fbpx
Wikipedia

Flora of Saskatchewan

The native flora of Saskatchewan includes vascular plants, plus additional species of other plants and plant-like organisms such as algae, lichens and other fungi, and mosses. Non-native species of plants are recorded as established outside of cultivation in Saskatchewan, of these some non-native species remain beneficial for gardening, and agriculture, where others have become invasive, noxious weeds. Saskatchewan is committed to protecting species at risk in Canada. The growing season has been studied and classified into plant hardiness zones depending on length of growing season and climatic conditions. Biogeographic factors have also been divided into vegetative zones, floristic kingdoms, hardiness zones and ecoregions across Saskatchewan, and natural vegetation varies depending on elevation, moisture, soil type landforms, and weather. The study of ethnobotany uncovers the interrelation between humans and plants and the various ways people have used plants for economic reasons, food, medicine and technological developments. The Government of Saskatchewan has declared 3 indigenous plants as provincial symbols.

Small Lady's Slipper - extirpated species
Silver buffaloberry
Canada thistle

Growing season edit

Saskatchewan possesses a continental climate and the seasonal variations in temperature provide a short growing season. On average the province supports 159 to 160 frost-free days, in the far north that number diminishes to 85 to 95 frost free days.[1] In 1967, Canadian scientists created a map outlining Plant Hardiness Zones. The hardiness zones examine climatic gradations such as length of frost-free period, summer rainfall, maximum summer temperatures, minimum winter temperatures, and wind speed. The harshest plant environment is 0 and the mildest is rated as 8. Corresponding data was correlated for plant requirements. Such an examination provides direction to which flora may survive the geographical hardiness zone conditions.[2] A development in the late 1800s encouraged homesteaders to pursue agriculture. Red Fife wheat (Triticum aestivum) matured 20 days before other wheats, which allowed plants to ripen before the autumn frost.[3]

Protected and invasive species edit

Saskatchewan has 367 rare species of vascular plants of which 135 of these have been listed as endangered.[4]

Saskatchewan's commitment to the Accord for the Protection of Species at Risk in Canada, which was ratified by provinces, territories and the federal government in September of 1998,"

Saskatchewan Environment and Resource Management Minister Lorne Scott (1999)[5]

There is listed Small White Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium candidum) as the only local extinction, (extirpated) plant. Endangered plants include the Sand Verbena (Abronia micrantha), Western Spiderwort (Tradescantia occidentalis), Tiny Cryptantha (Cryptantha minima), and Hairy Prairie-Clover (Dalea villosa). Threatened plants include the Slender Mouse-Ear Cress (Halimolobos virgata).[5] These two reports to aid in the protection of plants; Species at Risk In SK and Rare Plant Survey Guidelines.[6] Saskatchewan has implemented The Weed Control Act[7] to control plants introduced to Saskatchewan which have become a threat to the natural biodiversity such as leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula).[8] There are two reports in this regard; Invasive Species and Noxious Weeds of Saskatchewan.[6][8]

Section 15 (1) of the Act states: "Every owner or occupant of land shall:

(a) under the supervision of the weed inspector, eradicate any prohibited weeds located on the land;

(b) under the supervision of the weed inspector, eradicate any isolated infestations of noxious weeds located on the land;

(c) contain and control any established infestations of noxious weeds located on the land; and

(d) take measures to control any nuisance weeds located on the land."

The Weed Control Act.

Provincial symbols edit

The tree which was designated in 1988 as a symbol of Saskatchewan is the paper birch Betula papyrifera.[9] Saskatchewan's provincial flower is the Western red lily Lilium philadelphicum var. andinum (a protected species) designated in 1941.[10] Needle-and-thread grass Hesperostipa comata is Saskatchewan's provincial grass declared in 2001.[11]

Floristic kingdom edit

Saskatchewan is within the Holarctic Kingdom. There are two regions within this kingdom, the Circumboreal floristic region or which provides a cool northern temperate zone and the North American Atlantic Region in Southern Saskatchewan which is part of a warmer Midwestern Plains zone. These zones are characterized by a certain degree of endemism.[12]

Ecoregions edit

An ecoregion encompasses soil types and landform similarities.[13]: 134  The Taiga Shield ecozone in the far north includes the Selwyn Lake upland and Tazin Lake Upland ecoregion.[13]: 160 [14] This would have vegetation generally corresponding to the Subarctic Woodland. The Boreal Shield ecozone is further divided into the Athabasca Plain and Churchill River Upland, and this area of Northern Saskatchewan has been described by the World Wildlife Fund as part of the Midwestern Canadian Shield forests ecoregion. The Boreal Plains ecozone comprises the Mid-Boreal Upland, Mid-Boreal Lowland and Boreal Transition ecoregions. Further south is the Prairie ecozone which consists of the Aspen Parkland, Moist Mixed Prairie, Northern Mixed Grassland and Cypress Upland ecoregions. The ecoregions are further divided into Landscape Areas.[13]: 160 [15][16]

Vegetative zones edit

Several biogeographic factors contribute to the richness and diversity of Saskatchewan flora. From north to south there are a variety of vegetative zones. To the far north are the Subarctic Woodland and Northern Boreal Forest. The Southern Boreal Forest is south of the treeline. The Prairie is divided into the Aspen Parkland, Moist Mixed Grassland, Mixed Grassland, Cypress Upland and Fescue Grassland. In southeast Saskatchewan are Dry Mixed Prairie of the Great Sand Hills area and the Cypress Hills.[13]

Subarctic Woodland edit

Upon the Canadian Shield and in the coolest weather, are subarctic lichen woodland.[17] The black spruce (Picea Mariana), jack pine (Pinus banksiana), and white spruce (Picea glauca) are commonly occurring trees. This area is interspersed with peatlands, bogs, fens, permafrost areas, and areas of arctic tundra.[13] Yellow and Grey Reindeer moss (Cladonia mitis) provide ground cover.[17] The Subarctic Woodland corresponds to Canada's hardiness zone 0a.[18]

Northern Boreal Forest edit

The circumpolar boreal forest or taiga is dominated by conifers or aspen and poplar stands.[19]

 
Boreal forest

Throughout this area are lakes, bogs, forest and rock outcroppings.[17] Black spruce, jack pine once again are the main trees of the area. Forest fires are a concern in this area, and Fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium) occurs in burnt areas.[13] Cladonia cetraria and C. tereocaulon are lichen species which provide ground cover. Feather mosses such as Stair-Step Moss (Hylocomium splendens) and Hypnum are amongst the undergrowth.[17] Where the rock is covered in soils, the forest takes on the characteristics and species of the Southern Boreal Forest ecozone.[13] The plant hardiness zone would be Zone 0b.[18]

