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THE VASCULAR FLORA OF THE VICINITY OF THE FALLS OF NIAGARA
by Patricia M. Eckel
BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

 

Agassiz, L. 1850. Lake Superior: its Physical Character, Vegetation, and Animals. Gould, Kendall & Lincoln, Boston.

Alex, J. F. & C. M. Switzer. (no date.) Ontario Weeds. Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food. Publ. 505. Toronto.

Argus, G. W. & D. J. White. 1977. The Rare Vascular Plants of Ontario. National Museum of Natural Sciences. Botany Division, Ottawa.

Bailey, L. H. 1927. The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. Vols. I-III. Macmillan, New York.

-----------. 1938. Manual of Cultivated Plants. Macmillan, New York.

-----------. 1949. Manual of Cultivated Plants. Revised Edition. Macmillan, New York.

Bassett, I. J., C. W. Crompton, J. McNeill, & P. M. Taschereau. 1983. The Genus Atriplex (Chenopodiaceae) in Canada. Agr. Canada Monogr. 31. 72 pp.

Beck, L. C. 1833. Botany of the Northern and Middle States. Albany, New York.

Brittain, W. H. & W. F. Grant. 1967. Observations on Canadian Birch (Betula) Collections at the Morgan Arboretum. V. B. papyrifera and B. cordifolia from Eastern Canada. Canadian Field-Naturalist. 81: 251-262.

Britton, N. O. & A. Brown. 1913. An Illustrated Flora of the Northern United States, Canada and the British Possessions, Ed. 2. Three Vols., New York.

Cameron, Roderick. 1895. Catalogue of Plants Which Have Been Found Growing Without Cultivation in the Park and its Outlying Territories. Collected, mounted and catalogued for the Park herbarium in the Superintendent's Office. Queen Victoria Park. Appendix to the 10th Annual Commissioners for the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls Park. Ontario Government Publication, Ottawa.

[---------. 1894. "Catalogue of plants which have been found growing without cultivation in the park and its outlying territories ... (Ann. rep'ts of the com'rs for the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls park. 1894. 9:app.) A list of "104 families, comprising 417 genera and 915 species," compiled by the chief gardner of the park. --------. 1895. Catalogue of plants which have been found growing without cultivation in the park and its outlying territories ... (Ann. rep'ts of the com'rs for the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls park. 10:app.) A more complete list than that in the ninth report, but not exhaustive, since only such plants as had been mounted and were actually on evidence in the herbarium were included. The whole number consisted of '107 families, comprising 487 genera and 1,101 distinct species'" citations in Dow, 1921].

Carnes, C. 1984. Bangia atropurpurea (Roth) Ag. in the Great Lakes. Newsletter of the Niagara Frontier Botanical Society 2(3): 20-22.

Catling, P. M., Reznicek, A. A., and Riley, J. L. 1978. Some new and interesting grass records from southern Ontario. Canadian Field- Naturalist 91: 350-359.

Chamberlin, J. 1892. Letter to editor by John Chamberlin of Buffalo on "The Niagara Reservation." Garden and Forest, Nov. 30. 5:575.

Clemants, S. E. 1989. New York Natural Heritage Program, New York Rare Plant Status List. February. New York Natural Heritage Program, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and The Nature Conservancy.

Clinton, DeWitt. 1822. Hibernicus. Letters on the Natural History and Internal Resources of the State of New York. New York.

Clinton, G. W. 1864. Plants of Buffalo and Its Vicinity. Buffalo, New York. Also printed in the Annual Report of the Regents on the State Cabinet (for 1863) 17:24-35.

Core, E. L. 1941. Butomus umbellatus in America. Ohio Journal of Science. 41: 79-85.

----------. 1948. The Flora of the Erie Islands. An annotated list of vascular plants. The Ohio State University, Franz Theodore Stone Laboratory, No. 9.

Day, D. F. 1882. The Plants of Buffalo and Its Vicinity. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Vol. 4 (3).

----------. 1883. Supplement to the Plants of Buffalo and Its Vicinity. Bull. of the Buffalo Soc. of Natural Sciences. Vol. 4 (4).

--------- 1888. Catalogue of the Niagara Flora. Annual Report of the Commission for the State Reservation at Niagara for the Year (1887), pp. 67-133. Also reprinted as a pamphlet, Troy, New York (1888). The pamphlet has been consulted for this list.

-------- 1901. "The flora and fauna of Niagara Falls" in The Niagara Book, W. D. Howells, Mark Twain, N. S. Shaler, et al., Doubleday, Page & Co. pp. 158-177.

Denman, R. 1987. An alien to watch for, Flowering Rush. Wildflower Summer 3(3): 28-29.

