter. Bitterbrush also
    goes by the common names antelope brush or
    antelope bitterbrush. Lewis and Clark collected
    this plant on July 6, 1806 in western Montana.

12
Skunk-bush Sumac(Rhus trilobata)
  • Sumac Family Anacardiaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Tall shrub draws
  •  
  • Description A much-branched dense, rounded
    shrub, 2-5 feet high. Leaves compound with 3
    leaflets, middle leaflet largest. Tiny
    yellow-green flowers appear before leaves in
    crowded catkin-like clusters and are followed by
    flattened velvety, red or orange berries. Light
    brown bark.
  •  
  • General This shrub is also called Lemonade
    Bush. Its berries have an acid flavor and have
    been used to make a substitute for lemonade.
    Given its name because of its strong odor. Also
    known as Three-leaf Sumac.

13
Golden Current(Ribes aureum)
  • Gooseberry Family Grossulariaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Tall shrub draws
  •  
  • Description Shrub of medium height, up to 6
    feet with yellow, spicy-fragrant, tubular
    flowers. Short petals often tipped with red,
    leaves wedge-shaped and 3-lobed. Stems smooth
    without spines. Fruit a small, round, black or
    red-brown berry.
  •  
  • General This shrub is browsed by game animals,
    and the berries furnish food for small mammals
    and birds.

14
Wax Current(Ribes cereum)
  • Gooseberry Family Grossulariaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Tall shrub draws
  •  
  • Description Low, rather sticky-hairy shrub from
    2-5 feet tall. Leaves small, round or oval in
    outline and ordinarily quite hairy and sticky to
    the touch. Flowers white and sometimes tinged
    with pink. The flowers are tubular and occur in
    small clusters of two or three from short, stubby
    side branches. Fruit orange-red, edible but
    rather bitter.
  •  
  • General Also known as Western Red Currant. As
    a rule of thumb, gooseberry bushes bear thorns
    and currants go unarmed.

15
Wild Rose(Rosa arkansana or Rosa woodsii)
  • Rose Family Roseaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, tall shrub draws
  •  
  • Description Shrubs with prickly or bristly,
    usually upright stems. Flowers are pink but may
    fade to white, or petals may be streaked with
    darker pink and are in a cluster of 2-3 blooms.
    Wild Rose flowers are much flatter when open than
    those of the Woods Rose, which are distinctly
    saucer-shaped and usually a deeper pink.
  • Leaves are medium green, pinnately compound, with
    9-11 leaflets that are smooth and shiny. The
    fleshy apple-like fruit is called the rosehip.
  •  
  • General Woods Rose is the state flower of
    North Dakota. Roses have been used for food and
    medicine. The hips are high in vitamin C and
    make a good syrup or jelly. The flowers and
    leaves make a tea.

16
Gray Horsebrush(Tetradymia canescens)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description Thickly branched shrub up to 2 feet
    tall with white, felty foliage. Leaves are long,
    narrow, or with broad tips, densely white,
    felt-covered, bunched at stem joints. Flowers
    are yellow, about 4 to a head, surrounded by four
    or five bracts at the flower base. Heads are in
    compact somewhat flat-topped clusters at the ends
    of stems. Seed-like fruits are smooth or thinly
    hairy, each with tuft of grayish bristles at tip.
  •  
  • General Also called Spineless Horsebrush. All
    parts of the plant are poisonous.

17
Grasses
18
Bluebunch Wheatgrass(Elymus spicata)
  • Grass Family Gramineae
  •  
  • Habitat South facing slopes and other dry areas
    in forest regions
  •  
  • Description A native, cool-season,
    drought-tolerant, perennial bunchgrass. This
    grass grows in large, erect bunches from 2 to 3
    feet tall. It has numerous, rather lax, flat
    leaves situated along the length of the stems.
    The seed heads are narrow, 3 to 6 inches long.
    The spikelets are solitary at the points of a
    zigzag rachis. Each spikelet is 3 to 6 flowered,
    with the seeds tipped by a characteristic, rough,
    divergent awn. There are 4 to 12 seed heads per
    plant. It has an extensive, deep, fibrous root
    system.
  •  
  • General Bluebunch wheatgrass was designated the
    official state grass of Montana in 1973. It
    provides good forage for elk and deer.