The Athabasca Basin provides a separate ecosystem. The Athabasca Sand Hills protected by The Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park are unique feature of the Canadian shield. The hills are located in northern Saskatchewan and border Lake Athabasca, which straddles the Alberta and Saskatchewan border.[20][21] There is sparse plant life in the sand hills area. Blueberry, Bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi ), Sand Heather (Hudsonia tomentosa), Crowberry (Empetrum) and grasses survive here.[13] In this ecozone there are 10 species of endemic plants. There are unique four species of Willow (Salix).[22]

Southern Boreal Forest edit

Mixedwood boreal forest with jack pine, trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides ), white spruce, and tamarack (Larix laricina) populate the Southern Boreal Forest which also houses the forestry industry.[13][17]

 
Bearberry

The ground cover is lichen and stairstep moss. Bearberry, low-bush cranberry (Vaccinium vitis-idaea), Red Osier Dogwood (Cornus sericea, syn. C. stolonifera, Swida sericea) predominate the shrub layer.[19] Peatlands, fens, marsh complexes occur with wetter soils such as those found above the basin of the Quaternary Glacial Lake Agassiz in the south eastern portion of the Southern Boreal Forest.[13] 16% of the boreal forest are wetlands which have a water table at or above ground level.[19] The province is the world's largest producer of wild rice.[23]

 
Mushrooms, lichens, moss and other bryophytes.

Bog Labrador Tea (Ledum groenlandicum), Sphagnum mosses, and cloudberry (Rubus chamaemorus) flourish in the peatland areas.[13] Bogs have a high acidic layer, high water table and low nutrients.[19] Fens support the brown mosses such as Drepanocladus, Brachythecium, Calliergonelia, Scorpidium, Campylium. Reed Grass (Calamagrostis), Willows, marsh cinquefoil (Potentilla), and False Solomon's Seal (Maianthemum racemosum) gow in fen regions.[13] Fens have a high water table with slow drainage which is rich in nutrients.[19] Marshes are surrounded by willows and support Marsh reed grass (Calamagrostis), Kentucky blue grass (Poa pratensis), Fowl blue grass (Poa palustris), beaked sedge (Carex rostrata), bulrush (Scirpus validus and S. acutus).[17] Marshes have slow moving slightly alkaline water and are very rich in nutrient and minerals. Bogs, fens, and marshes together comprise muskeg regions.[19] Hardiness zone 1a describes the Southern Boreal Forest.[18]

Aspen Parkland edit

The Aspen parkland corresponds to the Transitional Grassland Ecoclimatic Region with lower precipitation and a higher average annual temperature of about 1.3 °C (34.3 °F).

 
Saskatchewan Flower: Western red lily Protected species

Trembling aspen form bluffs (small islands or shelter belts) which are typical in this area. The Aspen Parkland is a transitional area between the mixed woodland and prairie grasslands.[24] The Aspen Parkland can be divided into eastern, central and western. The eastern area produces tall grass prairie featuring big bluestem (andropogon gerardi) and Porcupine grass (Stipa spartea). Trees in this area are Bur Oak, (Quercus macrocarpa), Green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), Manitoba maple (Acer negundo), and balsam poplar (Populus sect. Tacamahaca) as well as aspen. Fescue grasses such as Festuca hallii and western porcupine grass (Stipa curtiseta) make up the native Fescue grasslands of central Saskatchewan. The aspen tree stands are still poplar, and interspersed with willow in wetter areas.

 
Tree: Paper Birch

The western parkland has ground cover of plains rough fescue Needle and thread grass (Hesperostipa comata). Tree groves are aspen, willows and balsam poplar.[19] Throughout the Aspen Parkland in low-lying areas with more moisture are dense shrub stands. Saskatoon (Amelanchier alnifolia), pin cherry (Prunus pensylvanica), choke cherry (Prunus virginiana), hawthorn (Crataegus), western snow berry (Symphoricarpos), woods rose (Rosa woodsii), Wolf willow (Elaeagnus commutata) and Canada buffaloberry (Shepherdia canadensis) are a few of the shrubs of the area.[13] The marshes and prairie sloughs of the Aspen Parkland support flora similar to the marshlands of the Southern Boreal Forest.[13] The Aspen Parkland ranges between 1b, 2a and 2b for plant hardiness areas.[18]

Mixed Prairie edit

 
Qu'Appelle Valley near Cutarm, Sask., circa 1910

The Mixed Grass Prairie correlates to the Arid Grassland Ecoclimatic Region and hardiness zone 2a and 3a.[18][24] Big sandgrass, blue grama (Bouteloua gracilis) grass grow in the higher dry areas.[24] At lower saline sites alkali grass (Puccinellia alroides), salt grass (Distichlis spicata), foxtail or wild barley (Hordeum jubatum), and arrowgrass (Triglochin maritima) are found.[17] Needle and thread grass, northern wheat grass (Elymus lanceolatus), hair sedge (Carex atherodes), bottle sedge (Carex rostrata) grow in the intermediate mesic sites, with cottonwoods and willow growing along riverbanks.[24]

Dry mixed prairie edit

Southwest Saskatchewan has very dry climatic conditions. Dry mixed prairie is found south of Cypress Hills and the Great Sand Hills area near Leader. Prickly pear cactus (Opuntia), blue grama grass, needle and thread grass, silver sagebrush (Artemisia cana) and June grass (Koeleria) are found in the areas.[13]

Cypress Hills edit

The Cypress Hills has an elevation over 1,200 metres (3,900 ft), with cooler resulting temperatures and higher precipitation which are more similar to the boreal forest than the prairie grasslands.

 
Cypress Hills

Lodgepole Pine (Pinus contorta) occurs only in the Cypress Hills area of Saskatchewan and also in the Rocky Mountain forests. Aspen, and white spruce are other trees of the Cypress Hills forests. Shining leaved meadowsweet (Spiraea lucida), low larkspur (Delphinium bicolor ), pinegrass (Calamagrostis rubescens ) provide ground cover.

Ethnobotany edit

There are many native plants of Saskatchewan which can be prepared as vegetables, teas, wine, jams, syrups and flour. Other plants have medicinal qualities. The harvest of various plants varies. Shoots, and leaves of some plants are harvested, while roots and tubers of others are picked like potatoes. When locating native plants, it is important to note which season to harvest them and what habitats to search for. Marshy pond edges reveal broad leaf cattail, or yellow pond lily (Nuphar advena).