Dore, W. G. & J. McNeill. 1980. The Grasses of Ontario. Biosystematics Research Institute, Monograph 26. Research Branch Agriculture Canada, Ottawa.

Douglas, D. 1914. Journal kept by David Douglas during his travels in North America 1823-1827. Pub. by Royal Hort. Soc., London pp.364.

Dow, C. M. 1921. Anthology and Bibliography of Niagara Falls. 2 Vols. Published by the State of New York. Albany.

Eckel, P. M. 1986. Flora of DeVeaux College Woods, Niagara Falls, New York. Clintonia, Supplement to Issue 1:1-7.

-----------. 1988. New and interesting records for the Niagara Frontier flora. Clintonia Vol. 3(2): 4-7.

-----------. 1990. Botanical Evaluation of Goat Island Complex, Niagara Falls, New York. Report to New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. January, 1990.

-----------. 1991. Flora of a marsh on Cayuga Island, Niagara County, New York. Clintonia Vol. 6(4):7-10.

------------. 1999. The Honeysuckle hybrid Lonicera morrowii x tatarica (=L. x bella Zabel) at Buckhorn Island State Park, Erie County, New York. Clintonia Vol. 14(4):5.

------------. 1999. Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai (Curcurbitaceae), an African species on Navy Island, Ontario. Clintonia Vol. 14(6):5.

-----------. 2001. Tiny species: Myosotis stricta Link, a rare component of some vernal microfloras in New York and Ontario along the Niagara River. Clintonia Vol. 16(1):4.

----------. 2004, Nov. 7. Trees Along the Crest of the Niagara River Gorge from Devil's Hole to DeVeaux (Whirlpool) Steps in New York State. Res Botanica, a Missouri Botanical Garden Web Site: http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/ResBot/index.htm

 ----------- & J. Bissell. 2000. Iris virginica L., Southern Blue Flag, restored to the flora of New York State. Clintonia Vol. 15(3):7.

Elias, T. S. 1980. The Complete Trees of North America. Field Guide and Natural History. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.

Fernald, M. L. 1932. Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Vol. XVII, Part I.

-------------. 1950. Gray's Manual of Botany. Eighth edition. New York. The revision by R. C. Rollins (1970) is also referred to here.

Fox, W. S. & J. H. Soper. 1954. The distribution of some trees and shrubs of the Carolinian Zone of Southern Ontario. Transactions of the Royal Canadian Institute. No. 63, Vol. XXX, Part. II. pp. 99 - 130.

Gaiser, L. O. 1949. Further distribution of Butomus umbellatus in the Great Lakes region. Rhodora 51: 385-390.

Gleason, H. A. & A. Cronquist. 1963. Manual of Vascular Plants of Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada. New York.

Goldie, J. 1819. Diary of a Journey Through Upper Canada and Some of the New England States. Privately published, 1961[7]. Toronto.

Gray, A. (no date). Amer. Journ. Sci. ser.2, xlii. 278 (cited in Robinson, 1901).

Guest, Lady T. 1895. A Round Trip in North America. London.

Gurney, J.J. 1841. A Journey in North America, Described in Familiar Letters to Amelia Opie. Norwich.

Hamilton, George H. 1943. Plants of the Niagara Parks System of Ontario. Toronto.

Harty, F. M. 1986. Exotics and their ecological ramifications. Natural Areas Journal Vol. 6(4): 20 - 26.

Heimburger, M. 1955. "Report on the Flora of Lincoln, Welland, Haldimand and Norfolk Counties,based on the Miller and Landon collections, 1948- 1952. January 3-April 30, 1955." Unpublished notebooks, Royal Horticultural Gardens, Hamilton.

House, H. 1924. Annotated list of the ferns and flowering plants of New York State. New York State Mus. Bull. 254.

________. 1925. New York State Museum Bull. 266: 28-30, June.

Ingraham, J. W. 1935. A Manual for the use of Visiters to the Falls of Niagara, intended as an epitome of, and temporary substitute for, a larger amd more extended work, relative to the most stupendous wonder of the world. Buffalo, Charles Faxon; sold by O. G. Steele, T. Butler, and A. W. Wilgus, 1834. Rare book room, Buffalo & Erie County Public Library.

Jensen, Richard J. 1997. Quercus Linnaeus sect. Lobatae Loudon in Flora of North America, Vol. 3: 447-468. Oxford University Press. New York..

Jones, G. N. & G. D. Fuller. 1955. Vascular Plants of Illinois. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.

Kartesz, J. T. & R. K. Kartesz. 1980. A synonymized checklist of the vascular flora of the United States, Canada, and Greenland. Vol. 11. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.