19
Idaho Fescue(Festuca idahoensis)
  • Grass Family Gramineae
  •  
  • Habitat Open woods, rocky slopes of the
    mountains and foothills
  •  
  • Description Idaho fescue is a cool-season,
    densely tufted, perennial bunchgrass. The
    characteristic bluish-green leaves are tightly
    inrolled and rough to the touch. The narrow
    panicle is 3 to 8 inches long, with branches
    ascending or appressed, somewhat spreading during
    pollination. The spikelets are five- to
    seven-flowered, with awns up to ¼ inch long.
    This species is shade tolerant, and often
    functions as an understory plant however, it
    also occurs on exposed sites as a dominant plant.
  •  
  • General Idaho fescue is considered a key
    indicator of the condition and trend of native
    forage stands. First noted by the Lewis and
    Clark Expedition, June 10, 1806, on the Weippe
    Prairie, Idaho.

20
Forbs
21
Yarrow(Achillea millefolium)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, cliff and rock
    outcrops, tall shrub draws, forests and woodlands
  •  
  • Description A flat-topped to somewhat rounded
    blossom, typifies yarrow. Ordinarily white or
    sooty-colored, the flowers occasionally show pink
    or even yellow shades. This plant averages 1 to
    3 feet in height. The leaves have a fern-like
    appearance. Soft, woolly hairs coat the foliage.
  •  
  • General Yarrow is a medicinal wonder. It has
    been used to stop bleeding from wounds and cuts,
    as a poultice on burns, boils and open sores, to
    treat fevers and colds, and alleviate
    toothaches. Many call this plant Chipmunks
    Tail because the leaves bear a resemblance to
    the tail of a chipmunk.

22
Small-leaf Pussytoes(Antennaria parvifolia)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry forest openings, plains
  •  
  • Description From a small, grayish basal rosette
    rises an erect, sparsely-leaved flower stalk with
    cluster of small, rayless, whitish flower heads.
    Leaves are long, equally hairy on both sides
    those in rosettes lanceolate but are obviously
    broader near the top, those on the flower stalk
    are much narrower. The fruit is seed-like, with
    5 white bristles at top.
  •  
  • General The clusters of small, soft, whitish to
    pink flower heads resemble a cats paw.
    Pussytoes seedlings are quick to volunteer in
    open areas. This is a suitable ground cover for
    sunny, barren areas.

23
Holboells Rockcress(Arabis holboellii)
  • Mustard Family Cruciferae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry slopes and foothills into the lower
    mountains
  •  
  • Description This plant is biennial or perennial
    from a tough, persistent base bearing slender
    taproots. There are usually only one to three
    stems. Plants are covered with short, appressed
    hairs. Individual plants can be up to three feet
    tall, but are usually less than 20 inches tall.
    Ten to 50 light purplish-to-pink flowers about
    ¼-inch long are crowded along the upper half of
    the stem. At maturity, flowers form narrow pods
    (siliques) about two inches long that bend
    downwards. Each pod holds several dozen tiny
    seeds.
  •  
  • General All rockcresses are edible, with the
    typical sharp flavor of the mustard family. The
    tender leaves and flowers are usually added to
    salads and sandwiches for flavor.

24
Fringed Sagewort(Artemisia frigida)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description An aromatic herb, the silver-gray,
    finely cut foliage is the most noticeable feature
    of this plant. Grows in tufts 4-8 inches tall.
    Small, yellow, nodding flower heads bloom in
    August. The many-divided, soft and silky leaves
    are clustered near the ground.
  •  
  • General Native people called this plant
    Womens Sage. Women would make a tea to
    correct menstrual irregularity. The early
    settlers used this plant to make a bitter tea
    which was believed to be a tonic and a remedy for
    mountain fever (typhoid). Plants have a pungent
    sage odor and were also used as a smudge for
  • protection from mosquitoes.

