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Iris prismatica

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Slender blue flag
Scientific classification
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Limniris
Species:
I. prismatica
Binomial name
Iris prismatica
Pursh
Synonyms[1]
  • Iris boltoniana Schult.
  • Iris gracilis Bigelow
  • Iris prismatica var. austrina Fernald
  • Iris sibirica var. trigonocarpa Baker
  • Iris trigonocarpa A.Br. & Bouché
  • Limniris prismatica (Pursh) Rodion.

Iris prismatica, the Slender blue flag, is a plant species native to parts of the southern and eastern United States from Maine south to Alabama, as well as to the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Nova Scotia.[2][3][4]

Iris prismatica is a perennial herb spreading by means of rhizomes that are close to the surface of the soil. Flowering stalks can reach a height of 80 cm. Leaves are long and narrow, up to 60 cm long but rarely more than 5 mm across. Flowers are pale blue to blue-violet.[2][5][6][7][8][9] It tends to grow in wet conditions,[2] and in the United States is currently state listed as threatened in Maine, New Hampshire, New York, and Tennessee, and state listed as endangered in Maryland and Pennsylvania.[10]

References

  1. ^ The Plant List, Iris prismatica
  2. ^ a b c Flora of North America v 26 p 395, Iris prismatica
  3. ^ BONAP (Biota of North America Project) floistic synthesis, Iris prismatica
  4. ^ Rodionenko, Georgi Ivanovich. 2007. Botaničnyj Žurnal 92: 552. 2007.
  5. ^ Pursh, Frederick Traugott. 1813. Flora Americae Septentrionalis 1: 30.
  6. ^ Godfrey, R. K. & J. W. Wooten. 1979. Aquatic and Wetland Plants of Southeastern United States Monocotyledons 1–712. The University of Georgia Press, Athens.
  7. ^ Chester, E. W. 1993. Atlas of Tennessee Vascular Plants Volume 1. Pteridophytes, Gymnosperms & Moncots. 118 pp.
  8. ^ Radford, A. E., H. E. Ahles & C. R. Bell. 1968. Manual of the Vascular Flora of the Carolinas i–lxi, 1–1183. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
  9. ^ Gleason, H. A. & A.J. Cronquist. 1968. The Pteridophytoa, Gymnospermae and Monocotyledoneae. 1: 1–482. In H. A. Gleason New Britton and Brown Illustrated Flora of the Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada. New York Botanical Garden, New York.
  10. ^ "Natural Resources Conservation Service". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 22 May 2014.