This page created by Ms.  Dekan's 6th grade students  from Augusta School District
as part of a Goals 2000 Grant|Created 4.14.99|Updated 4.14.99/jcd

Deep in the forest, there grows many different species of woodland flowers.  They cover the forest floor from early spring to late fall.  They grow in many shapes, sizes, and colors.  They serve a variety of purposes, the main one being vegetation for  other insects and animals.
 


 Woodland Flowers

wood anemonies
White
Marsh Marigold - yellow flowers
Orange, Red
& Yellow

Pink, Blue
& Purple
wild ginger flower
Brown & Green
Bloodroot 
 
Bunchberry
Bellwort
Aster
Jack in the Pulpit 
Dutchman Breeches
     
Hepatica
Columbine
Rose
Poison Ivy
Indian Pipe
     
May Apple
Jewelweed
Spiderwort
Skunk Cabbage
Partridge Berry
   
Starflower
Yellow Lady Slipper
Spring Beauty
Wild Ginger
Trillium
 
Wintergreen
Wood Sorrel
Wood Violet
Blueberry
Wood Anenome
Wood Lily
             Plant Bibliography          
 


This page compiled and layed out by Beth F.



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This page created by Ms.  Dekan's 6th grade students  from Augusta School District
as part of a Goals 2000 Grant|Created 4.14.99|Updated 4.14.99/jcd

You may contact us at:  dekanjud@augusta.k12.wi.us


Return to ecosystems page|Return to Woodland Directory


 








 


Bibliographies

mobot.org/welcome.html
wildflower.org

Many of the following books were purchased with a grant from the Wisconsin Environmental Education board.

Brill, Steve.  Edible and Medicinal Plants.  New York: william Morrow and Company, 1994.

Duke, James.  Medicinal Plants.  New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1977.  366 pages

Elias, Thomas S.  Edible Wild Plants. New York: Sterling Publishing Company, 1990.  286 pages

Martin, Alexander.  Flowers.  New York: Western Publishing Company, 1987.  159 pages

Martin, Laura.  Wildflower Folklore.  Connecticut: The Globe Pequot Press, 1984.

Reader's Digest.  Magic and Medicine of Plants.  New York: Reader's Digest Association, 1986.

Peterson, Lee Allen.  Edible Wild Plants.  New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1977.  330 pages

Peterson, Roger.  Wildflowers.  New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1986.  128 pages

Peterson, Roger.  Wildflowers.  New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1968.  420 pages

Sanders, Jack.  Hedgemaids and Fairy Candles.  Maine: Ragged Mountain Press, 1993.

Schinkel, Dick.  Favorite Wildflowers. Michigan: Thunder Bay Press, 1994.

Stokes, Donald & Lillian.  A Guide to Enjoying Wildflowers.  Canada: Little Brown & Company, 1985