25
Prairie Sagewort(Artemisia ludoviciana)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Grasslands and shrubland
  •  
  • Description Most often noticed for its
    silvery-white to greenish foliage and stems that
    are covered with a dense mat of woolly hairs.
    Leaves, usually linear, bear a spike with
    clusters of small, yellow disk flowers in late
    summer.
  •  
  • General Native people called this plant Man
    Sage. It was used in religious ceremonies. They
    believed this plant had the power to drive away
    bad spirits. The species name, ludoviciana, means
    of Louisiana but refers to the vast Louisiana
    Territory rather than to the state.

26
Pasqueflower(Anemone patens)
  • Buttercup Family Ranunculaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description Flowers are pale blue or mauve,
    occasionally white or light yellow. The sepals,
    five to seven, are colored and petals are absent.
    Leaves are gray-green, basal, stalked, and much
    divided. They appear after the flowers fade.
    The fruit is a large group of feathery achenes on
    a lengthened flower stalk.
  •  
  • General Was used as medicine by many tribes.
    Blackfeet women boiled the plant and drank tea to
    speed delivery in childbirth. The Blackfeet also
    bound the crushed pasqueflower leaves on some
    injuries as a counterirritant.

27
Arrowleaf Balsamroot(Balsamorhiza sagittata)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry, low elevation forest and open
    grassland in deep sandy soil
  •  
  • Description A clump of large, velvety,
    olive-green leaves with a pale green, woolly look
    to both sides of arrowhead-shaped leaves. A dozen
    or so large, yellow, sunflower-like flowers on
    leafless stems. Often forms dense, spectacular
    populations.
  •  
  • General One of the most colorful plants of the
    sagebrush ecosystem. In spring, the many species
    of Balsamroot brighten the landscape with yellow.
    Native people ate the rich, oily seeds, and the
    deep-growing roots were eaten raw or were toasted.

28
Wyoming Kittentails(Besseya wyomingensis)
  • Figwort Family Scrophulariaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, forest and
    woodland
  •  
  • Description This plant lacks petals, but the
    dense cylindrical flower heads bristle with dark
    red stamens. A perennial, 3-10 inches tall, the
    leaves are gray-hairy and often reddish-tinged,
    the lance-shaped basal leaves ½ to 1 inch long,
    the stem leaves smaller.
  •  
  • General The genus Besseya was named in honor of
    Charles Edwin Bessey, an eminent botanist from
    the University of Nebraska.

29
Harebell(Campanula rotundifolia)
  • Campanula Family Campanulaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description This plant has numerous blue or
    somewhat lavender, bell-shaped (5 lobed) and
    nodding flowers on thread-like stems. This plant
    ranges from 4-12 inches tall, with narrow leaves.
    Grows in clumps.
  •  
  • General Harebell is the true Scottish
    Bluebell.

30
Yellow Paintbrush(Castilleja lutescens)
  • Figwort Family Scrophulariaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry slopes and open coniferous forests
    in the grasslands of the steppe and montane zones
  •  
  • Description A perennial forb with clustered
    stems that are erect, stout, and often branched
    above. They are 1 2 ft tall, sometimes
    purplish and have leaves that are linear.
    Although the flowers are rather small and
    non-showy, they are associated with numerous
    colorful bract-like leaves that function as an
    attractant.
  •  
  • General An interesting adaptation of
    paintbrushes is that they are able to parasitize
    the roots of associated plants, especially
    sagebrush. From the host plant, the paintbrush
    derives both water and organic materials, thus
    increasing its tolerance to dry conditions and
    its ecological range.

