Template:IDViolet
From Oregon Hikers Field Guide
Revision as of 19:32, 22 February 2010 by Stevefromdodge (Talk | contribs)
Tips on identifying Violets
purple flowers, leaves with very small teeth | Early Blue Violet | Viola adunca |
white or light purple flowers, round leaves with rounded teeth | Howell's Violet | Viola howellii |
white flowers, bottom three petals have purple lines, roundish leaves | Small White Violet | Viola macloskeyi |
small plant, white flowers, bottom three petals have purple lines, roundish leaves, wet meadows and streams | Marsh Violet | Viola palustris |
yellow flowers, light green, heart shaped leaves, style head heavily bearded | Stream Violet | Viola glabella |
yellow flowers, bottom three petals have brownish lines, grows in moist forests, style head lightly bearded | Evergreen Violet | Viola sempervirens |
yellow flowers, bottom three petals have purple lines, leaves longer and narrower than most violets | Nuttall's Violet | Viola nuttallii |
small plant, yellow flowers, bottom three petals have purple lines, round leaves | Round Leaved Violet | Viola orbiculata |
yellow flowers, bottom three petals have brownish lines, leaves darker and hairier than other violets, likes dry areas | Canary Violet | Viola praemorsa |
yellow flowers, bottom three petals have purplish lines, leaves shaped like english ivy, likes dry areas at moderate to high elevations | Goosefoot Violet | Viola purpurea |
dark yellow flowers, leaves are dark and deeply cut, likes pine forests | Fan Violet | Viola sheltonii |
two top petals deep purple, bottom three petals pink with yellow center, leaves are light and lack teeth, likes vernally wet, rocky meadows in the eastern portion of the Cascades | Rainier Violet | Viola trinervata |