Iris prismatica

Slender blue flag
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Iridaceae
Subfamily: Iridoideae
Tribe: Irideae
Genus: Iris
Subgenus: Limniris
Section: 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. 1 2 3 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.
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