Rubus flagellaris

common dewberry [Blooms: May-Jun]

Young, densely-hairy, stems of common dewberry terminate in single flowers or corymbs of 2-3 (rarely five) flowers. Individual flowers are 1-1.25" across consisting of five green, lance-shaped, hairy and glandular-hairy sepals with a thin, narrow "tail" at the tip; five white, wrinkled petals longer than the sepals; numerous (20-100) stamens; and a cluster of 5-150 green carpels with their club-shaped styles in the center of the flower. Floral stems may also arise from the axils of leaves. The fruits are pretty typical compound drupes (aggregate fruit like blackberries) 1/2-3/4" across, usually tightly attached to the receptacle with relatively few drupelets (10-40 of the smaller sections of the fruit); ripe fruit are dark red to black and shiny (not pruinose).
Common dewberry (Rubus flagellaris) flowers and fruits. Top right: a common dewberry flower viewed face-on. The stamens are largely spent, but a few fertile, cream-colored anthers can be seen near the central green mass of white-tipped styles. Top left: common dewberry flowers in three-quarters perspective. Again, the stamens are largely spent, but a few fertile, cream-colored anthers can be seen near the center of the flower. Bottom right: the back of a flower showing the sepals with their long “tails.” Note the red-tipped glandular hairs on both the sepals and the flower stalk, and the remarkably dense hairs on the flower stalks. Bottom left: common dewberry fruits in all stages of development from fertilized carpels (center) to mature, dark black fruit (center left). Note the relatively large size and small numbers of drupelets in the fruit.
Young, densely-hairy, stems of common dewberry terminate in single flowers or corymbs of 2-3 (rarely five) flowers. Individual flowers are 1-1.25″ across consisting of five green, lance-shaped, hairy and glandular-hairy sepals with a thin, narrow “tail” at the tip; five white, wrinkled petals longer than the sepals; numerous (20-100) stamens; and a cluster of 5-150 green carpels with their club-shaped styles in the center of the flower. Floral stems may also arise from the axils of leaves. The fruits are pretty typical compound drupes (aggregate fruit like blackberries) 1/2-3/4″ across, usually tightly attached to the receptacle with relatively few drupelets (10-40 of the smaller sections of the fruit); ripe fruit are dark red to black and shiny (not pruinose).
Common dewberry (aka, northern dewberry) is a mat-like, creeping bramble that may produce occasional low-arching canes but soon returns to a creeping habit. The vine-like stems are woody, up to 15' long, armed with scattered, hooked prickles, and with alternate compound leaves occurring at intervals. Young stems are green and densely hairy; old stems are brown or reddish-brown. The first-year canes (primocanes) are round in section with rigid, hooked prickles, grow low to the ground, and commonly tip-root. The leaves are compound, usually with three leaflets, but leaves with five leaflets do occur. Leaflets are up to 3" long and half as wide, oval, mostly hairless, with serrated or doubly-serrate margins. The upper surface of the leaf is light to medium green; the underside is paler green. The lateral leaflets are sessile; the terminal leaflet has a short (1/4") petiolule and is widest at or above the middle; the entire leaf is connected to the stem by a long petiole, with a pair of small stipules flanking the attachment to the stem.
Common dewberry (Rubus flagellaris) stems and leaves. Left: a first year cane (primocane) surrounded by numerous second year canes (floricanes) bearing typical trifoliate compound leaves. Part of a flower can be seen peeking out from behind the leaves in the lower right corner of the image. Upper right: the upper side of a trifoliate leaf with an adjacent typical common dewberry flower. Bottom right: the underside of one of the trifoliate leaves. The short petiolule of the terminal leaflet can be seen where the leaflets converge; I’m holding the much-longer leaf petiole between thumb and index finger.
Common dewberry (aka, northern dewberry) is a mat-like, creeping bramble that may produce occasional low-arching canes but soon returns to a creeping habit. The vine-like stems are woody, up to 15 feet long, armed with scattered, hooked prickles, and with alternate compound leaves occurring at intervals. Young stems are green and densely hairy; old stems are brown or reddish-brown. The first-year canes (primocanes) are round in section with rigid, hooked prickles, grow low to the ground, and commonly tip-root. The leaves are compound, usually with three leaflets, but leaves with five leaflets do occur. Leaflets are up to 3″ long and half as wide, oval, mostly hairless, with serrated or doubly-serrate margins. The upper surface of the leaf is light to medium green; the underside is paler green. The lateral leaflets are sessile; the terminal leaflet has a short (1/4″) petiolule and is widest at or above the middle; the entire leaf is connected to the stem by a long petiole, with a pair of small stipules flanking the attachment to the stem.
