Scavenger Hunt

  • Plants in a specific family

    • Lamiaceae (mint)

      • Conserved characters that you used to determine the family identification. These characters should be clearly illustrated in your photo(s)

        • (most) are pubescent

        • alternate serrate crenate (having rounded scallops) leaves

        • aromatic

        • 5 fused sepals, 5 fused petals

        • petals zygomorphic – bilabiate (two lipped – 2 petals on one lip, 3 on the other)

        • 2 or 4 stamen

        • 2 fused (deeply lobed) or 4 unfused carpels

        • 1 stamen

        • 2 stigma lobes

      • name: Mentha piperita – peppermint

      • location: 2623 1/2 Neil ave, a garden

    • Rosaceae (rose)

      • conserved characters that you used to determine the family identification. These characters should be clearly illustrated in your photo(s)

        • alternate serrate leaves

        • 5 sepals and petals

        • many stamen (fused in apples)

        • superior ovary (except apples which have inferior ovaries)

        • hypathium (cup of fused sepals and petals half surrounding the ovary)

      • name:  Rosa sp

      • location: Chadwick Arboretum

      • image image
  • Plants that are on (or will be on) your sight ID list

    • Phytolacca americana (pokeweed)

      • location: Neil Ave

      • characters used to recognize the species:

        • racemes of white or pinkish flowers (sepals petal-like, no petals)

        • dark purple berries or green gynoceum

        • alternate, entire leaves

        • burgundy red stems and stalks on flowering parts

    • Cornus sp (dogwoods)

      • location: behind Jennings

      • characters used to recognize the species: Simple entire leaves, viens curving as they reach the leaf margin, four parted flowers, drupe seeds

  • Specific characters of plants

    • a plant with a gynoecium composed of many unfused carpels

      • name: Duchesnea indica

      • location: side lot of 2531 Neil ave

      • a definition of the character: carpels are the ovule containers in the ovary, they are fused when their fleshy areas are not easily separated. In the case of this plant (fruit shown here) the unfused carpels will become separate achenes

    • a plant with a gynoecium composed of five carpels

      • name: crab apple – Malus sp

      • location: behind Jennings

      • a definition of the character: carpels are the ovule containers in the ovary.

2 thoughts on “Scavenger Hunt

  1. Nice Mentha piperita find! I find it really interesting and neat that someone grows that on Neil. I oftentimes wonder how the first person to eat peppermint actually decided to try it. I love the aromaticity and would have to assume whoever tried it did too. The duchesna indicata picture is really pretty. The dogwoods are seemingly ubiquitous! I have so many in my backyard.

  2. I think those little Duchesnea indica are a let down. You expect them to taste like “real” strawberries, but then they are just all water and seeds (really, fruits- achenes).

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