 
Marsh area. Blueberry, strawberry, dewberry, plantain, shaggy mane mushrooms, cattail, Labrador tea, bearberry, strawberry blight, puffball mushrooms and wild mint can be harvested near this site.

Disturbed sites produce chickweed, and plantain (Musa). Asparagus (Asparagus officinalis) shoots grow near roadsides. There are plants which are poisonous, and edible plants which have poisonous look alike.[25]

Strawberry (Fragaria vesca), wild mint (Mentha arvensis), and Labrador tea leaves can be steeped in boiling water for tea.[19] Saskatoons, blueberries and other berries can be hand-picked for jam, jelly, syrup and juice preparation. Blackberry, dewberry, blueberry, buffaloberry, currant, huckleberry, prickly pear, raspberry, and rose hips all make delicious jams or jellies. Pies can be made of currants, blackberries, mountain ash, or strawberries, for example. Hull grass seeds and grind them down into flour.[25]

Herbal solutions used as remedies for ailments could be ingested as tea, used as ointments, or poultices or inhaled as smoke or steam from a decoction. Cow parsnip (Heracleum maximum) and broad-leaved water plantain (Alisma plantago-aquatica) are two herbal remedies which were cultivated by the Cree.[19] However, the cow parsnip does have a poisonous look-alike species, the western water hemlock, (Cicuta douglasii, poison hemlock).[25]

Flora of Saskatchewan have also aided humans in other ways; trees provide wood such as birch bark for canoes, reeds could be fashioned into whistles and baskets. Sphagnum mosses were used for their insulating qualities, as well mosses were absorbent for diapers, and had antibacterial properties.[19]

Botanists edit

Eugène Bourgeau (1813 - 1877) was the botanist who traveled with Captain John Palliser (1817–1887) and Henry Youle Hind (1823 - 1908) during the British North American Exploring Expedition.

 
Green Spurge or Leafy Spurge invasive species

The results of these investigations between 1857 and 1861 resulted in reporting the area unsuitable for agriculture and an area of particularly dry land was named the Palliser's Triangle.[26][27] John Macoun (1831-1920) was a naturalist who accompanied Sir Sanford Fleming to the prairies in 1872 and he offered agricultural possibilities for the region.[28] Isabel M. Priestly (1893-1946) was a botanist who made botanical collections and formed the Yorkton Natural History Society.[29] Dr. William P. Fraser is the namesake of the W.P. Fraser Herbarium. His botanical collection was donated to the Biology Department at the University of Saskatchewan where he was a professor. Later the Fraser collections were transferred to the Department of Plant Ecology in the College of Agriculture.[30] Dr. John K. Jeglum was a research botanist with Great Lakes Forestry Centre (GLFC). He received his doctorate at the University of Saskatchewan his thesis on Lowland vegetation at Candle Lake, Southern Boreal Forest Saskatchewan resulted in a collection of Saskatchewan specimens.[31]

Agriculture edit

 
Harvest time

Agriculture in Saskatchewan is the production of various food, feed, or fiber commodities to fulfill domestic and international human and animal sustenance needs. The newest agricultural economy to be developed in renewable biofuel production or agricultural biomass which is marketed as ethanol or biodiesel.[32] cultivation and livestock production have abandoned subsistence agricultural practices in favor of intensive technological farming resulting in cash crops which contribute to the economy of Saskatchewan. The particular commodity produced is dependent upon its particular biogeography or ecozone of Geography of Saskatchewan. Agricultural techniques and activities have evolved over the years. The first nation nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle and the early immigrant ox and plow farmer proving up on his quarter section of land in no way resemble the present farmer operating huge amounts of land or livestock with their attendant technological mechanization.[33]

 
Grain field in the aspen parkland near Saskatoon

Challenges to the future of Saskatchewan agriculture include developing sustainable water management strategies for a cyclical drought prone climate in south western Saskatchewan, updating dryland farming techniques, stabilizing organic definitions or protocols and the decision to grow, or not to grow genetically modified foods. Domestically and internationally, some commodities have faced increased scrutiny from disease and the ensuing marketing issues.

Canada's production of wheat, oats, flaxseed, and barley come mainly from Saskatchewan and the prairie provinces.[34] Saskatchewan still has cattle ranching along the southwestern corner of the province, However, grain farming and growing crops such as wheat, oats, flax, alfalfa, and rapeseed (especially canola) dominate the parkland area. Mixed grain farming, dairy farms, mixed livestock and grazing lands dot the central lowlands region of this prairie province.[35] As of 1996, March 24 to 30, has been proclaimed Agriculture Week in Saskatchewan.[36]

Forestry edit

In the northern part of the province, forestry is significant. North of the treeline in Saskatchewan are 350,000 square kilometres (140,000 sq mi) of forests which provide resources for the Saskatchewan forestry industry.[37] The forestry industry comprises lumber and sodium sulphate for pulp and paper resources.[38]

Physiographic regions edit

Physiographic regions -with some of the area's main features[39]
Physiographic Region Bedrock Geology Dominant soils Natural Vegetation
Canadian Shield
Rock knob complex Igneous rocks and Precambrian Missi Series Lodzolic forest soils Lichen woodland
black spruce
pine
Athabasca Plains Precambrian Athabasca Formation Rough rock land; bedrock exposures pine
Central Lowlands
Manitoba Lowlands Cretaceous formations Chernozemic soils Aspen
fescue
spear/wheat grass
Saskatchewan Plains Cretaceous formations Chernozemic soils Aspen
fescue
spear/wheat grass
Great Plains
Alberta Plateau Tertiary formations Regozolic and solonetzic soil mixtures spear grass / blue grama