Common dewberry (aka, northern dewberry) is a mat-like, creeping bramble that may produce occasional low-arching canes but soon returns to a creeping habit. The vine-like stems are woody, up to 15' long, armed with scattered, hooked prickles, and with alternate compound leaves occurring at intervals. Young stems are green and densely hairy; old stems are brown or reddish-brown. The first-year canes (primocanes) are round in section with rigid, hooked prickles, grow low to the ground, and commonly tip-root. The leaves are compound, usually with three leaflets, but leaves with five leaflets do occur. Leaflets are up to 3" long and half as wide, oval, mostly hairless, with serrated or doubly-serrate margins. The upper surface of the leaf is light to medium green; the underside is paler green. The lateral leaflets are sessile; the terminal leaflet has a short (1/4") petiolule and is widest at or above the middle; the entire leaf is connected to the stem by a long petiole, with a pair of small stipules flanking the attachment to the stem. Young, densely-hairy, stems terminate in single flowers or corymbs of 2-3 (rarely five) flowers. Individual flowers are 1-1.25" across consisting of five green, lance-shaped, hairy and glandular-hairy sepals with a thin, narrow "tail" at the tip; five white, wrinkled petals longer than the sepals; numerous (20-100) stamens; and a cluster of 5-150 green carpels with their club-shaped styles in the center of the flower. Floral stems may also arise from the axils of leaves. The fruits are pretty typical compound drupes (aggregate fruit like blackberries) 1/2-3/4" across, usually tightly attached to the receptacle with relatively few drupelets (10-40 of the smaller sections of the fruit); ripe fruit are dark red to black and shiny (not pruinose). The plants tend to be highly variable from year to year in habit and number and shape of prickles. The thin narrow "tail" at the tip of the sepals is common to all the Rubus sp. in Jackson Park. Common dewberry is quite similar to the introduced Rubus caesius (Eurasian dewberry); the Seek app tends to identify the Jackson Park dewberries as Eurasian dewberry, but that species has pruinose fruit (with a whiteish, powdery coating, like a plum). Common dewberry seems to thrive along the western shores of Wooded Island.
A mat of common dewberry (Rubus flagellaris) on the west shore of Wooded Island opposite Japanese Garden. The insert on the upper right shows an enlarged image of one of common dewberry’s trifoliate compound leaves.
Common dewberry (aka, northern dewberry) is a mat-like, creeping bramble that may produce occasional low-arching canes but soon returns to a creeping habit. The vine-like stems are woody, up to 15 feet long, armed with scattered, hooked prickles, and with alternate compound leaves occurring at intervals. Young stems are green and densely hairy; old stems are brown or reddish-brown. The first-year canes (primocanes) are round in section with rigid, hooked prickles, grow low to the ground, and commonly tip-root. The leaves are compound, usually with three leaflets, but leaves with five leaflets do occur. Leaflets are up to 3″ long and half as wide, oval, mostly hairless, with serrated or doubly-serrate margins. The upper surface of the leaf is light to medium green; the underside is paler green. The lateral leaflets are sessile; the terminal leaflet has a short (1/4″) petiolule and is widest at or above the middle; the entire leaf is connected to the stem by a long petiole, with a pair of small stipules flanking the attachment to the stem. Young, densely-hairy, stems terminate in single flowers or corymbs of 2-3 (rarely five) flowers. Individual flowers are 1-1.25″ across consisting of five green, lance-shaped, hairy and glandular-hairy sepals with a thin, narrow “tail” at the tip; five white, wrinkled petals longer than the sepals; numerous (20-100) stamens; and a cluster of 5-150 green carpels with their club-shaped styles in the center of the flower. Floral stems may also arise from the axils of leaves. The fruits are pretty typical compound drupes (aggregate fruit like blackberries) 1/2-3/4″ across, usually tightly attached to the receptacle with relatively few drupelets (10-40 of the smaller sections of the fruit); ripe fruit are dark red to black and shiny (not pruinose). The plants tend to be highly variable from year to year in habit and number and shape of prickles. The thin narrow “tail” at the tip of the sepals is common to all the Rubus sp. in Jackson Park. Common dewberry is quite similar to the introduced Rubus caesius (Eurasian dewberry); the Seek app tends to identify the Jackson Park dewberries as Eurasian dewberry, but that species has pruinose fruit (with a whitish, powdery coating, like a plum). Common dewberry seems to thrive along the western shores of Wooded Island.

