Quiz Advanced Plant ID Week 3 Native Plants

Advanced Plant Identification Quiz

Test your knowledge on native plants with this engaging quiz! Discover various species, their characteristics, and how they can enhance your landscape. Perfect for plant enthusiasts, students, and anyone interested in horticulture!

  • 20 challenging questions
  • Focus on native plants
  • Expand your plant identification skills
20 Questions5 MinutesCreated by GardeningWise202
This small suckering shrub, has fragrant summer flowers, and red fall color making a great shrub to plant in mass to cover an embankment. Leaves are serrulate. Give the common name.
This shrub has fragrant white flowers in spring, before and as the leaves are emerging, also has a nice fall color. Leaves are obovate to oblong, dentate above the middle. The leaf base is asymmetrical. Give the common name.
This small tree reaches up to 20 feet tall and wide in the landscape, produces white panicles of flowers in late May. It is dioecious, however can be polygamo-dioecious, where there are some perfect flowers, therefore a mostly male plant can produce the dark blue fruit. Simple, narrow-elliptic to oblong leaves are opposite to sub-oppositely arranged. Give the common name.
This flowering tree averages 50 ft. In height and produces 2 inch tube bell-shaped white flowers in June which result in the formation of an 8-10 inch fruit capsule. It has opposite to whorled leaf arrangement with no terminal bud. What is it's common name?
This evergreen native is dioecious, producing red fruit on female plants. It's latin species name translates to darker or dull. It reaches up to 30 ft. Tall with a pyramidal shape, it is however slow growing. What is it's common name?
You might expect the leaves of this small evergreen shrub to have spines on the leaves however it has obovate to oblanceolate leaves with obtuse teeth near the apex. It is dioecious, producing small black fruits on female plants. What is it's common name?
This small shrub grows up to 4 ft. tall, has terminal clusters of small summer blooming white flowers. It's leave are lanceolate and toothed. Tolerates wet soils making it ideal for raingardens.
From the image you might think this is an evergreen however this plant is deciduous. It is also dioecious and produces red fruit on female plants that persists through the winter. Leaves are elliptic or obvoate with serrate margins. What is it's common name?
This plant is a bee magnet but disliked by deer. Produces yellow blooms on an 3-4 ft. Upright mounded shrub from June- August. There are several similar species with slightly different leaf shape and flowering habit. What is the common name of this genus of plants?
The older stems of this plant have papery exfoliating bark. While the straight species is 6-10' tall and often seen locally along streambanks, there are many cultivars being developed that have purple, orange, or yellow foliage. These cultivar's are often shorter and have smaller foliage.
From the digging deeper list, this shrub is 6-9 ft tall, with fragrant maroon blooms in the spring. Leaves have opposite leaf arrangement and no terminal bud. What is it's common name
Most well known for it's bright orange blooms in spring before the leave emerge. This deciduous shrub is best grown in acidic well drained soil
This native tree is usually 20-25 feet tall, has white late summer flowers in drooping panicles, leaves are alternate and elliptic-oblong to lanceolate, can be serrulate to entire. Bright red early fall color.
An upright perennial that reaches 3-4 ft. Tall in the landscape. Blooms in spring before trifoliate leaves with blue green leaflets emerge. What is it's scientific name
This late summer blooming rhizomatous perennial forms small colonies especially in wet areas. The Genus name Chelone, is from the greek word meaning turtle in reference to the shape of the bloom. What is the common name?
What term would you use to describe this leaf base?
What type of roots are these on this grape stem?
What are the structures called that the arrows are pointing to?
What is the term that is used to describe the movement or twining of this Clematis stem around the support
What term could be used to describe this leaf base?
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