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada CanSIS > National Soil DataBase (NSDB) > CLIMATE data > Plant Hardiness Zones. Government of Canada. 2008-11-27. Archived from the original on 2006-10-02. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  2. ^ . Microsoft Corporation. 1993–2008. Archived from the original on 2009-10-31. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  3. ^ Adelman, Jeremy (1994). rontier Development: Land, Labour, and Capital on the Wheatlands of Argentina and Canada, 1890-1914 (Digitized online by Google books). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198204411. ISBN 0-19-820441-8
  4. ^ . Sask Herbarium. University of Saskatchewan Plant Sciences Department. Archived from the original on July 11, 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  5. ^ a b . About Government/News Releases/March 1999/Wild Plants and Animals Protected. Government of Saskatchewan. March 1999. Archived from the original on 2010-11-24. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  6. ^ a b "Saskatchewan Conservation Data Centre". About Government/News Releases/March 1999/Wild Plants and Animals Protected. 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  7. ^ "The Weed Control Act (Sask)". Government of Saskatchewan. 2010. Retrieved 2019-05-08.
  8. ^ a b . About Agriculture/Production/Crops - Weeds/Invasive Alien Plant Program. Government of Saskatchewan. March 1999. Archived from the original on 2011-05-30. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  9. ^ Government of Saskatchewan (June 2008). "Saskatchewan's Provincial Tree". Retrieved 2008-04-05.
  10. ^ Government of Saskatchewan (June 2008). "Saskatchewan's Provincial Flower". Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  11. ^ Government of Saskatchewan (June 2008). "Saskatchewan's Provincial Grass". Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  12. ^ Haggett, Peter (2002). Encyclopedia of World Geography (Digitized online by Google books) (2, illustrated ed.). Marshall Cavendish. p. 355. ISBN 9780761472896. Retrieved 2009-01-25. ISBN 0-7614-7289-4
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Thorpe, J. (1999). "Natural Vegetation". In Kai-iu Fung; Bill Barry; Wilson, Michael (eds.). Atlas of Saskatchewan Celebrating the Millennium (Millennium ed.). Saskatchewan: University of Saskatchewan. pp. 132–138. ISBN 0-88880-387-7.
  14. ^ "Virtual Saskatchewan - Tazin Lake Upland Ecoregion". 1997–2007. Retrieved 2009-01-26.
  15. ^ . Climate Change Saskatchewan. 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-06-26. Retrieved 2009-01-26.
  16. ^ Secoy, Diane (2006). "Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina". . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on 2008-09-25. Retrieved 2009-01-25. Map of Ecozones and ecoregions
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Coupland, R.T. (1969). "Natural Vegetation of Saskatchewan". In J.H. Richards; K.I. Fung (eds.). Atlas of Saskatchewan. J.S. Rowe. Saskatoon, SK, CA: University of Saskatchewan. pp. 72–78.
  18. ^ a b c d e . Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada The National Land and Water Information Service. Government of Canada. Archived from the original on 2009-02-16. Retrieved 2009-01-25. 20
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Johnson, Derek; Linda Kershaw; Andy Mackinnon; Jim Pojar (1995). Plants of the Western Boreal Forest and Aspen Parkland (Digitized online by Google books). Lone Pine Publishing and the Canadian Forest Service. pp. 11–21. ISBN 1-55105-058-7. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  20. ^ Schwartzenberger, Tina (2005). The Canadian Shield (Digitized online by Google books) (illustrated ed.). Weigl Educational Publishers Limited. p. 23. ISBN 9781553881483. Retrieved 2008-01-21. ISBN 1-55388-148-6
  21. ^ Kissock, Heather (2002). Saskatchewan (Digitized online by Internet Archive) (illustrated ed.). Weigl Educational Publishers Limited. p. 8. ISBN 9781894705462. Retrieved 2008-01-21. ISBN 1-894705-46-7
  22. ^ Cooper, Ranessa L.; David D. Cass (2001). "Comparative evaluation of vessel elements in Salix spp. (Salicaceae) endemic to the Athabasca sand dunes of northern Saskatchewan, Canada". American Journal of Botany. Botanical Society of America, Inc. 88 (4): 583–587. doi:10.2307/2657056. JSTOR 2657056. PMID 11302842.
  23. ^ . Government of Canada. 2008-01-07. Archived from the original on 2008-01-24. Retrieved 2007-12-29. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  24. ^ a b c d Scott, Geoffrey A. J. (1995). Canada's Vegetation: A World Perspective (Digitized online by Google books) (illustrated ed.). McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. pp. 129–156. ISBN 9780773512405. Retrieved 2009-01-25. ISBN 0-7735-1240-3
  25. ^ a b c Elias, Professor Thomas S Elias, Thomas S. (1983). Edible Wild Plants A North American Field Guide (Digitized online by Google books). Peter A. Dykeman. Cengage Learning. pp. 9–28 and 258. ISBN 9780442222543. Retrieved 2009-01-25. ISBN 0-442-22254-8
  26. ^ Heinrichs, Gerald (2006). "Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina". Palliser and Hind Expeditions. Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  27. ^ "Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina". Bourgeaux (Bourgeau), Eugène. Dictionary of Canadian Biography ONline (1871-1880 (Volume X) ed.). University of Toronto/University Laval, Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan. 2000. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  28. ^ Secoy, Diane (2006). "Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina". . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on 2008-03-13. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  29. ^ Houston, Mary I. (2006). "Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina". . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on 2010-05-24. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  30. ^ "Sask History". Department of Plant Sciences. University of Saskatchewan Sask Herbarium. Retrieved 2009-01-25.[dead link]
  31. ^ "Collector Biographies". Dr. John K. Jeglum. Major Collector and Former Curators Northern Ontario Plant Database. January 25, 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  32. ^ Government of Saskatchewan (2006). . Archived from the original on 2007-06-18. Retrieved 2007-05-20.
  33. ^ . Government of Canada. Statistics Canada. Archived from the original on 2007-04-02. Retrieved 2007-04-07.
  34. ^ "History of Agriculture in the Prairie Provinces". Archives of the Agricultural Experience. University of Manitoba Archives Special Collections, the Libraries. 1998. Retrieved 2007-04-10.
  35. ^ "Saskatchewan Agricultural Hall of Fame". zu.com communications inc. 2006. Retrieved 2007-04-10.
  36. ^ Government of Saskatchewan (May 20, 2007). . Archived from the original on November 24, 2010. Retrieved 2007-05-20.
  37. ^ . Education Canada Network. 1996–2008. Archived from the original on 2010-01-01. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  38. ^ Adamson, J; Department of Highways (14 Oct 2003). "1926 Highway Map: Province of Saskatchewan". Online Historical Map Digitization Project. Retrieved 2009-01-16. []URL accessed April 6, 2007
  39. ^ Richards, J.H., Fung, K.I. Atlas of Saskatchewan Physical Features of Saskatchewan. University of Saskatchewan 1969. p. 40.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  • University of Saskatchewan: Virtual Herbarium Database Search by Scientific Family or Plant Name
  • Saskatchewan Conservation Data Centre Database Projects and Publications

