Botanists at Oregon State University have helped design a new app that provides information on the Pacific Northwest’s wide variety of wildflowers, OSU announced.
The app provides multimedia and information on nearly 1,000 wildflowers, shrubs and vines common in Oregon and adjacent areas in Idaho, Washington and California. For each plant, the app offers photographs, natural history, range maps and more. It works without an Internet connection once downloaded.
“You can use the app no matter how remote your wanderings may take you,” said Linda Hardison, a professor in OSU’s Botany and Plant Pathology Department, an OSU effort to develop resources, like the new app, to help people learn about plants in Oregon.
“It’s designed for both budding wildflower enthusiasts and experienced botanists to learn about plant communities and ecology throughout the Pacific Northwest,” said Hardison.
The majority of species featured in the app are native to the region, with some introduced species that have become established. Plants are organized by common name, scientific name or family, which app users can identify by browsing through high-resolution photographs.
To identify an unknown plant, users can select from 12 illustrated categories, which include geographic region, type of plant, flower features (color, number of petals), leaf features (type and shape), plant size and habitat.
The app is available at Amazon, Apple and Google app stores for $7.99 and is compatible with all Android devices, Kindle Fire, iPhones and iPads. A portion of revenues will support conservation and botanical exploration in the region, said Hardison.
The Oregon Flora Project published The Flora of Oregon, a three-volume reference that is the state’s only flora published in the past half century and the first illustrated floristic work that exclusively addresses Oregon. Volumes 1 and 2 were published in 2015 and 2020, respectively, and can be purchased directly from the publisher, the Botanical Research Institute of Texas Press, or from other vendors.
The Oregon Flora Project website contains additional information about all of Oregon’s 4,380 native and naturalized plants. Its mission is to inform a broad range of audiences – policymakers, land use managers, climate change scientists, gardeners and plant enthusiasts – and to foster effective use of this information by all.
The Oregon Wildflowers app was developed in partnership with High Country Apps, which specializes in providing natural history information on mobile platforms.