Kerr, Ernest. 1985. A blue trillium. Wildflower. Vol. 1, No. 2. pp. 16-17. Interesting discussion of the cytology and mutations of Trilliums in Ontario.

Lamere, Clifford W. 1991. Sky-blue Aster at Niagara River Gorge. NYFA Newsletter Vol. 2(3):2. New York Flora Association of the New York State Museum Institute.

LaRocque, A. 1949. Post-Pleistocene connection between James Bay and the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. Geological Society of America Bulletin 60: 363- 79.

Lellinger, D. B. 1985. A Field Manual of the Ferns and Fern-allies of the United States and Canada. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C.

Macoun, J. 1877. Synopsis of the flora of the valley of the St. Lawrence and Great Lakes. The Canadian Journal of Science, Literature and History. Vol. XV (V), pp. 429-435.

---------. 1883-1892. Catalogue of Canadian Plants. Geological Survey of Canada. Parts 1-6, Montreal. Parts 1-5 relate to vascular plants. (1883) Pt. 1; (1884) Pt. 2; (1886) Pt. 3; (1888) Pt. 4; (1890) Pt. 5.

---------. 1893. Notes on the flora of the Niagara Peninsula and shores of Lake Erie. Journal and Proceedings of the Hamilton Association Vol. 9, pp. 78-86.

---------. 1902. Catalogue of Canadian Plants. Geological Survey of Canada. Part 7, Ottawa.

McNeill, John. 1978. Silene alba and S. dioica in North America and the generic delimitation of Lychnis, Melandrium and Silene (Caryophyllaceae). Canadian Journal of Botany 56:297-308.

Malte, M. O. 1932. The so-called Agropyron caninum (L.) Beauv. of North America. Annual Report of the National Museums of Canada. 1930: 27-57 (Bulletin of the National Museums of Canada No. 68).

McIntosh, Karen L. and Paul M. Catling. 1979. Notes on the flora of the Canadian portion of the Niagara Frontier. Ontario Field Biologist Vol. 33(1):79, pp. 1-11

Mitchell, R. S. 1986. A rare fringed gentian (Gentianopsis procera) at Niagara Falls. Clintonia 1(6): 3-4.

______________. 1986. A Checklist of New York State Plants. New York State Mus. Bull. 458.

______________. & J. K. Dean. 1978. Polygonaceae (Buckwheat Family) of New York State. Contributions to a Flora of New York State I. New York State Mus. Bull. 431.

______________. & C. J. Sheviak. 1981. Rare Plants of New York State. New York State Museum, Albany.

______________. 1988. Platanaceae through Myricacese of New York State. Contributions to a Flora of New York State VI. New York State Museum Bulletin No. 464, Albany.

______________. & G. C. Tucker. 1997. Revised Checklist of New York State Plants. New York State Museum Bulletin 490. Albany.

Mizer, H. B. 1981. Niagara Falls, a City is Born, a City Matures. No. 24 of the Occasional Contributions of the Niagara County Historical Society.

Morsink, W. A. G. and P. D. Pratt.1984. Shumard Oak, Quercus shumardii, in Essex County, Ontario. Canadian Field-Naturalist 98(4): 470-478.

Olmsted, F. L. 1880. in Gardner, J. T., Director. 1880. New York State Survey. Special report on the preservation of the scenery of Niagara Falls, and fourth annual report on the triangulation of the State for the year 1879, pp. 27-31. Albany.

Paine, John, Jr. 1865. Catalogue of the plants found in Oneida County and Vicinity. 18th Annual Report of the Regents, Senate Document no. 90,  pp. 53-192.

Panton, Prof. J. Hoyes. 1890, in: Annual Reports (1889) of the Commissioner for Queen Victoria Niagara Falls Park. Ontario Legislative Sessional Papers, Vol. 22.

Peattie, D. C. 1922. The Atlantic Coastal Plain Element in the Flora of the Great Lakes. Rhodora 24: 57-70, 80-88 (April, May).

Peck, Charles H. 1872.Report of the Botanist in 25th ANNUAL report on the State Museum of Natural History. Senate Document no. 83 pp. 58-123.

Pohl, R. W. 1963. Phytogeographic notes on Rottboellia, Paspalum, and Miscanthus (Gramineae). Rhodora 65: 146-147.

Potter, D. 1932. Botanical evidence for a post-Pleistocene marine connection between Hudson Bay and the St. Lawrence basin. Rhodora 34: 69-89, 101-12.

Provancher, Abbe L. 1862. Flore Canadienne. Vol. 1 & 2. Quebec.