flora, saskatchewan, native, flora, saskatchewan, includes, vascular, plants, plus, additional, species, other, plants, plant, like, organisms, such, algae, lichens, other, fungi, mosses, native, species, plants, recorded, established, outside, cultivation, sa. The native flora of Saskatchewan includes vascular plants plus additional species of other plants and plant like organisms such as algae lichens and other fungi and mosses Non native species of plants are recorded as established outside of cultivation in Saskatchewan of these some non native species remain beneficial for gardening and agriculture where others have become invasive noxious weeds Saskatchewan is committed to protecting species at risk in Canada The growing season has been studied and classified into plant hardiness zones depending on length of growing season and climatic conditions Biogeographic factors have also been divided into vegetative zones floristic kingdoms hardiness zones and ecoregions across Saskatchewan and natural vegetation varies depending on elevation moisture soil type landforms and weather The study of ethnobotany uncovers the interrelation between humans and plants and the various ways people have used plants for economic reasons food medicine and technological developments The Government of Saskatchewan has declared 3 indigenous plants as provincial symbols Small Lady s Slipper extirpated species Silver buffaloberryCanada thistle Contents 1 Growing season 2 Protected and invasive species 3 Provincial symbols 4 Floristic kingdom 5 Ecoregions 6 Vegetative zones 6 1 Subarctic Woodland 6 2 Northern Boreal Forest 6 3 Southern Boreal Forest 6 4 Aspen Parkland 6 5 Mixed Prairie 6 6 Dry mixed prairie 6 7 Cypress Hills 7 Ethnobotany 8 Botanists 9 Agriculture 10 Forestry 11 Physiographic regions 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksGrowing season editSaskatchewan possesses a continental climate and the seasonal variations in temperature provide a short growing season On average the province supports 159 to 160 frost free days in the far north that number diminishes to 85 to 95 frost free days 1 In 1967 Canadian scientists created a map outlining Plant Hardiness Zones The hardiness zones examine climatic gradations such as length of frost free period summer rainfall maximum summer temperatures minimum winter temperatures and wind speed The harshest plant environment is 0 and the mildest is rated as 8 Corresponding data was correlated for plant requirements Such an examination provides direction to which flora may survive the geographical hardiness zone conditions 2 A development in the late 1800s encouraged homesteaders to pursue agriculture Red Fife wheat Triticum aestivum matured 20 days before other wheats which allowed plants to ripen before the autumn frost 3 Protected and invasive species editSaskatchewan has 367 rare species of vascular plants of which 135 of these have been listed as endangered 4 Saskatchewan s commitment to the Accord for the Protection of Species at Risk in Canada which was ratified by provinces territories and the federal government in September of 1998 Saskatchewan Environment and Resource Management Minister Lorne Scott 1999 5 There is listed Small White Lady s Slipper Cypripedium candidum as the only local extinction extirpated plant Endangered plants include the Sand Verbena Abronia micrantha Western Spiderwort Tradescantia occidentalis Tiny Cryptantha Cryptantha minima and Hairy Prairie Clover Dalea villosa Threatened plants include the Slender Mouse Ear Cress Halimolobos virgata 5 These two reports to aid in the protection of plants Species at Risk In SK and Rare Plant Survey Guidelines 6 Saskatchewan has implemented The Weed Control Act 7 to control plants introduced to Saskatchewan which have become a threat to the natural biodiversity such as leafy spurge Euphorbia esula 8 There are two reports in this regard Invasive Species and Noxious Weeds of Saskatchewan 6 8 Section 15 1 of the Act states Every owner or occupant of land shall a under the supervision of the weed inspector eradicate any prohibited weeds located on the land b under the supervision of the weed inspector eradicate any isolated infestations of noxious weeds located on the land c contain and control any established infestations of noxious weeds located on the land and d take measures to control any nuisance weeds located on the land The Weed Control Act Provincial symbols editThe tree which was designated in 1988 as a symbol of Saskatchewan is the paper birch Betula papyrifera 9 Saskatchewan s provincial flower is the Western red lily Lilium philadelphicum var andinum a protected species designated in 1941 10 Needle and thread grass Hesperostipa comata is Saskatchewan s provincial grass declared in 2001 11 Floristic kingdom editSaskatchewan is within the Holarctic Kingdom There are two regions within this kingdom the Circumboreal floristic region or which provides a cool northern temperate zone and the North American Atlantic Region in Southern Saskatchewan which is part of a warmer Midwestern Plains zone These zones are characterized by a certain degree of endemism 12 Ecoregions editAn ecoregion encompasses soil types and landform similarities 13 134 The Taiga Shield ecozone in the far north includes the Selwyn Lake upland and Tazin Lake Upland ecoregion 13 160 14 This would have vegetation generally corresponding to the Subarctic Woodland The Boreal Shield ecozone is further divided into the Athabasca Plain and Churchill River Upland and this area of Northern Saskatchewan has been described by the World Wildlife Fund as part of the Midwestern Canadian Shield forests ecoregion The Boreal Plains ecozone comprises the Mid Boreal Upland Mid Boreal Lowland and Boreal Transition ecoregions Further south is the Prairie ecozone which consists of the Aspen Parkland Moist Mixed Prairie Northern Mixed Grassland and Cypress Upland ecoregions The ecoregions are further divided into Landscape Areas 13 160 15 16 Vegetative zones editSeveral biogeographic factors contribute to the richness and diversity of Saskatchewan flora From north to south there are a variety of vegetative zones To the far north are the Subarctic Woodland and Northern Boreal Forest The Southern Boreal Forest is south of the treeline The Prairie is divided into the Aspen Parkland Moist Mixed Grassland Mixed Grassland Cypress Upland and Fescue Grassland In southeast Saskatchewan are Dry Mixed Prairie of the Great Sand Hills area and the Cypress Hills 13 Subarctic Woodland edit Upon the Canadian Shield and in the coolest weather are subarctic lichen woodland 17 The black spruce Picea Mariana jack pine Pinus banksiana and white spruce Picea glauca are commonly occurring trees This area is interspersed with peatlands bogs fens permafrost areas and areas of arctic tundra 13 Yellow and Grey Reindeer moss Cladonia mitis provide ground cover 17 The Subarctic