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Aesculus

Aesculus glabra

Ohio buckeye [Blooms: Apr/May–?]

bottlebrush buckeye [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

slender false foxglove [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

blue giant hyssop [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

yellow giant hyssop [Blooms: Jul-?]

purple giant hyssop [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

white snakeroot [Blooms: Jul-Nov]

swamp agrimony [Blooms: Aug-?]

hollyhock [Blooms: Jul-?]

northern water-plantain [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

garlic mustard [Blooms: Apr-Jul]

wild garlic [Blooms: Jun-?]

nodding onion [Blooms: Jul/Aug–?]

green/red amaranth [Blooms: Sep-?]

Amaranthus

Amaranthus palmeri

Palmer's amaranth [Blooms: Aug–?]

redroot amaranth [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

common ragweed [Blooms: Aug-?]

Western ragweed [Blooms: ?-Nov]

great ragweed [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Amelanchier

Amelanchier arborea

downy serviceberry [Blooms: Apr-May]

Wiegand's shadbush [Blooms: Apr-May]

marram grass [Blooms: Jul-?]

lead plant [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

sharp-lobed hepatica [Blooms: Apr]

Canada anemone [Blooms: May–Oct]

thimbleweed [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

wood anemone [Blooms: Apr–May]

tall anemone [Blooms: Jun–?]

field pussytoes [Blooms: Apr-May]

plaintain-leafed pussytoes [Blooms: Apr-May]

common dogbane [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

red columbine [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

common columbine [Blooms:May-Jun]

Aralia

Aralia elata

Japanese angelica tree [Blooms: Jul/Aug–?]

spikenard [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

devil's walking stick [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Arctium

Arctium minus

burdock [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

Arctostaphylos

Arctostaphylos uva-ursi

bearberry [Blooms: April]

thyme-leaved sandwort [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

Jack-in-the-pulpit [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

pale Indian-plantain [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

prairie Indian-plantain [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

red chokeberry [Blooms: Apr-May]

black chokeberry [Blooms: May-?]

beach wormwood [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

mugwort [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

wild ginger [Blooms: Apr/May-?]

prairie milkweed [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

swamp milkweed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Sullivant's milkweed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

common milkweed [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

butterfly milkweed [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

whorled milkweed [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

Canada milkvetch [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Baptisia

Baptisia alba

white wild-indigo [Blooms: May-Aug]

cream wild-indigo [Blooms: May-Jun]

yellow rocket [Blooms: Apr-May]

Betula

Betula nigra

river birch [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

Spanish needles [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

nodding bur-marigold [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

devil's beggar-tick [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

crowned beggar-tick [Blooms: Sep-Oct]

hairy wood mint [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

false boneset [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

butterfly-bush [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

American searocket [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

purple poppy-mallow [Blooms: ?-Jul]

Calystegia

Calystegia sepium

hedge bindweed [Blooms: May-Sep]

wild hyacinth [Blooms: May-Jun]

American bellflower [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

creeping bellflower [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

shepard's purse [Blooms: Apr-May]

cutleaf toothwort [Blooms: Apr-May]

hairy bitter-cress [Blooms: April]

Pennsylvania bitter-cress [Blooms: April]

nodding thistle [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

woodland sedge [Blooms: Apr-May]

capitate sedge [Blooms: May-Jun]

bottlebrush sedge [Blooms: May-Jun]

Gray's sedge [Blooms: May-Jul]

wood gray sedge [Blooms: May-Jun]

porcupine sedge [Blooms: May-Jul]

troublesome sedge [Blooms: May-Jun]

palm sedge [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

woolly sedge [Blooms: Apr-May]

Pennsylvania sedge [Blooms: Apr]

cyperus sedge [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

star sedge [Blooms: May-?]

longbeaked sedge [Blooms: Apr-May]

prickly sedge [Blooms: May-Jun]

brown fox sedge [Blooms: May-Jul]

pecan [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Northern catalpa [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

blue cohosh [Blooms: Apr-May]

New Jersey tea [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

American bittersweet [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

common hackberry [Blooms: Apr-May]

sandbur [Blooms: Aug-?]

