growing in a rich bottomland area near an old railroad bridge crossing of a river, undersides of leaf blades finely pubescent over entire lower surface. No. 860529014.
See also: https://michiganflora.net/genus/Euonymus
a single plant growing on glacial outwash gravels on a trail in the middle part of the ridge.
syn. Desmodium n., growing on a well drained forest ridge near a bridle trail in an upland area. No. 860731031.
See also:
https://michiganflora.net/record/1295
a stunted plant by the edge of a trail in a seasonally wet area of an early successional forest. This plant flowered in 1998 before local deer abundance.
growing in a degraded upland wetland. No. 850919028. Spikelets all or mostly sessile in clusters of 3 or more.
See also: See also: https://michiganflora.net/genus.aspx?id=Scirpus
syn. Scirpus lineatus Muhl., growing in a moist area along the side of a hike and bike trail on a former railroad ROW. No. 850524011. Scales with excurrent midrib and contorted bristles not exceeding scales, see FNA and review by @jreinier below.
See also: https://michiganflora.net/record/1159
http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Scirpus
and
http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Scirpus_pendulus
also
https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn%3Alsid%3Aipni.org%3Anames%3A314080-1#synonyms
syn. Scirpus lineatus Muhl., growing in a seasonally wet area along the side of a hike and bike trail on a former railroad ROW No. 850621038. Scales with excurrent midrib and contorted bristles not exceeding scales, see FNA and review by @jreinier below.
See also: https://michiganflora.net/genus.aspx?id=Scirpus
http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Scirpus
and
http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Scirpus_pendulus
also
https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn%3Alsid%3Aipni.org%3Anames%3A314080-1#synonyms
Spotted by @the_land_philosopher Lawrence County, Ohio
Found on shady ridge near Lake Vesuvius.
Hypanthium glaberous
New growth without bristles
Auricles 1.3mm by 4.0mm
Small shrubby trees. Glossy dark green leaves with impressed veins, 15-20 stamen with pink anthers, flower stems hairy, gland tipped toothed stipules.
Same tree in fruit (plus another nearby patch with ripe fruit)
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/182893067
Has gland tiped teeth.
one plant was growing near the base of sandstone steps leading up an old quarried Berea Formation sandstone wall. Identification follows FNA, which combines many plants into one polymorphic species. While these poor photos are not great for detail, the plants were noticeably hirsute throughout, and they had unique stem leaves that are similarly illustrated as H. kalmii var. fasiculatum in Holmgren (1998) and H. canadense in Fisher (1988). The plant was removed during park maintenance.
What in the world is this plant? This keyed out to Hieracium canadense in Gleason and in Gray's manual, but the USDA website says the synonym for this species is H. kalmii var. fasciculatum. Furthermore, in Flora of North America, this is listed as a synonym for H. umbellatum. Whatever the name may be, this is an atypical specimen, with the single-flowered inflorescence.
Single plant in dry, weedy edge along Headwaters bike trail. Basal leaves absent, sap milky.