Woodland corresponds to Canada s hardiness zone 0a 18 Northern Boreal Forest editThe circumpolar boreal forest or taiga is dominated by conifers or aspen and poplar stands 19 nbsp Boreal forestThroughout this area are lakes bogs forest and rock outcroppings 17 Black spruce jack pine once again are the main trees of the area Forest fires are a concern in this area and Fireweed Epilobium angustifolium occurs in burnt areas 13 Cladonia cetraria and C tereocaulon are lichen species which provide ground cover Feather mosses such as Stair Step Moss Hylocomium splendens and Hypnum are amongst the undergrowth 17 Where the rock is covered in soils the forest takes on the characteristics and species of the Southern Boreal Forest ecozone 13 The plant hardiness zone would be Zone 0b 18 The Athabasca Basin provides a separate ecosystem The Athabasca Sand Hills protected by The Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park are unique feature of the Canadian shield The hills are located in northern Saskatchewan and border Lake Athabasca which straddles the Alberta and Saskatchewan border 20 21 There is sparse plant life in the sand hills area Blueberry Bearberry Arctostaphylos uva ursi Sand Heather Hudsonia tomentosa Crowberry Empetrum and grasses survive here 13 In this ecozone there are 10 species of endemic plants There are unique four species of Willow Salix 22 Southern Boreal Forest editMixedwood boreal forest with jack pine trembling aspen Populus tremuloides white spruce and tamarack Larix laricina populate the Southern Boreal Forest which also houses the forestry industry 13 17 nbsp BearberryThe ground cover is lichen and stairstep moss Bearberry low bush cranberry Vaccinium vitis idaea Red Osier Dogwood Cornus sericea syn C stolonifera Swida sericea predominate the shrub layer 19 Peatlands fens marsh complexes occur with wetter soils such as those found above the basin of the Quaternary Glacial Lake Agassiz in the south eastern portion of the Southern Boreal Forest 13 16 of the boreal forest are wetlands which have a water table at or above ground level 19 The province is the world s largest producer of wild rice 23 nbsp Mushrooms lichens moss and other bryophytes Bog Labrador Tea Ledum groenlandicum Sphagnum mosses and cloudberry Rubus chamaemorus flourish in the peatland areas 13 Bogs have a high acidic layer high water table and low nutrients 19 Fens support the brown mosses such as Drepanocladus Brachythecium Calliergonelia Scorpidium Campylium Reed Grass Calamagrostis Willows marsh cinquefoil Potentilla and False Solomon s Seal Maianthemum racemosum gow in fen regions 13 Fens have a high water table with slow drainage which is rich in nutrients 19 Marshes are surrounded by willows and support Marsh reed grass Calamagrostis Kentucky blue grass Poa pratensis Fowl blue grass Poa palustris beaked sedge Carex rostrata bulrush Scirpus validus and S acutus 17 Marshes have slow moving slightly alkaline water and are very rich in nutrient and minerals Bogs fens and marshes together comprise muskeg regions 19 Hardiness zone 1a describes the Southern Boreal Forest 18 Aspen Parkland editThe Aspen parkland corresponds to the Transitional Grassland Ecoclimatic Region with lower precipitation and a higher average annual temperature of about 1 3 C 34 3 F nbsp Saskatchewan Flower Western red lily Protected speciesTrembling aspen form bluffs small islands or shelter belts which are typical in this area The Aspen Parkland is a transitional area between the mixed woodland and prairie grasslands 24 The Aspen Parkland can be divided into eastern central and western The eastern area produces tall grass prairie featuring big bluestem andropogon gerardi and Porcupine grass Stipa spartea Trees in this area are Bur Oak Quercus macrocarpa Green ash Fraxinus pennsylvanica Manitoba maple Acer negundo and balsam poplar Populus sect Tacamahaca as well as aspen Fescue grasses such as Festuca hallii and western porcupine grass Stipa curtiseta make up the native Fescue grasslands of central Saskatchewan The aspen tree stands are still poplar and interspersed with willow in wetter areas nbsp Tree Paper BirchThe western parkland has ground cover of plains rough fescue Needle and thread grass Hesperostipa comata Tree groves are aspen willows and balsam poplar 19 Throughout the Aspen Parkland in low lying areas with more moisture are dense shrub stands Saskatoon Amelanchier alnifolia pin cherry Prunus pensylvanica choke cherry Prunus virginiana hawthorn Crataegus western snow berry Symphoricarpos woods rose Rosa woodsii Wolf willow Elaeagnus commutata and Canada buffaloberry Shepherdia canadensis are a few of the shrubs of the area 13 The marshes and prairie sloughs of the Aspen Parkland support flora similar to the marshlands of the Southern Boreal Forest 13 The Aspen Parkland ranges between 1b 2a and 2b for plant hardiness areas 18 Mixed Prairie edit nbsp Qu Appelle Valley near Cutarm Sask circa 1910The Mixed Grass Prairie correlates to the Arid Grassland Ecoclimatic Region and hardiness zone 2a and 3a 18 24 Big sandgrass blue grama Bouteloua gracilis grass grow in the higher dry areas 24 At lower saline sites alkali grass Puccinellia alroides salt grass Distichlis spicata foxtail or wild barley Hordeum jubatum and arrowgrass Triglochin maritima are found 17 Needle and thread grass northern wheat grass Elymus lanceolatus hair sedge Carex atherodes bottle sedge Carex rostrata grow in the intermediate mesic sites with cottonwoods and willow growing along riverbanks 24 Dry mixed prairie editSouthwest Saskatchewan has very dry climatic conditions Dry mixed prairie is found south of Cypress Hills and the Great Sand Hills area near Leader Prickly pear cactus Opuntia blue grama grass needle and thread grass silver sagebrush Artemisia cana and June grass Koeleria are found in the areas 13 Cypress Hills editThe Cypress Hills has an elevation over 1 200 metres 3 900 ft with cooler resulting temperatures and higher precipitation which are more similar to the boreal forest than the prairie grasslands nbsp Cypress Hills Lodgepole Pine Pinus contorta occurs only in the Cypress Hills area of Saskatchewan and also in the Rocky Mountain forests Aspen and white spruce are other trees of the Cypress Hills forests Shining leaved meadowsweet Spiraea lucida low larkspur Delphinium bicolor pinegrass Calamagrostis rubescens provide ground cover Ethnobotany editThere are many native plants of Saskatchewan which can be prepared as vegetables teas wine jams syrups and flour Other plants have medicinal qualities The harvest of various plants varies Shoots and leaves of some plants are harvested while roots and tubers of others are picked like potatoes When locating native plants it is important to note which season to harvest them and what habitats to search for Marshy pond edges reveal broad leaf cattail or yellow pond lily Nuphar advena nbsp Marsh area