Centaurea

Centaurea stoebe

spotted knapweed [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

buttonbush [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

mouse-ear chickweed [Blooms: Apr-May]

Eastern redbud [Blooms: Apr-May]

wild chervil [Blooms: May-?]

partridge pea [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

white turtlehead [Blooms: Sep-Oct]

Chenopodium

Chenopodium album

lamb's quarters [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

glory-of-the-snow [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

chicory [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

enchanter's nightshade [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

Canada thistle [Blooms: May-Sep]

field thistle [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

bull thistle [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

spring beauty [Blooms: Apr-May]

asiatic dayflower [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

poison hemlock [Blooms: May-Jun]

Convallaria

Convallaria majalis

lily-of-the-valley [Blooms: Apr-May]

field bindweed [Blooms: May-Aug]

horseweed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

lance-leafed coreopsis [Blooms: May-Jun]

prairie coreopsis [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

plains coreopsis [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

tall coreopsis [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

whorled coreopsis [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

silky dogwood [Blooms: May-Jun]

rough-leaved dogwood [Blooms: ?]

Cornus

Cornus mas

Cornelian cherry dogwood [Blooms: Apr-?]

swamp dogwood [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

gray dogwood [Blooms: May-Jun]

red-osier dogwood [Blooms: Apr-Sep]

American hazelnut [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

cockspur hawthorn [Blooms: May-Jun]

Crataegus

Crataegus mollis

downy hawthorn [Blooms: Apr-May]

common hawthorn [Blooms: May-?]

narrow-leaf hawksbeard [Blooms: May-?]

spring crocus [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

honewort [Blooms: May-Jun]

winged pigweed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

shining flatsedge [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

yellow nut sedge [Blooms: Aug-?]

rusty flatsedge [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

white prairie-clover [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

purple prairie-clover [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

shrubby cinquefoil [Blooms: May-Jul]

mullein foxglove [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Queen Anne's lace [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

swamp loosestrife [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Illinois bundleflower [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

showy tick-trefoil [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

pointed-leaf tick-trefoil [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

panicled tick-trefoil [Blooms: Aug]

Deptford pink [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Dutchman's breeches [Blooms: Apr-May]

northern bush honeysuckle [Blooms: May-Jul]

Diplotaxis

Diplotaxis muralis

annual wallrocket [Blooms: May-Oct]

wild teasel [Blooms: Jul-?]

cut-leaved teasel [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

flat-topped aster [Blooms: Jul – Sep]

whitlow-grass [Blooms: Apr-May]

Drymocallis

Drymocallis arguta

prairie cinquefoil [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

Duchesnea

Duchesnea indica

mock strawberry [Blooms: Apr-Sep]

pale purple coneflower [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

purple coneflower [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

yerba de tajo [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

common spike-rush [Blooms: May-Jul]

Aunt Lucy [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

cinnamon willowherb [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

broad-leaved helleborine [Blooms: Jul]

Erigeron

Erigeron annuus

annual fleabane [Blooms: May-Aug]

Philadelphia fleabane [Blooms: May-Sep]

Robin's plantain [Blooms: Apr-May]

daisy fleabane [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

storksbill [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

rattlesnake master [Jun-Sep]

wormseed mustard [Blooms: Apr-?]

Erythronium

Erythronium albidum

troutlily [Blooms: Apr-May]

Euonymus

Euonymus alatus

winged Euonymus [Blooms: May-Jun]

European spindletree [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

Hamilton's spindletree [Blooms: Maay-Jun]

tall boneset [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

common boneset [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

late boneset [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

flowering spurge [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

seaside sandmat [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

lance-leafed goldenrod [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

spotted Joe-Pye weed [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

sweet Joe-Pye weed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

black bindweed [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

climbing false-buckwheat [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Filipendula

Filipendula rubra

queen-of-the-prairie [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

wild strawberry [Blooms: Apr-May]

Indian blanket [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

greater snowdrop [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

snowdrop [Blooms: Feb-Mar]

gallant-soldier [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

galinsoga [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

cleavers [Blooms: Apr/May-?]

dyer's greenweed [Blooms: Oct]

