Generally-speaking, people appreciate a flower for the beauty of its color, the pleasantness of its fragrance or the efficacy of its ability to get one out of the trouble that one has gotten into.
Insects (to be so bold as to speak for the critters who will be around to occupy our collective wreckage), meanwhile, may well appreciate a flower for its intricate architecture (that nicely foils the competitors' search for pollen) or its preferred place in the landscape or its season of pollen production.
Ponder these or your own musings as you appreciate the following summer of 2008 blooms from some of Indiana's protected natural areas. We greatly enjoyed bumbling across these many wonders while working for their continued protection amongst their woodland, swamp and prairie homes.
Wanna Chip In?:
www.nature.org
www.acreslandtrust.org
www.lrwp.org
Wanna Chip In?:
www.nature.org
www.acreslandtrust.org
www.lrwp.org
Wild Senna
Rose Pogonia (an orchid)
Small-Flowered Foxglove
Solitary-Flowered Rockrose
Sundew
Swamp Saxifrage
Marsh Pea
Michigan Lily
Unknown
Pickerelweed
Pitcher Plant
Red Clover
Fire Pink
Grass Pink (an orchid)
Hepatica
Marsh Marigold
Spotted Touch-Me-Not
Boneset
White Vervain
Blue Vervain
Ladies' Tresses Orchid
Jerusalem Artichoke
Grass-of-Parnassus
Brook Lobelia
Water Hemlock
Bugleweed
Monkeyflower
Joe-Pye-Weed
Unknown
Common Milkweed
Ironweed
Swamp Milkweed
Swamp Thistle
Some Sort of Vine-ing Legume
Harebell
Brown-eyed Susan
Some sort of Tick-Trefoil
Common St. Johnswort
Heal-All
Birds-Foot Violet
Blue Flag
Arrowhead
Just a few reasons why we care.
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