Blueberry strawberry dewberry plantain shaggy mane mushrooms cattail Labrador tea bearberry strawberry blight puffball mushrooms and wild mint can be harvested near this site Disturbed sites produce chickweed and plantain Musa Asparagus Asparagus officinalis shoots grow near roadsides There are plants which are poisonous and edible plants which have poisonous look alike 25 Strawberry Fragaria vesca wild mint Mentha arvensis and Labrador tea leaves can be steeped in boiling water for tea 19 Saskatoons blueberries and other berries can be hand picked for jam jelly syrup and juice preparation Blackberry dewberry blueberry buffaloberry currant huckleberry prickly pear raspberry and rose hips all make delicious jams or jellies Pies can be made of currants blackberries mountain ash or strawberries for example Hull grass seeds and grind them down into flour 25 Herbal solutions used as remedies for ailments could be ingested as tea used as ointments or poultices or inhaled as smoke or steam from a decoction Cow parsnip Heracleum maximum and broad leaved water plantain Alisma plantago aquatica are two herbal remedies which were cultivated by the Cree 19 However the cow parsnip does have a poisonous look alike species the western water hemlock Cicuta douglasii poison hemlock 25 Flora of Saskatchewan have also aided humans in other ways trees provide wood such as birch bark for canoes reeds could be fashioned into whistles and baskets Sphagnum mosses were used for their insulating qualities as well mosses were absorbent for diapers and had antibacterial properties 19 Botanists editEugene Bourgeau 1813 1877 was the botanist who traveled with Captain John Palliser 1817 1887 and Henry Youle Hind 1823 1908 during the British North American Exploring Expedition nbsp Green Spurge or Leafy Spurge invasive speciesThe results of these investigations between 1857 and 1861 resulted in reporting the area unsuitable for agriculture and an area of particularly dry land was named the Palliser s Triangle 26 27 John Macoun 1831 1920 was a naturalist who accompanied Sir Sanford Fleming to the prairies in 1872 and he offered agricultural possibilities for the region 28 Isabel M Priestly 1893 1946 was a botanist who made botanical collections and formed the Yorkton Natural History Society 29 Dr William P Fraser is the namesake of the W P Fraser Herbarium His botanical collection was donated to the Biology Department at the University of Saskatchewan where he was a professor Later the Fraser collections were transferred to the Department of Plant Ecology in the College of Agriculture 30 Dr John K Jeglum was a research botanist with Great Lakes Forestry Centre GLFC He received his doctorate at the University of Saskatchewan his thesis on Lowland vegetation at Candle Lake Southern Boreal Forest Saskatchewan resulted in a collection of Saskatchewan specimens 31 Agriculture editMain article Agriculture in Saskatchewan nbsp Harvest timeAgriculture in Saskatchewan is the production of various food feed or fiber commodities to fulfill domestic and international human and animal sustenance needs The newest agricultural economy to be developed in renewable biofuel production or agricultural biomass which is marketed as ethanol or biodiesel 32 cultivation and livestock production have abandoned subsistence agricultural practices in favor of intensive technological farming resulting in cash crops which contribute to the economy of Saskatchewan The particular commodity produced is dependent upon its particular biogeography or ecozone of Geography of Saskatchewan Agricultural techniques and activities have evolved over the years The first nation nomadic hunter gatherer lifestyle and the early immigrant ox and plow farmer proving up on his quarter section of land in no way resemble the present farmer operating huge amounts of land or livestock with their attendant technological mechanization 33 nbsp Grain field in the aspen parkland near SaskatoonChallenges to the future of Saskatchewan agriculture include developing sustainable water management strategies for a cyclical drought prone climate in south western Saskatchewan updating dryland farming techniques stabilizing organic definitions or protocols and the decision to grow or not to grow genetically modified foods Domestically and internationally some commodities have faced increased scrutiny from disease and the ensuing marketing issues Canada s production of wheat oats flaxseed and barley come mainly from Saskatchewan and the prairie provinces 34 Saskatchewan still has cattle ranching along the southwestern corner of the province However grain farming and growing crops such as wheat oats flax alfalfa and rapeseed especially canola dominate the parkland area Mixed grain farming dairy farms mixed livestock and grazing lands dot the central lowlands region of this prairie province 35 As of 1996 March 24 to 30 has been proclaimed Agriculture Week in Saskatchewan 36 Forestry editIn the northern part of the province forestry is significant North of the treeline in Saskatchewan are 350 000 square kilometres 140 000 sq mi of forests which provide resources for the Saskatchewan forestry industry 37 The forestry industry comprises lumber and sodium sulphate for pulp and paper resources 38 Physiographic regions editPhysiographic regions with some of the area s main features 39 Physiographic Region Bedrock Geology Dominant soils Natural VegetationCanadian ShieldRock knob complex Igneous rocks and Precambrian Missi Series Lodzolic forest soils Lichen woodlandblack sprucepineAthabasca Plains Precambrian Athabasca Formation Rough rock land bedrock exposures pineCentral LowlandsManitoba Lowlands Cretaceous formations Chernozemic soils Aspen fescuespear wheat grassSaskatchewan Plains Cretaceous formations Chernozemic soils Aspen fescuespear wheat grassGreat PlainsAlberta Plateau Tertiary formations Regozolic and solonetzic soil mixtures spear grass blue gramaSee also editCanadian Prairies Canada s landforms Canadian Shield Forestry Farm Park and Zoo List of ecoregions in Canada List of terrestrial ecoregions WWF List of ecoregions in North America CEC List of Wildlife Species at Risk PrairieReferences edit Plant Hardiness Zones in Canada Agriculture and Agri Food Canada CanSIS gt National Soil DataBase NSDB gt CLIMATE data gt Plant Hardiness Zones Government of Canada 2008 11 27 Archived from the original on 2006 10 02 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Saskatchewan province MSN Encarta Microsoft Corporation 1993 2008 Archived from the original on 2009 10 31 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Adelman Jeremy 1994 rontier Development Land Labour and Capital on the Wheatlands of Argentina and Canada 1890 1914 Digitized online by Google books Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198204411 ISBN 0 19 820441 8 Rare Native Saskatchewan Plants The Rare Native Vascular Plants