Gentiana

Gentiana alba

cream gentian [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

Carolina crane's-bill [Blooms: May-Jun]

cut-leaved crane's-bill [Blooms: May-Jun]

wild geranium [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

white avens [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

rough avens [Blooms: June]

prairie smoke [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

ground ivy [Blooms: Apr-May]

honey locust [Blooms: May-Jun]

Gymnocladus

Gymnocladus dioicus

Kentucky coffeetree [Blooms: May-Jun]

stickseed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

sneezeweed [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

woodland sunflower [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

sawtooth sunflower [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

Helianthus

Helianthus mollis

downy sunflower [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

western sunflower [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Jerusalem artichoke [Blooms: Aug – Oct]

ox-eye sunflower [Blooms: May-Jul]

Hemerocallis

Hemerocallis fulva

day lily [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

cow parsnip [Blooms: May/Jun-?]

dame's rocket [Blooms: Apr-May]

common alumroot [Blooms: May – ?]

Hibiscus

Hibiscus laevis

halberd-leaved rose-mallow [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

swamp rose-mallow [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

flower-of-an-hour [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

American hops [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

wild hydrangea [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Virginia waterleaf [Blooms: May]

giant St. John's wort [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Kalm's St. John's wort [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

common St. John's wort [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

shrubby St. John's wort [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

round-fruited St. John's wort [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

orange jewelweed [Blooms: Jul-Nov]

ivy-leaved morning-glory [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

small white morning-glory [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

wild sweet-potato [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

common morning-glory [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

yellow iris [Blooms: May-Jun]

blue flag iris [Blooms: May-Jun]

Juglans

Juglans nigra

black walnut [Blooms: May?-Jun]

Dudley's rush [Blooms: May-Jun]

soft rush [Blooms: May-Jun]

path rush [Blooms: ?-Jun]

Torrey's rush [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

American water-willow [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

kochia [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

two-flowered cynthia [Blooms: Jun-?]

Canada lettuce [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

prickly lettuce [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

henbit [Blooms: Apr-May]

purple dead-nettle [Blooms: Apr-?]

wood nettle [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

duckweed [Blooms: ?]

motherwort [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

field peppergrass [Blooms: May-?]

peppergrass [Blooms: Oct-Nov]

round-headed bush-clover [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

violet bush-clover [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Leucanthemum

Leucanthemum vulgare

ox-eye daisy [Blooms: May-Jul]

summer snowflake [Blooms: Apr-May]

Lyme grass [Blooms: May-Jun]

rough blazing-star [Blooms: Aug-Sept]

cylindrical blazing-star [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Rocky Mountain blazing-star [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

prairie blazing-star [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

savanna blazing-star [Blooms: Aug]

marsh blazing-star [Blooms: Aug]

Michigan lily [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

butter-and-eggs [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

spicebush [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

tulip tree [Blooms: June]

creeping lilyturf [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

hairy puccoon [Blooms: May-Jun]

cardinal flower [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

great blue lobelia [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

amur honeysuckle [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

Morrow's honeysuckle [Blooms: Apr-May]

grape honeysuckle [Blooms: Jun]

tatarian honeysuckle [Blooms: Apr-May]

bird's-foot trefoil [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

wild lupine [Blooms: May-Jun]

American bugleweed [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

gypsywort [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

northern bugleweed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Lysimachia

Lysimachia ciliata

fringed loosestrife [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

winged loosestrife [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

purple loosestrife [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

false Solomon's seal [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

starry false Solomon's seal [Blooms: Apr-May]

prairie crabapple [Blooms: Apr-May]

common mallow [Blooms: May-Oct]

wild chamomile [Blooms: May-Jun]

pineapple-weed [Apr-Jul]

black medic [Blooms: May-?]

Melilotus

Melilotus albus

white sweetclover [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

yellow sweetclover [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

field mint [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Virginia bluebells [Blooms: Apr-May]

square-stemmed monkeyflower [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

wild four-o'clock [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

twoleaf miterwort [Blooms: Apr-May]

wild bergamot [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

spotted beebalm [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Morus

Morus alba

white mulberry [Blooms: Apr-May]

red mulberry [Blooms: ??]