31
Field Chickweed(Cerastium arvense)
  • Pink Family Caryophyllaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, and tall shrub
    draws
  •  
  • Description Flowers snowy-white, almost ½ inch
    across, with 5 deeply cleft petals and five
    sepals. Plants are up to 12 inches tall. Stems
    tend to spread or lean. Leaves are narrow,
    small, velvety and gray-green in color. This
    plant is often found in large patches.
  •  
  • General Also known as Mouse-ear Chickweed. It
    is often the most abundant white flower on open
    fields and dry meadows in spring and early summer.

32
Wavyleaf Thistle(Cirsium undulatum)
  • Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry, open sites in plains, foothills,
    and montane forests
  •  
  • Description Has large, showy, rose-purple
    flower heads that may be over 2 inches wide and
    1.5 inches tall. Leaves and stems are whitish
    gray because of a covering of woolly hairs.
    Sharp yellow spines project from the leaves and
    sides of the flower heads and wavy leaf margins.
  •  
  • General The thick roots were cooked by several
    tribes of North America. Thistledown is relished
    by birds for food and nest linings. This plant
    should not be confused with the noxious Canada
    thistle.

33
Miners Candle(Cryptantha celosioides)
  • Borage Family Boraginaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry slopes and foothills into the lower
    mountains
  •  
  • Description A spike of white, open-faced
    flowers, crowds the upper portion of a stem,
    hence the common name. The basal leaves broaden
    at the tip into spatula or oar shapes. A few
    smaller, narrow leaves attach along the stem.
    Dense white hairs, straight and somewhat stiff to
    silky, cover the leaves, stems and sepals.
  •  
  • General Plants usually flower 1-2 years and
    then die. There are no known economic uses of
    this plant.

34
Little Larkspur(Delphinium bicolor)
  • Buttercup Family Ranunculaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, forest and
    woodland
  •  
  • Description Flowers have dark blue as the
    prominent color due to five petal-like sepals.
    The four petals are blue to creamy white and
    somewhat hairy. The four petals are much smaller
    than the sepals. The flowers are spurred. The
    flower stalks are long and hairy. Leaves are
    palmately compound and deeply parted into slender
    leaflets.
  •  
  • General Is also known as Montana Larkspur and
    Low Larkspur.

35
Slimpod Shooting Star(Dodecatheon conjugens)
  • Primrose Family Primulaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grasslands, montane to near treeline
  •  
  • Description A perennial forb. Leaves are all
    basal. Flowers are magenta to lavender, swept
    backwards and united at the base by two yellow
    rings. Dark stamens and style cling together to
    form a spear-like point.
  •  
  • General Flowers are said to smell like root
    beer. Such an unusual flower requires a special
    technique for pollination. A bumblebee grasps
    the yellow band while hanging upside down. It
    then gives a quick buzz of its wings that shakes
    pollen out of the flowers anthers and onto its
    abdomen. When the bee visits the next shooting
    star, the thin stigma protruding from the tube is
    placed perfectly to receive the pollen.

36
Cut-leaved Fleabane(Erigeron compositus)
  •  Composite Family Compositae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, forest, and
    woodland
  •  
  • Description This is a little tufted plant with
    stems 2-6 inches tall. Rays are usually white
    but may be bluish or purple. Leaves mostly
    basal, once or twice 3-parted into narrow, blunt
    lobes. The very small stem leaves are entire.
  •  
  • General A very large genus that is confused
    with asters. Erigerons usually bloom in spring
    and early summer, asters in late summer and fall.
    Many Erigerons have only one head to each stem,
    and most have fewer than five (most asters have
    several to many heads).

37
Howards Alpine Forget-me-not(Eritrichium
howardii)
  • Borage Family Boraginaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Cliff and rock outcrops
  •  
  • Description A cushion plant with fragrant,
    brilliantly blue, yellow-eyed flowers. Its stems
    rise from compact rosettes of tiny, silver-hairy
    leaves.
  •  
  • General A member of the Borage family, this
    lovely plant likes limestone hills and ridges
    east of the Continental Divide. The name
    Eritrichium comes from the Greek, and means
    woolly.