of Saskatchewan Sask Herbarium University of Saskatchewan Plant Sciences Department Archived from the original on July 11 2009 Retrieved 2009 01 25 a b Wild Plants and Animals Protected About Government News Releases March 1999 Wild Plants and Animals Protected Government of Saskatchewan March 1999 Archived from the original on 2010 11 24 Retrieved 2009 01 25 a b Saskatchewan Conservation Data Centre About Government News Releases March 1999 Wild Plants and Animals Protected 2008 Retrieved 2009 01 25 The Weed Control Act Sask Government of Saskatchewan 2010 Retrieved 2019 05 08 a b Wild Plants and Animals Protected About Agriculture Production Crops Weeds Invasive Alien Plant Program Government of Saskatchewan March 1999 Archived from the original on 2011 05 30 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Government of Saskatchewan June 2008 Saskatchewan s Provincial Tree Retrieved 2008 04 05 Government of Saskatchewan June 2008 Saskatchewan s Provincial Flower Retrieved 2008 06 01 Government of Saskatchewan June 2008 Saskatchewan s Provincial Grass Retrieved 2008 06 01 Haggett Peter 2002 Encyclopedia of World Geography Digitized online by Google books 2 illustrated ed Marshall Cavendish p 355 ISBN 9780761472896 Retrieved 2009 01 25 ISBN 0 7614 7289 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Thorpe J 1999 Natural Vegetation In Kai iu Fung Bill Barry Wilson Michael eds Atlas of Saskatchewan Celebrating the Millennium Millennium ed Saskatchewan University of Saskatchewan pp 132 138 ISBN 0 88880 387 7 Virtual Saskatchewan Tazin Lake Upland Ecoregion 1997 2007 Retrieved 2009 01 26 Ecoregions Climate Change Saskatchewan 2009 Archived from the original on 2009 06 26 Retrieved 2009 01 26 Secoy Diane 2006 Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina Ecozones and Ecoregions Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on 2008 09 25 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Map of Ecozones and ecoregions a b c d e f g Coupland R T 1969 Natural Vegetation of Saskatchewan In J H Richards K I Fung eds Atlas of Saskatchewan J S Rowe Saskatoon SK CA University of Saskatchewan pp 72 78 a b c d e Plant Hardiness Zones 2000 Agriculture and Agri Food Canada The National Land and Water Information Service Government of Canada Archived from the original on 2009 02 16 Retrieved 2009 01 25 20 a b c d e f g h i j Johnson Derek Linda Kershaw Andy Mackinnon Jim Pojar 1995 Plants of the Western Boreal Forest and Aspen Parkland Digitized online by Google books Lone Pine Publishing and the Canadian Forest Service pp 11 21 ISBN 1 55105 058 7 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Schwartzenberger Tina 2005 The Canadian Shield Digitized online by Google books illustrated ed Weigl Educational Publishers Limited p 23 ISBN 9781553881483 Retrieved 2008 01 21 ISBN 1 55388 148 6 Kissock Heather 2002 Saskatchewan Digitized online by Internet Archive illustrated ed Weigl Educational Publishers Limited p 8 ISBN 9781894705462 Retrieved 2008 01 21 ISBN 1 894705 46 7 Cooper Ranessa L David D Cass 2001 Comparative evaluation of vessel elements in Salix spp Salicaceae endemic to the Athabasca sand dunes of northern Saskatchewan Canada American Journal of Botany Botanical Society of America Inc 88 4 583 587 doi 10 2307 2657056 JSTOR 2657056 PMID 11302842 Geoscape Northern SaskatchewanGeoscience for our Canadian Shield Community Meteorite impact Government of Canada 2008 01 07 Archived from the original on 2008 01 24 Retrieved 2007 12 29 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d Scott Geoffrey A J 1995 Canada s Vegetation A World Perspective Digitized online by Google books illustrated ed McGill Queen s Press MQUP pp 129 156 ISBN 9780773512405 Retrieved 2009 01 25 ISBN 0 7735 1240 3 a b c Elias Professor Thomas S Elias Thomas S 1983 Edible Wild Plants A North American Field Guide Digitized online by Google books Peter A Dykeman Cengage Learning pp 9 28 and 258 ISBN 9780442222543 Retrieved 2009 01 25 ISBN 0 442 22254 8 Heinrichs Gerald 2006 Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina Palliser and Hind Expeditions Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan Retrieved 2009 01 25 Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina Bourgeaux Bourgeau Eugene Dictionary of Canadian Biography ONline 1871 1880 Volume X ed University of Toronto University Laval Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan 2000 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Secoy Diane 2006 Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina Macoun John 1831 1920 Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on 2008 03 13 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Houston Mary I 2006 Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina Priestly Isabel M 1893 1946 Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Western Economic Diversification Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on 2010 05 24 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Sask History Department of Plant Sciences University of Saskatchewan Sask Herbarium Retrieved 2009 01 25 dead link Collector Biographies Dr John K Jeglum Major Collector and Former Curators Northern Ontario Plant Database January 25 2009 Retrieved 2009 01 25 Government of Saskatchewan 2006 Saskatchewan Agriculture and Food A Natural for Biofuels Production Archived from the original on 2007 06 18 Retrieved 2007 05 20 Agriculture Statistics Canada Government of Canada Statistics Canada Archived from the original on 2007 04 02 Retrieved 2007 04 07 History of Agriculture in the Prairie Provinces Archives of the Agricultural Experience University of Manitoba Archives Special Collections the Libraries 1998 Retrieved 2007 04 10 Saskatchewan Agricultural Hall of Fame zu com communications inc 2006 Retrieved 2007 04 10 Government of Saskatchewan May 20 2007 AGRICULTURE WEEK IN SASKATCHEWAN PROCLAIMED Government of Saskatchewan News Release March 13 1996 Archived from the original on November 24 2010 Retrieved 2007 05 20 Education Canada Network Canada Facts Saskatchewan Education Canada Network 1996 2008 Archived from the original on 2010 01 01 Retrieved 2009 01 16 Adamson J Department of Highways 14 Oct 2003 1926 Highway Map Province of Saskatchewan Online Historical Map Digitization Project Retrieved 2009 01 16 URL accessed April 6 2007 Richards J H Fung K I Atlas of Saskatchewan Physical Features of Saskatchewan University of Saskatchewan 1969 p 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flora of Saskatchewan External links editFlora of Saskatchewan Project University of Saskatchewan Virtual Herbarium Database Search by Scientific Family or Plant Name Saskatchewan Conservation Data Centre Database Projects and Publications Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flora of Saskatchewan amp oldid 1179329372, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.