Description: Cultivated specimen of the endangered Hawaiian endemic ʻŌpelu (Lobelia niihauensis) on the island of Oʻahu. Date: 1 November 2008, 16:27. Source: Lobelia niihauensis Uploaded by Tim1357. Author: David Eickhoff from Pearl City, Hawaii, USA.
Description: Hāhā Campanulaceae Endemic to the Hawaiian Islands (West Maui only) Very rare and endangered Kauaʻi (Cultivated). Date: 1 March 2011, 13:13. Source: Cyanea lobata subsp. lobata Uploaded by Tim1357. Author: David Eickhoff from Pearl City, Hawaii, USA.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Campanula isophylla var. alba in a flower pot in Gabrovo, Bulgaria Български: Campanula isophylla var. alba в саксия, Габрово, България. Date: 14 September 2010. Source: Own work. Author: Payakoff.
Summary[edit] Description: English: American Bellflower (Campanula americana) blooming in the Seldom Seen Greenway, Pittsburgh. Date: 15 August 2021, 14:36:34. Source: Own work. Author: Cbaile19.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Campanula lactiflora in Gothenburg Botanical Garden 2015. Plant id: 2011-1849 s W. Date: 7 July 2015, 13:59:22. Source: Own work. Author: Averater. Camera location 57° 40′ 42.81″ N, 11° 57′ 15.03″ E: View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: 57.678558; 11.954175.
Summary[edit] Description: These delightful little flower are hiding in a corner of the Great Glasshouse at the National Botanic Garden Wales 7 Flowers for 52 in 2020 challenge. Date: Taken on 27 February 2020, 11:49. Source: Trachelium - E X P L O R E D. Author: Clint Budd from About 15 miles North of Swansea, Wales. Flickr tags52 in 2020 challenge, flowers, national botanic garden wales, nbgw, great glass house. Camera location51° 50′ 31.33″ N, 4° 08′ 48.26″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 51.842035; -4.146738.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Downingia bacigalupii flowering in SW Idaho. Date: 21 June 2005, 13:08:56. Source: Boise District Bureau of Land Management (Formerly Four Rivers Field Office), Idaho. Author: Either Roger Rosentreter or Ann DeBolt, though in some cases it may be the work of a BLM technician or other botanist.
Summary[edit] Description: As a part of an effort to restore red spruce in the Southern Appalachians, the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission recently worked with a host of partners, including the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Southern Highlands Reserve, Haywood Community College, and the U.S.D.A. Forest Service to plant 1150 red spruce trees along the Cherohala Skyway in North Carolina’s Graham County. The project is designed to improve habitat for the endangered Carolina northern flying squirrel, which lives in spruce-fir/northern hardwood forests, and for which red spruce is an important source of food and shelter. Forest Service research indicates that spruce-fir and spruce-northern hardwood forests were once far more abundant, but widespread logging in the early 1900s, followed by catastrophic wildfires, damaged soil, making it hard for spruce seedlings to germinate. Along the Cherohala Skyway, Eastern hemlocks werethe dominant evergreen tree, however their numbers are fading due to the hemlock woolly adelgid. Biologists hope the hundreds of planted red spruce will help fill the gap left by the fading hemlocks. The trees were grown from seed by The Southern Highlands Reserve, a nonprofit native plant arboretum; with most of them planted by students from Haywood Community College’s wildlife and forestry programs. Date: 24 September 2013, 12:04. Source: Roadside wildflowers Uploaded by AlbertHerring. Author: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Southeast Region.