38
Wild Strawberry(Fragaria virginiana)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Openings and open forest to timberline
  •  
  • Description Perennial, low-growing herb. Thin
    leaves with 3 leaflets and small white flowers
    with 5-7 petals. Fruit is a small, red
    strawberry. Delicious!
  •  
  • General Native Americans used strawberry leaves
    for tea and to make anti-diarrhea medicines. The
    berries are only eaten fresh since they are too
    juicy to dry like other berries.

39
Yellowbell(Fritillaria pudicua)
  • Lily Family Liliaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, forest and
    woodland
  •  
  • Description A single, golden-yellow,
    bell-shaped flower hangs downward or sidewise
    from a bent stalk. It begins blooming in March
    and the flower soon fades to red or purple. The
    slender, blunt-tipped leaves, often two or three
    in number, measure from 2-4 inches in length.
    Plants are 3-8 inches in height.
  •  
  • General The bulb-like underground corms were a
    minor portion of the native peoples vegetable
    diet in Montana. Wild animals such as bears,
    gophers, and ground squirrels avidly dig for
    these corms. The fruity pods are also edible.

40
Prairie Smoke(Geum triflorum)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, forest and
    woodland
  •  
  • Description Has finely dissected leaves and
    nodding flowers, usually 3 on a stalk, the whole
    inflorescence is rose-colored. The calyx lobes
    overlap to form a sort of urn, from which whitish
    or pale yellow petals protrude slightly. The
    fruit becomes puffs of long, feathery plumes that
    are carried on the wind.
  •  
  • General In the Rose family. Also known as
    Three-flowered Avens and Old Mans Whiskers.
    The latter name due to the feathery plumes of the
    fruit.

41
Bitterroot(Lewisia rediviva)
  •  Purslane Family Portulacaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry open foothills, montane and
    subalpine sites
  •  
  • Description Low perennial herb, inconspicuous
    until the beautiful flower appears in early
    summer. Each flower has numerous petals,
    stamens, and styles. The petals vary from nearly
    white to deep rose. The succulent leaves are
    small, club-shaped, and inconspicuous.
  •  
  • General The fleshiness of bitterroot reflects a
    water-storing adaptation, which parallels that of
    cacti and other desert succulents. The roots can
    survive extreme dehydration. A staple food for
    many Native American tribes. A 50 lb. bag of
    roots was
  • considered enough to sustain a person through
    winter. This plant was an important trade item
    a bag of bitterroot could be traded for a good
    horse. This is Montanas state flower.

42
Gromwell(Lithospermum ruderale)
  • Borage Family Boraginaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry slopes, plains and shrub-steppe, up
    to mid-elevation in the mountains
  •  
  • Description A perennial forb with several
    ascending stems. Its stems and prominently
    ribbed leaves appear grayish-green from their
    coating of fine hairs. The nutlets (seeds) are
    bony hard. Leaves are narrowly lance-shaped.
    Flowers are light yellow.
  •  
  • General The generic term, Lithospermum, comes
    from two Greek words meaning stone and seed.
    Our plants species name, ruderale, means
    waste-place or dump in Latin. Native
    Americans gave the name puccoon to a related
    plant that grows in the eastern United States.
    Captain John Smith wrote about this plant in
    1612 Pocones is a small roote that groweth in
    the mountains, which being dryed and beate in
    powder turneth red and used by Indians to paint
    their skin. The roots of the Columbia puccoon
    contain a yellow dye that was used by Native
    Americans in that region.

43
Nine-leaf Lomatium(Lomatium triternatum)
  • Parsley Family Umbelliferae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, tall shrub draws,
    cliff and rock outcrops
  •  
  • Description Pale yellow flowers are arranged in
    compound umbels. The compound leaves are often
    in sets of 3 leaflets each and are very narrow.
    Flowering stalk and leaves are covered with fine
    hair.
  •  
  • General The Blackfeet made a tea from the roots
    of this plant and the rose, to relieve sore
    throats and coughs. Long distance runners would
    chew the fruit to avoid side aches.