grape hyacinth [Blooms: Apr]

water chickweed [Blooms: May-Jun]

glade mallow [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

poet's daffodil [Blooms: Apr-May]

wild daffodil [Blooms: Mar-May]

catnip [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

spatterdock [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

fragrant water-lily [Blooms: May-Aug]

evening primrose [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

smallflowered gaura [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

Oenothera

Oenothera gaura

biennial gaura [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

northern evening primrose [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

prairie sundrop [Blooms: Jun]

hairy evening primrose [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

Eastern prickly-pear [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

French-grass [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

star of Bethlehem [Blooms: May]

aniseroot [Blooms: Apr – Jun]

hop hornbeam [Blooms: Apr-May]

yellow wood-sorrel [Blooms: May-Sep]

cowbane [Blooms: May-June]

butterweed [Blooms: May-Jun]

balsam ragwort [Blooms: Apr-May]

prairie ragwort [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

wild quinine [Blooms: May-Aug]

Virginia creeper [Blooms: ?]

Boston ivy [Blooms: ??]

Parthenocissus

Parthenocissus vitacea

woodbine [Blooms: ??]

Pastinaca

Pastinaca sativa

wild parsnip [Blooms: May-Jun]

wood betony [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

calico penstemon [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

foxglove beardtongue [Blooms: May-Jul]

slender beardtongue [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

large-flowered penstemon [Blooms: May-Jul]

hairy beardtongue [Blooms: May-Jul]

pale beardtongue [Blooms: May-Jun]

ditch stonecrop [Blooms: Aug-?]

waterpepper [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

pale smartweed [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

creeping smartweed [Blooms: May-Oct]

lady's-thumb [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Pennsylvania smartweed [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

dotted smartweed [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

jumpseed [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

reed canary-grass [Blooms: May-?]

sweet mock-orange [Blooms: May-Jun]

cleft phlox [Blooms: Apr-?]

woodland phlox [Blooms: Apr-May]

smooth phlox [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

prairie phlox [Blooms: Apr-Jun]

giant reed [Blooms: ?early-midsummer]

clammy groundcherry [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

smooth groundcherry [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

ninebark [Blooms: May-Jun]

obedient plant [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

pokeweed [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

English plantain [Blooms: May-Aug]

Plantago

Plantago major

common plantain [?-Aug]

mayapple [Blooms: Apr-May]

Polemonium

Polemonium reptans

Jacob's ladder [Blooms: Apr-May]

Soloman's seal [Blooms: May-Jul]

prostrate knotweed [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Pontederia

Pontederia cordata

pickerel weed [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Eastern cottonwood [Blooms: Apr-May]

common purslane [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Potamogeton

Potamogeton crispus

curly pondweed [Blooms: May-?]

silverweed [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

rough cinquefoil [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Potentilla

Potentilla recta

sulfur cinquefoil [Blooms: May-Jul]

Potentilla

Potentilla simplex

common cinquefoil [Blooms: May-Jul]

shooting star [Blooms: Apr-May]

heal-all [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

American plum [Blooms: Apr-May]

Prunus

Prunus padus

European bird cherry [Blooms: Apr-May]

peach [Blooms: Apr-May]

sand cherry [Blooms: Apr-May]

black cherry [Blooms: May-June]

Japanese cherry [Blooms: Apr-May]

chokecherry [Blooms: Apr-May]

hoptree [Blooms: May-Jun]

striped squill [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

slender mountain-mint [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Virginia mountain-mint [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

small-flowered buttercup [Blooms: Apr-May]

Ranunculus

Ranunculus ficaria

lesser celadine [Blooms: Apr-May]

hispid buttercup [Blooms: May-Jul]

Pennsylvania buttercup [Blooms: Jul-?]

cursed crowfoot [Blooms: May-Jul]

upright prairie coneflower [Blooms: Jul]

grey-headed coneflower [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

Japanese knotweed [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

buckthorn [Blooms: May-Jun]

jetbead [Blooms: Apr-May]

fragrant sumac [Blooms: Apr-May]

smooth sumac [Blooms: May-Jul]

staghorn sumac [Blooms: May-Jul]

wild black currant [Blooms: Apr-May]

golden currant [Blooms: Apr-May]

Missouri gooseberry [Blooms: Apr-May]

black locust [Blooms: May-Jun]

marsh yellow-cress [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

prairie rose [Blooms: May-Jul]

pasture rose [Blooms: Jun-?]

