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FLORA OF MISSOURI

The Flora of Missouri project is an ongoing effort to update and compile information on the state’s flora. It began in 1987 as a joint effort of the Missouri Botanical Garden and the Missouri Department of Conservation. One of its main goals is a three-volume revision of former Missouri Botanical Garden curator Julian A. Steyermark’s Flora of Missouri, first published in 1963. Missouri’s ever changing plant diversity, the shifting distributions of its plant species, and the many new records of plants in the state have necessitated an expansion of Steyermark’s original publication into three volumes. Volume 1 of the new encyclopedia was published in 1999; Volume 2 was published in June 2006. Volume 3 is anticipated in 2011.

Under the project team’s direction, information from the 1990 Catalogue of the Flora of Missouri, published in the Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden series, has been computerized and updated for the Garden’s Web site, www.mobot.org. The 586 plates of new art prepared for the Flora have also been computerized. An expanding database of specimen label data for use in preparing county dot maps presently contains more than 170,000 records from the Missouri Botanical Garden and other herbaria in Missouri and elsewhere.

Steyermark’s Flora of Missouri, Second Edition: Volume 1 contains lengthy introductory chapters on climate, geology, vegetation and botanical history, as well as treatments of the pteridophytes, conifers, and monocots. Volume 2 contains the first half of the dicot treatments, including members of the parsley, carnation, honeysuckle, milkweed, morning glory, mustard and sunflower families. Each volume has more than 1,000 pages and features dot maps, descriptions, identification keys, flowering times and habitat information, along with new, original black-and-white illustrations of nearly all of the species. Current efforts are focused on completing the research and writing of Volume 3, which will complete the dicot treatments.

Field work by Missouri botanists from colleges and universities, state and federal agencies, and private organizations, along with specimens donated by amateur enthusiasts, continue to increase the Garden’s holdings of the state’s flora by about 5,000 specimens per year. A grant by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to the Garden will allow the expansion of the project on the World Wide Web. Over the next two years, images of herbarium specimens and plants in the wild for all of Missouri’s species will be loaded into the Garden’s eFloras.org Web site. Text from the first two printed volumes will be reformatted to create new online identification tools.

The Flora of Missouri project is directed by Garden Curator, Dr. George Yatskievych. Dr. Rex Hill is the project’s database manager and Kathleen Wood, Ann Larson, Nancy Walker, and Jack Harris volunteer their services to the project.

Published volumes of Steyermark’s Flora of Missouri, Second Edition are available from the Missouri Botanical Garden Press, www.mbgpress.info or 1 (877) 271-1930, and the Garden Gate Shop, (314) 577‑5137.


The Missouri Botanical Garden’s mission is “to discover and share knowledge about plants and their environment, in order to preserve and enrich life.” Today, 150 years after opening, the Missouri Botanical Garden is a National Historic Landmark and a center for science and conservation, education and horticultural display.      

11/3/08