44
Leafy Musineon(Musineon divaricatum)
  • Parsely Family Umbelliferae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrubland, cliff and rocky
    outcrops
  •  
  • Description Flowers are powdery-yellow with
    five petals and sepals, and are supported by
    linear bractlets. The flowers are borne in a
    compound umbel. Leaves are basal, doubly
    pinnate. Leaflets are oblong, bright green and
    smooth. Growth habit is erect, but low-growing
    and spreading. Flower heads are not usually more
    than 4 inches tall and the leaflets are beneath
    them.
  •  
  • General Leafy Musineon is in the Parsley family
    that contains many edible plants, but also some
    deadly poisonous ones.

45
Prickly Pear(Opuntia polyacantha)
  • Cactus Family Cactaceae
  •  
  • Habitat On arid plains, canyons, benches and
    foothills on gentle slopes
  •  
  • Description Fleshy forb, 4-12 inches tall. A
    shallow, extensive lateral root system forms
    rounded clumps and spreads into mats. Stems are
    fleshy, strongly flattened, and jointed into
    obovate segments. Straight spines up to 2 inches
    long cover the stem (only slightly barbed).
    Leaves are fleshy with tawny bristles. Flowers
    appear waxy, yellow (often reddish tinged).
    Fruit is pear-shaped berry (brown or tan). Plant
    gets its common name from the prickly fruit.
  •  
  • General Antelope and mountain sheep graze the
    pods. Seeds and fruit are eaten by rabbits,
    ground squirrels, wood rats, chipmunks and mice.
    Native Americans ate the pods raw, dried and used
    them in stews or soups and boiled in a tea as a
    remedy for diarrhea.

46
Hoods Phlox(Phlox hoodii)
  • Phlox Family Palemoniaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland, shrub land, forest, and
    woodland
  •  
  • Description Early flowering dense cushion
    plant. The 5-petaled flowers are white to pale
    violet. Flowers grow directly attached to the
    short main stems of the plant and form whitish
    patches on the ground. Leaves are gray-green in
    color and are awl-shaped.
  •  
  • General Also known as Carpet Phlox and Moss
    Phlox. Growth habit is short and tufted, not
    much more than an inch above the ground. After
    the flowers fade, the leaves and stem form an
    inconspicuous part of the ground cover. The
    plant is named for Robert Hood, midshipman on Sir
    John Franklins expedition of 1819-22.

47
Early Cinquefoil(Potentilla concinna)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description This is a low, silvery plant with 5
    leaflets. The leaflets are green above, white
    below. The flowers have 5 separate, heart-shaped
    petals, which are yellow and have an orange spot
    at the base. The 5 sepals are united into a calyx
    that resembles a 5-pointed star. Five extra,
    narrower bractlets alternate with the main calyx
    lobes to give the calyx a 10-lobed appearance.
  •  
  • General The old common name for this genus,
    Cinquefoil, which in French means 5-leaf, was
    originally applied to a European species that has
    5 leaflets. Among the large number of American
    species, most have more than 5 leaflets, so the
    name is inappropriate for the genus as a whole.

48
Sagebrush Buttercup(Ranunculus glaberrimus)
  • Buttercup Family Ranunculaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description The waxy, shiny yellow cups have 5,
    or as many as 8, petals. Many yellow stamens
    encircle a mound of greenish-yellow pistils in
    the center of the blossom. Five shorter sepals
    beneath the petals bear a purplish tinge. The
    round or oval, fleshy leaf blades may be either
    simple or 3-lobed and both kinds often occur on
    the same plant.
  •  
  • General A small pocket at the base of each
    petal holds nectar for bees and other pollinating
    insects.

49
Scarlet Globemallow(Sphaeralcea coccinea)
  • Mallow Family Malvaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry, often disturbed open plains,
    foothills, and montane sites
  •  
  • Description Low-spreading perennial herb,
    grayish with dense, star-shaped hairs. Leaves
    alternate cut into 3-5 wedge-shaped segments
    arranged like fingers on a hand. Flowers are
    orange to brick red.
  •  
  • General Roots of this plant were chewed and
    then laid on sores and wounds to aid healing and
    stop bleeding. Whole plants were used to make a
    sweet-tasting tea.