multiflora rose [Blooms: May-Jun]

swamp rose [Blooms: May-Jun]

rugosa rose [Blooms: May-Jul]

climbing wild rose [Blooms: Jun -Jul]

common blackberry [Blooms: May-June]

common dewberry [Blooms: May-Jun]

purple-flowered raspberry [Blooms: Apr/May-Aug]

Pennsylvania blackberry [Blooms: May-Jun]

orange coneflower [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Rudbeckia

Rudbeckia hirta

black-eyed susan [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

cutleaf coneflower [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

sweet coneflower [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

brown-eyed susan [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

hairy wild petunia [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

pale dock [Blooms: May-Jun]

curly dock [Blooms: May-Jun]

bitter dock [Blooms: May-Jul]

common arrowhead [Blooms: Aug – Sep]

weeping willow [Blooms: Apr]

Missouri River willow [Blooms: Apr]

prairie willow [Blooms: Apr-May]

narrowleaf willow [Blooms: Apr-Jul]

black willow [Blooms: ??]

Sambucus

Sambucus nigra

elderberry [Blooms: May-Jul]

bloodroot [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

Canadian black snakeroot [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

black snakeroot [Blooms: May-Jun]

soapwort [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

Schoenoplectus

Schoenoplectus acutus

hardstem bulrush [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

Schoenoplectus

Schoenoplectus pungens

three-square bulrush [Blooms: May-Jul]

great bulrush [Blooms: May-Jul]

alpine squill [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

Siberian squill [Blooms: Mar-Apr]

dark green bulrush [Blooms: May-Jul]

early figwort [Blooms: May-Jul]

late figwort [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

mad-dog skullcap [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

Securigera

Securigera varia

crown vetch [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

Sedum

Sedum acre

biting stonecrop [Blooms: Jun]

common groundsel [Blooms: May-Jul]

Maryland senna [Blooms: Jul]

prickly sida [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

evening campion [Blooms: May-Aug]

Silene

Silene regia

royal catchfly [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

starry campion [Blooms: Jun-Jul]

rosinweed [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

compass plant [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

cup plant [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

prairie dock [Blooms: Jun-Sep]

wild mustard [Blooms: May-Jun]

hedge mustard [Blooms: May-Jul]

Sisyrinchium

Sisyrinchium albidum

white blue-eyed grass [Blooms: May-?]

water parsnip [Blooms: Jul-Aug]

horsenettle [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

bittersweet nightshade [Blooms: May-Aug]

black nightshade [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

tall goldenrod [Blooms: Sep-Oct]

Solidago

Solidago caesia

woodland goldenrod [Blooms: Sep-Oct]

Canada goldenrod [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

broad-leaved goldenrod [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

tall goldenrod [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

Solidago

Solidago juncea

early goldenrod [Blooms: Jul/Aug-?]

field goldenrod [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

upland white goldenrod [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Solidago

Solidago rigida

stiff goldenrod [Blooms: Aug-Oct]

seaside goldenrod [Blooms: Sep-Oct]

showy goldenrod [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

elmleaf goldenrod [Blooms: Jul-Oct]

perennial sowthistle [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

Sonchus

Sonchus asper

prickly sowthistle [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

prickly sowthistle [Blooms: Jun-Oct]

giant bur-reed [Blooms: May-Jul]

Spergularia

Spergularia salina

saltmarsh sand-spurry [Blooms: May-Aug]

Spiraea

Spiraea alba

white meadowsweet [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

Great Plains ladies'-tresses [Blooms: Sep]

bladdernut [Blooms: Apr-May]

Stellaria

Stellaria media

common chickweed [Blooms: Apr-May]

Strophostyles

Strophostyles helvola

trailing wild-bean [Blooms: Aug-Sep]

Symphoricarpos

Symphoricarpos albus

snowberry [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

coralberry [Blooms: Aug-?]

Drummond's aster [Blooms: Sep – ?]

Symphyotrichum

Symphyotrichum ericoides

heath aster [Blooms: Sep – Nov]

Symphyotrichum

Symphyotrichum laeve

smooth blue aster [Blooms: Aug – Sep]

panicled aster [Blooms: Aug – Oct]

calico aster [Blooms: Sep – ?]

New England aster [Blooms: Aug – Nov]

skyblue aster [Blooms: Sep – Oct]

Symphyotrichum

Symphyotrichum pilosum

hairy aster [Blooms: Aug – Nov]

Symphyotrichum

Symphyotrichum shortii

Short's aster [Blooms: Aug – Nov]