Regents, One of the. 1865. Facts and Observations touching the flora of the State of New-York. 18th Annual Report of the Regents, Senate Document no. 90,  pp. 197-205.

Robinson, B. L. 1901. The Correct Disposition of Sisymbrium niagarense Rhodora 3(2):16-17.

Robinson, W. 1875. Alpine Flowers. Given in Gardner, J. T., Director. 1880. New York State Survey. Special report on the preservation of the scenery of Niagara Falls, and fourth annual report on the triangulation of the state for the year 1879. Albany: Charles Van Benthuysen and Sons, pp. 27-31.

Robinson, B. L. & M. L. Fernald. 1908. A handbook of the Flowering Plants and Ferns of the central and northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada. New York.

Sargent, C. S. 1913. Crataegus in New York. New York State Mus. Bull. 167: 53-124, Albany

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Semple, John C., Stephen B. Heard and ChunSheng Xiang. 1996. The Asters of Ontario (Compositae: Astereae): Diplactis Raf., Oclemena E. L. Greene, Doellingeria Nees and Aster L. (including Canadanthus Nesom, Symphotrichum Nees, and Virgulus Raf). University of Waterloo Biiology Series No. 38. Waterloo, Ontario.

Severance, F. H. (ed.) 1910. George W. Clinton: Tour from Albany to Lake Erie by the Erie Canal in 1826. Buffalo Historical Society Publications, Vol. 14: 273-305. Buffalo, N. Y. [The full transcription of Clinton's diary is published here. The original diary is in the Research Library, Buffalo Museum of Science].

Smith, C. P. 1915. Carex tuckermani niagarense, a neglected sedge. Rhodora 17:57-59.

Soper, J. H. 1952. Phytogeographic studies in Ontario 1. The genus Uvularia in Southern Ontario. Rhodora Vol. 54 (639)pp. 57-67.

-----------. & M. L. Heimburger. 1982. Shrubs of Ontario. Royal Ontario Museum Life Sciences Misc. Publ., Toronto.

Steen, David. 1985. The Toronto Star, June (18, )West 2. "Botanists want to save rare primrose from bulldozers" and "Author says plants grow best if left alone." Comments on Alliaria officinalis, or Garlic Mustard.

Sweeney, C. R. 1984. Population Study on the Purple Loosestrife, Lythrum salicaria L. Newsletter of the Niagara Frontier Botanical Society 2(1): 1-2.

Taschereau, P. M. 1972. Taxonomy and Distribution of Atriplex Species in Nova Scotia. Canad. J. Bot. 50: 1571-1594.

Thomas, D. 1839. Description of a New Species of Liatris. Amer. Jour. Sci. 37:338-339.

Torrey, J. 1943. A Flora of the State of New York, comprising full descriptions of all the indigenous and naturalized plants hitherto discovered in the state; with remarks on their economical and medicinal properties. Vols. 1 & 2 of Natural History of New York. Albany.

Tuckerman, E. 1849. Observations on American Species of the Genus Potamogeton, L. Am. Jour. Sci. II 7: pp. 347-360.

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Vermont 1957. An Act to restrict the taking of certain rare plants and to repeal Section 8443 of Vermont Statutes 47. Laws of Vermont 83: 55-56. (Given by Argus & White 1977).

Vinal, T. 1949. Niagara Portage, from Past to Present. Foster & Stewart, Buffalo.

Voss, E. G. 1972. Michigan Flora. Part I. Gymnosperms and Monocots. Cranbrook Institute of Science and University of Michigan Herbarium Bull. 55, Ann Arbor.

_________. 1985. Michigan Flora. Part II. Dicots (Saururaceae-Cornaceae). Cranbrook Institute of Science and University of Michigan Herbarium Bull. 59, Ann Arbor

Waldron, G. E., Aboud, S. W., Ambrose, J. D. and G. A. Meyers. 1987. Shumard Oak, Quercus shumardii, in Canada. Canadian Field-Naturalist 101(4): 532-538.

Wied-Neuwied, M. A. P., Prinz von. 1843. Travels in the interior of North America, with numerous engravings on wood and a large map; translated by H. Evans Lloyd. London, pp. 493-496.

Wiegand, K. M. 1920. Eupatorium purpureum and its allies. Rhodora. Vol. 22, No. 256, pp. 57-70.

Wood, R. D. 1967. Charophytes of North America. Memorial Union University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island.

Yaki, G. J. 1970. Plants of the Niagara Peinsula. Niagara Falls Nature Club, Special Publication No. 2:pp 1- 42.

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Zenkert, C. A. 1931. The Rare Rock Selaginella at Lewiston. Hobbies: 12:95.

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