50
Birchleaf Spiraea(Spiraea betulifolia)
  • Rose Family Rosaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Dry, open, mountain forests.
    Bunchgrass and Ponderosa Pine ecosystems mostly
    east of the Continental Divide.
  •  
  • Description Under 2 feet tall with slender
    stems. Leaves are rounded like a birch leaf and
    coarsely toothed along upper two thirds. Dense,
    flat-topped crown of small, white flowers
    occasionally tinged pink. Commonly found with
    Douglas-fir and Lodgepole Pine.
  •  
  • General Birchleaf Spiraea is also called
    Meadowsweet and is used by herbalists to relieve
    pain and reduce fever and inflammation.

51
Yellow Prairie Violet(Viola nuttallii)
  • Violet Family Violaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Grassland and shrubland
  •  
  • Description Small, bright yellow, 5-petaled
    flowers. The petals may be veined with purple or
    the upper ones tinged with red on the back.
    Leaves are lance-shaped. Plants are 4-8 inches
    tall.
  •  
  • General This plant is also called Nuttalls
    Violet, named for Thomas Nuttall, a naturalist of
    the early 19th century. His interests were in
    both birds and plants. He was professor of
    botany at Harvard and collected plants in the
    western U.S.

52
Trees
53
Limber Pine(Pinus flexilis)
  • Pine Family Pinaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Forest and woodland
  •  
  • Description The bark is light gray on young
    trunks and branches, but much darker on old
    trunks. The needles are dark green, usually 5 in
    a cluster, and more bluish than those of the
    Ponderosa Pine. The cylindrical cones are often
    very pitchy. Each scale is rounded, with a pale
    border.
  •  
  • General Limber Pine got its Latin name from its
    flexible branches. At timberline and other windy
    sites, they become gnarled and twisted. The
    trunk may separate into several main,
    upward-reaching branches. They become mature at
    about 300 years.

54
Ponderosa Pine(Pinus ponderosa)
  • Pine Family Pinaceae
  •  
  • Habitat Valley bottoms to mountain slopes in
    dry, well-drained soils
  •  
  • Description Its straight trunk is topped by a
    large mass of heavy branches with tufts of bushy
    needles. Has the longest needles of any evergreen
    in our area 6-9 inches in bunches of 3. The
    bark is flaky, terra cotta red bark, and furrowed
    like jigsaw pieces. Its cones are roundish,
    shiny, and light brown.
  •  
  • General Common in low, forested portions of
    Montana between 1,500-3,000 feet elevation.
    Isolated occurrences in dry, gravely places west
    of the Cascades. Ponderosa Pine has a flammable
    chemical in its needles. Quick ground fires do
    not harm the tree but do destroy competing
    vegetation.

55
Douglas Fir(Pseudotsuga menziesii)
  • Pine Family Pinaceae
  •  
  • Habitat From extremely dry, low elevation sites
    to moist montane sites
  •  
  • Description Large, evergreen tree with thick,
    ridged and rough brown bark. Needles spirally
    arranged with one groove on upper surface and two
    white bands of stomata on lower surface. Cones
    hang down green at flowering, turning reddish
    brown to gray, with bracts prominently
    three-forked (look for the mice hiding in the
    cone the bracts are their hind feet and tails).
  •  
  • General Under natural conditions, Douglas-fir
    establishes primarily after forest fires. The
    trees have very thick bark that allows them to
    withstand moderate surface fires. The soft inner
    bark was used for survival food. Young twigs and
    needles can be used as a substitute for coffee or
    tea. Fragrant Douglas-fir boughs were often
    used for bedding. The pliable roots have been
    used to weave baskets. Rotted wood from old logs
    was burned slowly to smoke hides , and the bark
    was used in tanning.
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