Floyd Swink's and Gerould Wilhelm's Plants of the Chicago
Region
is widely considered the "bible" of Chicago area restoration ecologists.

Plants of the Chicago Region (4th Edition) is available from Amazon.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Summer 2000

Name That Plant
For help in identifying plants in the field, turn to fellow stewards and a copy of Plants of the Chicago Region

by Joe Neumann

At 6:00 p.m. we gather at a pavilion in the Palos division of the Cook County Forest Preserves. Rich is waiting for us. He is the recognized plant expert among the Palos volunteer stewards. A large part of ecological restoration involves removing aggressive non-native species. But a broad knowledge of native species is essential for assessing the progress of a restoration and for such tasks as collecting and scattering seed. This evening Rich will be leading us in a plant identification session.

 

Photo by Jerry Reedy.


How do you identify an unknown plant? A guidebook with drawings or photos is a good place to start. Volunteer stewards have another resource — each other. If you need to identify a plant, you ask a fellow steward. One of them may recognize it. Perhaps it grows at the site one of them works on. Or perhaps one of them has an eye for its distinct features, or was present when a botanist identified it.

The third resource, and the final say in plant identification, is Plants of the Chicago Region by Floyd Swink and Gerould Wilhelm. This bible-sized book provides a deep look into the intricacy of the ecosystem of the Chicago region along with a complete listing of the 1,638 native plant species and the 892 non-natives found here. Extensive keys separate species on the basis of their technical botanical characteristics. A write-up on each species includes information on its ecological niche and sometimes a piece of its local history.

We learn there that just over 50 years ago tens of thousands of fringed gentians grew in the vicinity of what is now 17th and Whitcomb Streets in Gary, Indiana. Today you could buy gas there, but you’d be hard put to find a gentian.

The "botanist’s method" is the one we will be applying this evening. We congregate at a picnic table. Plant samples poke out from the pages of each Swink & Wilhelm. You can tell how serious a botany student a person is by how many plant samples are pressed between the pages of his or her Swink & Wilhelm.

We spread our specimens on the table. Rich picks up a plant. What is it? A grass? A sedge? A distinguishing feature of sedges is that they are "3-ranked." Each leaf along the stem rotates 120 degrees with respect to the one beneath it. Count up from a lower leaf: 1, 2, 3, 4. The fourth leaf lies directly above the first leaf you counted. Grasses are "2-ranked." As we examine the sedge sample further, Rich points out another feature that helps separate one group of sedges from another. Is the seed "lenticular" (two-sided like a lens) or "trigonous" (three-sided)?

Each step of a botanical key presents you with two options. You choose one, which leads you to another pair of choices. In this way you repeatedly narrow the alternatives until only a single species remains.

We examine one of the sunflowers now and another plant that is similar. This second plant is one of the Silphium family. The tiny disk flowers that comprise the center of the sunflower’s head will produce seeds while the petal-like flowers that ring the center are sterile. For the flowers of the Silphium, the reverse is true. Seeds form only on the sides of the head — the petal-like flowers — but not in the center.

Everyone who wants to seriously examine plants needs a hand lens to examine the surface features of a plant. The typical one has 10x power. Swink & Wilhelm contains a diagram illustrating over two dozen different terms. What does "hirtellous" look like? Rich points to the stubble on my unshaven face. It’s all as plain as the hair on my face? Yes — as long as you have a copy of Swink & Wilhelm and the help of fellow stewards.