2. Jotting down a floral formula helps keying no matter where you start.
3. Picture Guides: Remember that
while picture
guides may be useful for getting a "ballpark" idea of family (occasionally
genus), they are NOT keys and are never to be used for
species
identification. For each plant that gets its picture in a book, dozens
of similar plants are left out. DO NOT get your ID's from picutre
books
or field guides or websites--their nomenclature is often incorrect
or out of
date.
Read below to learn which books have acceptable names.
2. Monocots of the Local Area--Your gray key will key to genus. You may use our "Black Key" version to key to species if you have Alismataceae, Commelinaceae, Iridaceae, Liliaceae, Orchidaceae, or Smilacaceae. (This book is actually a small red folder.) For other families, you may use Illustrated Flora of East Texas, Volume I, but realize that family alignments may not match what you learn in lab. (Don’t confuse this book with the Flora of North Central Texas!) If you get stuck, ask your TA or Monique if there is some other helpful book.
3. Texas Plants Not From the Local Area--Check with your TA or Monique to see if your gray lab key can be used, and if so, how far. Sometimes the local key works all the way; sometimes not. ASK. You may be keying in the Manual of the Vascular Plants of Texas, which is a fine work but out of date--sometimes a name in it will need to be updated.
4. Grasses--Same as 2 above, or try Gould's Grasses of Texas, a good book with drawings. Its nomenclature may need updating. The Experiment Station has several very useful regional keys; ask Monique if one of them applies.
5. Woody Plants With Fruit but Without Flowers--Check with Monique or your TA. Often the best book is E. Nixon's Trees, Shrubs, and Woody Vines of East Texas, but not always. Some names may need to be updated, e.g., Bumelia= Sideroxylon, pecans.
6. Non-Texas Material--Check with your TA or Monique to find out which key to use. Sometimes the gray and black keys work part way, but ASK. If you know you will be collecting out of state, tell Monique ahead of time, so she can round up a key for you so it's handy when you need it. Names may need updating. We can tell you now that there's no fantastic key for Mexico and that import restrictions are a major hassle.
6. Aquatic and Wetland Plants--Try
the appropriate
source above, or try one of our two sets of wetland plant keys. One is
for southeastern states, one is for
southwestern states, and both of them are illustrated. Names may
need
to be updated from these books.
2. Compare Your Specimen to the Sheets--Is it the same? Similar? Different? If you're sure it's the same--great! If it's close, you will want to check your keying again or ask for help. If it's very different--back to the key. Sometimes there are notes with helpful hints pasted inside a genus folder or a note that says the name's been changed and directs you to another folder.
NOTE that many sheets have one or more annotation ("change") labels or handwritten notes attached. These correct a misidentification or make note of a change in nomenclature. The correct ID for a sheet is the one that appears on the most recent of all the annotations on the sheet.
DO NOT EXPECT to ID a plant to species just by figuring out the genus and then looking through the genus folder for a match! Many species are differentiated by characters that are not readily visible on an herbarium sheet. Also, the student herbarium does not contain sheets of every species found locally. Remember: Key first, look later.
Return to the
Plant Collection Guidelines
Return to the Table
of Contents for the lab
Return to the
Biology 301 homepage
last update July 11, 2007 by Monique Reed