Now showing items 216-235 of 346

    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Three color photographs of Nothoscordum bivalve (also known as false garlic or crow poison), a flowering plant from the Lily family found on various soils in prairies, openings, and waste places, and along roads.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Nuttallanthus texanus, (also known as Toadflax), an annual flowering plant from the Figwort family found on sandy soils in priaires, openings, fields, and waste places.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Nyctaginia capitata (also know as scarlet muskflower), a perennial flowering plant from the Four-O'Clock family found on dry sand or caliche in openings or along roads near Mathis.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Four color photographs of Nymphaea elegans (also known as lampazos), a perennial aquatic plant from the Waterlily family found in ponds, ditches, swales, lakes, and streams of the Texas Coastal Bend.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Oenothera laciniata, (also known as evening-primrose), an annual flowering plant from the Evening-Primrose family found on sandy soils.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Four color photographs of Oenothera speciosa, (also known as primrose), a perennial flowering plant from the Evening-Primrose family found on clay or loamy soils in prairies, openings, fields, and waste places and along roads.
    • Douglas, Claire (Texas A&M University Press, 2006)
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Onosmodium bejariense (also known as false groomwell), a perennial flowering plant from the Heliotrope family found in Goliad County.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Eleven color photographs of Opuntia engelmannii (also known as Texas prickly pear), a flowering plant the Cactus family commonly found in prairies, openings, brushy thickets, and woods, and frequently found on coastal ...
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Four color photographs of Opuntia leptocaulis (also known as tasajillo), a flowering plant from the Cactus family found in brushy thickets, openings, and prairies of the Texas Coastal Bend.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Four color photographs of Orobanche ludoviciana, (also known as broomrape), a herb from the Broomrape family found on sand or caliche in prairies and openings and on dunes of the barrier islands.
    • Oxalis 
      Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Two color photographs of Oxalis, (also known as wood-sorrel), a perennial flowering plant from the Wood-Sorrel family found on various soils in the Texas Coastal Bend.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Two color photographs of Oxalis dichondrifolia, (also known as agrito), a perennial flowering plant from the Wood-Sorrel family found in pastures and woods on loamy soils or caliche.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Two color photographs of oxalis dillenii, a perennial flowering plant from the Wood-Sorrel family found on a wide range of soils in prairies, openings, and waste places, and along roads.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Oxalis drummondii, a perennial flowering plant from the Wood-Sorrel family found in pastures, woods, stream bottoms, and waste places.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Three color photos of Palafoxia texana (also known as Texas palafox), an annual flowering plant from the Aster family and is abundant on sandy and loamy soils in prairies, openings, and waste places of the Texas Coastal Bend.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Papaver rhoeas, (also known as corn poppy), a flowering plant from the Poppy family found along Interstate 37 north of Mathis in San Patricio County.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Two color photographs of Parkinsonia aculeata, (also known as retama), a deciduous tree from the Pea family found in stream bottoms, swales, and other low places.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      Two color photographs of Parkinsonia texana, (also known as paloverde), a deciduous shrub or tree from the Pea family found in brushy pastures on better-drained soils.
    • Lehman, Roy L. (Texas A & M University. Press, 2005)
      One color photograph of Passiflora incarnata (also known as passionflower), a perennial vine from the Passionflower family found in woods along the San Antonio River and in live oak mottes near Refugio.