The black currant is a shrub with maple-like leaves with toothed edges.
From the tiniest mosses to the towering oaks, plants are important and unique to Wisconsin ecosystems.


This wetland plant is very common to Wisconsin's marshes, ponds, ditches, rivers and lakes.

People use this tree for woodwork in their homes, hope chests, closets, for lead pencils, posts, and poles.

Evergreen trees give us vibrant green color in winter when the rest of the world has turned brown

The jack pine is unique because its resinous cones open and release seeds during a fire or from an intense, hot sun.

The Northern White Cedar is easy to identify. It grows nearly everywhere in Wisconsin, except the southwest.

In the winter, birch are also easy to identify by the dangling flower clusters in small bunches.

Before wet meadows and moist prairies were drained and tilled for agriculture, the prairie white-fringed orchid was more common.

Garden varieties have also been proven to pollinate with purple loosestrife and help it multiply.

The red pine stands tall in the forest (80-120 feet) with a narrow trunk measuring only 2-3 feet in diameter.

Cranesbill, star shower, diamond-sparks—these are all names for this plant. Can you guess why?

This Wisconsin prairie grass can be found in high prairies in southern Wisconsin to the north.

The tamarack is NOT an evergreen because an evergreen tree is one that is never totally without leaves.

The sugar maple was selected as the state tree by school children in a statewide vote in 1893.

While you were playing in the hot sun during summer vacation the trees on the streets, in the parks, and in the forests were working hard to keep you cool.

Armed with a flexible measuring tape and a ruler, big tree hunters are searching Wisconsin's cities and countryside for champion trees.

Tell-tale smooth, peeling bark that looks like paper with small horizontal lines is a sure sign of a yellow birch.

This beautiful wetland plant can be found throughout the Midwest and eastern United States.