Decorative Panel of a Spider's Web at the Brooklyn…
Decorative Panel of Flowers at the Brooklyn Botani…
The Palm House & Fountain at the Brooklyn Botanica…
The Palm House & Fountain at the Brooklyn Botanica…
Palm Tree in the Tropical Pavilion in the Brooklyn…
Tree in the Desert Pavilion in the Brooklyn Botani…
Aquatic House in the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, No…
The Palm House in the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, N…
Warm Temperate Pavilion in the Brooklyn Botanical…
Aquatic House in the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, No…
The Palm House at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, N…
Aquatic House in the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, No…
The Tropical Pavilion in the Brooklyn Botanical Ga…
The Tropical Pavilion in the Brooklyn Botanical Ga…
The Bonsai Museum at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden…
The Tropical Pavilion in the Brooklyn Botanical Ga…
The Tropical Pavilion in the Brooklyn Botanical Ga…
Column in the Osborne Garden of the Brooklyn Botan…
Fountain in the Osborne Garden of the Brooklyn Bot…
Fountain & Columns in the Osborne Garden of the Br…
Fountain & Columns in the Osborne Garden of the Br…
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Nov. 2006
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Nov. 2006
Lily Pond & Fountain at the Brooklyn Botanical Gar…
Lily Pond & Visitor's Center at the Brooklyn Botan…
Bronze Sculpture of a Girl Holding a Sundial in th…
Bronze Sculpture of a Girl Holding a Sundial in th…
Bronze Sculpture of a Girl Holding a Sundial in th…
Trellis in the Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic…
Trellis in the Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic…
Trellis in the Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic…
Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Nov. 2…
Armillary Sphere in the Brooklyn Botanical Garden,…
Magnolia Plaza & the Armillary Sphere in the Brook…
Shakespeare Garden in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden,…
Sculpture in the Fragrance Garden in the Brooklyn…
Sculpture in the Fragrance Garden in the Brooklyn…
Jim Dine's Venus on 6th Avenue, Oct. 2006
Jim Dine's Venus on 6th Avenue, Oct. 2006
The Maine Monument in Central Park, Oct. 2006
The Maine Monument in Central Park, Oct. 2006
The Maine Monument in Central Park, Oct. 2006
The Unisphere In Front of the Trump Hotel in Colum…
The Langon Chapel in the Cloisters, Oct. 2006
The Langon Chapel in the Cloisters, Oct. 2006
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
342 visits
Wooden Door With Decorative Panels at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Nov. 2006


Native Flora Garden
With more than two acres divided into eight geographical zones, this wildflower garden exhibits native plants growing in the New York Metropolitan Area, a region known for its natural diversity.
Dating back to 1911, the Native Flora Garden isn't just another wildflower display. In 1931, this wild retreat was ecologically designed to support nine distinct plant communities found within a 100-mile radius of New York City: serpentine rock, dry meadow, kettle pond, bog, pine barrens, wet meadow and stream, deciduous woodland, and limestone ledge, as well as a border mound with several representatives of the region's coniferous forests.
All plants in this garden are appropriate for their particular ecological niches, determined by environmental factors such as topography, geology, soil acidity or alkalinity, moisture, drainage, and light.
The Native Flora Garden complements Brooklyn Botanic Garden's long-standing efforts to research and document the region's plant life. While most of the botanical community focuses on tracking the devastation in the tropics, scientists at BBG are working on the most comprehensive study ever undertaken to identify and catalog the plant biodiversity of the New York Metropolitan Area. The region's rich diversity of natural habitats has been transformed by human settlement in the past 400 years. Understanding the resulting new urban landscape is critical in our rapidly urbanizing world. For more on this important research, including an encyclopedia of all woody plants growing in the area, see Metropolitan Plants.
Serpentine Rock Area
When you enter the Native Flora Garden, the serpentine rock area is just beyond the gate, to your left. In the New York region, serpentine, a streaked greenish rock, is found primarily on Staten Island, where outcroppings cover some 35 square miles. Other sites occur in Hoboken, New Jersey, along the Cross-Westchester Expressway between White Plains and Rye, and in some western parts of midtown Manhattan.
A high magnesium content gives serpentine rock its greenish tint, but it may range in color from yellowish to dark green or even be reddish in hue when intruded by iron oxide. Although dense in weight, serpentine is soft and crumbly to the touch.
Serpentine habitat is extremely arid, nutrient-poor, and prone to fire. Toxic levels of elements such as chromium in the soil inhibit the growth of many plants. The result is a somewhat stunted forest-and-savannah-like plant community. It's a globally rare habitat, containing several endangered endemic plant species.
