This preliminary list of more than 3,000 species includes only the native plants and those that have been introduced from other sections of this country, or other continents, and have escaped from cultivation, and become naturalized and are now a part of the flora of the state.https://scholarworks.uni.edu/iowabooks/1028/thumbnail.jp
Three years of field work in Iowa (1950-1952) have turned up many vascular plants that have been unr...
In a number of former papers the writer presented notes on new or otherwise noteworthy native and in...
The following plants either do not appear on Mr. Cratty\u27s list (1933), in which case they are ind...
In two former papers the writer listed a number of plants that were noteworthy or new to the Iowa fl...
In three former papers the writer has listed numerous plants new to our state, or noteworthy for oth...
Since the settlement of Iowa many changes have taken place in our flora, especially with reference t...
The following plants are not in Mr. Cratty\u27s1 catalogue and, so far as I know, have not been defi...
Recently quite a number of plants new to the State or noteworthy for other reasons, have come under ...
Since issuing No.1 of my paper on the above subject1 quite a number of interesting plants, many of t...
Non-native, invasive forb species have been a problem in Iowa since the earliest decades of Iowa\u27...
The flora of Iowa is relatively well known compared to that of some of the southern and western stat...
Recent collecting and studying in herbaria have called forth the following notes on some of the rare...
A need for a reasonably complete and modern list of vascular plants for the Iowa City vicinity has l...
Though the herbarium of University of Nebraska at Omaha (OMA) lies outside the state boundaries, it ...
During the summers of 1933 and 1934 about 750 species of flowering plants, ferns, and mosses were co...
Three years of field work in Iowa (1950-1952) have turned up many vascular plants that have been unr...
In a number of former papers the writer presented notes on new or otherwise noteworthy native and in...
The following plants either do not appear on Mr. Cratty\u27s list (1933), in which case they are ind...
In two former papers the writer listed a number of plants that were noteworthy or new to the Iowa fl...
In three former papers the writer has listed numerous plants new to our state, or noteworthy for oth...
Since the settlement of Iowa many changes have taken place in our flora, especially with reference t...
The following plants are not in Mr. Cratty\u27s1 catalogue and, so far as I know, have not been defi...
Recently quite a number of plants new to the State or noteworthy for other reasons, have come under ...
Since issuing No.1 of my paper on the above subject1 quite a number of interesting plants, many of t...
Non-native, invasive forb species have been a problem in Iowa since the earliest decades of Iowa\u27...
The flora of Iowa is relatively well known compared to that of some of the southern and western stat...
Recent collecting and studying in herbaria have called forth the following notes on some of the rare...
A need for a reasonably complete and modern list of vascular plants for the Iowa City vicinity has l...
Though the herbarium of University of Nebraska at Omaha (OMA) lies outside the state boundaries, it ...
During the summers of 1933 and 1934 about 750 species of flowering plants, ferns, and mosses were co...
Three years of field work in Iowa (1950-1952) have turned up many vascular plants that have been unr...
In a number of former papers the writer presented notes on new or otherwise noteworthy native and in...
The following plants either do not appear on Mr. Cratty\u27s list (1933), in which case they are ind...