Using the Flora of Virginia app to Explore Virginia’s Natural Communities
“The Flora of Virginia app is an authoritative scientific reference you can carry in your pocket,” said Mason associate professor of biology Andrea Weeks, director of Mason’s Ted R. Bradley Herbarium. “Our newest version integrates the latest information about Virginia’s naturally occurring ecological communities. I am excited by its potential to accelerate research, education, and outreach about the Commonwealth’s flora. No other state in the U.S. has a more detailed comparable app.”
The classification system developed by Vegetation Ecologists with the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation’s Natural Heritage provides a framework to describe natural communities. It gives context to the importance of protecting certain habitats and species and will guide efforts to restore landscapes to functioning ecosystems that support native flora and fauna.
The guide:
Describes in detail the 80 Natural Community groups;
Includes over 1,000 new captioned photos;
Illustrates the diverse and unique habitats where native flora grow and why certain species are always found together;
Provides range maps detailing where these groups are most likely found; and,
Includes abbreviated lists of species frequently found in each community group.
“The integration of Natural Communities into the App was the Flora’s primary objective for 2023,” says Flora of Virginia Project Foundation board president Caitie Cyrus. “We could not have completed the work without the guidance of Natural Heritage, our longtime partners and collaborators.”
Weeks worked with Joey Thompson from the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation’s Natural Heritage on the project. The Foundation of the Flora of Virginia Project is a nonprofit organization that inspires conservation of Virginia’s native flora through education, outreach, and production of the Flora of Virginia, in print and electronic formats.