Certain species are better adapted than others to serpentine habitat. Of the trees commonly associated with this habitat, staghorn sumac and sassafras are represented in the Native Flora Garden. Pinxterbloom or pink azalea, a shrubby member of the heath family, also found in this section of the garden, is prominent in the serpentine outcroppings on Staten Island.
The regal fronds of cinnamon fern and interrupted fern, both members of the royal fern family, as well as hay-scented fern, are all here as well. Cinnamon fern derives its name from the tall, orange-brown fertile fronds that appear in the spring. The interrupted fern is so named because the leaflets in the center part of each fertile frond ripen and wither in early summer, leaving a space.
In spring, the serpentine rock area is filled with the tiny flowers of moss phlox or moss pink, blue-eyed grass (actually not a grass at all but a member of the iris family), and common wood sorrel. The tall, asterlike yellow clusters of roundleaf ragwort are in bloom from April to June, while the many species of goldenrod flower in late summer or early fall.
Dry Meadow
Just inside the entrance to the Native Flora Garden, to the right, is the dry meadow, an open area where herbaceous plants, rather than trees and shrubs, predominate. Meadows are one stage in the succession from cleared land, such as farmland, back to forest.
The thin, somewhat sandy soil of most dry meadows tends to be infertile. However, grasses thrive here, and their
With more than two acres divided into eight geographical zones, this wildflower garden exhibits native plants growing in the New York Metropolitan Area, a region known for its natural diversity.
Dating back to 1911, the Native Flora Garden isn't just another wildflower display. In 1931, this wild retreat was ecologically designed to support nine distinct plant communities found within a 100-mile radius of New York City: serpentine rock, dry meadow, kettle pond, bog, pine barrens, wet meadow and stream, deciduous woodland, and limestone ledge, as well as a border mound with several representatives of the region's coniferous forests.
All plants in this garden are appropriate for their particular ecological niches, determined by environmental factors such as topography, geology, soil acidity or alkalinity, moisture, drainage, and light.
The Native Flora Garden complements Brooklyn Botanic Garden's long-standing efforts to research and document the region's plant life. While most of the botanical community focuses on tracking the devastation in the tropics, scientists at BBG are working on the most comprehensive study ever undertaken to identify and catalog the plant biodiversity of the New York Metropolitan Area. The region's rich diversity of natural habitats has been transformed by human settlement in the past 400 years. Understanding the resulting new urban landscape is critical in our rapidly urbanizing world. For more on this important research, including an encyclopedia of all woody plants growing in the area, see Metropolitan Plants.
Serpentine Rock Area
When you enter the Native Flora Garden, the serpentine rock area is just beyond the gate, to your left. In the New York region, serpentine, a streaked greenish rock, is found primarily on Staten Island, where outcroppings cover some 35 square miles. Other sites occur in Hoboken, New Jersey, along the Cross-Westchester Expressway between White Plains and Rye, and in some western parts of midtown Manhattan.
A high magnesium content gives serpentine rock its greenish tint, but it may range in color from yellowish to dark green or even be reddish in hue when intruded by iron oxide. Although dense in weight, serpentine is soft and crumbly to the touch.
Serpentine habitat is extremely arid, nutrient-poor, and prone to fire. Toxic levels of elements such as chromium in the soil inhibit the growth of many plants. The result is a somewhat stunted forest-and-savannah-like plant community. It's a globally rare habitat, containing several endangered endemic plant species.
Certain species are better adapted than others to serpentine habitat. Of the trees commonly associated with this habitat, staghorn sumac and sassafras are represented in the Native Flora Garden. Pinxterbloom or pink azalea, a shrubby member of the heath family, also found in this section of the garden, is prominent in the serpentine outcroppings on Staten Island.
The regal fronds of cinnamon fern and interrupted fern, both members of the royal fern family, as well as hay-scented fern, are all here as well. Cinnamon fern derives its name from the tall, orange-brown fertile fronds that appear in the spring. The interrupted fern is so named because the leaflets in the center part of each fertile frond ripen and wither in early summer, leaving a space.
In spring, the serpentine rock area is filled with the tiny flowers of moss phlox or moss pink, blue-eyed grass (actually not a grass at all but a member of the iris family), and common wood sorrel. The tall, asterlike yellow clusters of roundleaf ragwort are in bloom from April to June, while the many species of goldenrod flower in late summer or early fall.
Dry Meadow
Just inside the entrance to the Native Flora Garden, to the right, is the dry meadow, an open area where herbaceous plants, rather than trees and shrubs, predominate. Meadows are one stage in the succession from cleared land, such as farmland, back to forest.
The thin, somewhat sandy soil of most dry meadows tends to be infertile. However, grasses thrive here, and their
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.