Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Thismia americana

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Genus
  
Thismia

Rank
  
Species

Family
  
Burmanniaceae

Scientific name
  
Thismia americana

Order
  
Dioscoreales

Thismia americana wwwphytoimagessiueduusersparaman173015sT

Similar
  
Thismia, Thismiaceae, Burmanniaceae, Crudia zeylanica, Blutaparon rigidum

thismia americana music video


Thismia americana, the banded trinity, was a species of flowering plant that was described and published as living in wetlands surrounding Chicago's Lake Calumet in the 1910s. The specimen was found in what was then a wet-mesic sand prairie at 119th Street and Torrence Avenue in what would become the industrial neighborhood of South Deering. The plant has not been seen since 1916, and the ground where it was observed has since been extensively altered by industrial development. The species is believed to be extinct. An extensive volunteer search, conducted in August 2011 on the far south side of Chicago, did not uncover any specimens of the vanished species.

Contents

Thismia americana An Extinction in Chicago In Defense of Plants

The search for thismia americana continues


Life cycle

Thismia americana Thismia americana Burmanniaceae image 99330 at PhytoImagessiuedu

Thismia americana drew interest from botanists because of its extremely specialized ecological niche. T. americana lacked chlorophyll. Instead of converting solar energy, the flowering plant was a mycoheterotroph, utilizing local fungi of the southern Lake Michigan wetlands for its nourishment. The plant enjoyed a short, shy life cycle above ground; in July, its roots would sprout a tiny flowering head, which produced a white flower the size of a jewelry bead.

Thismia americana Thismia Americana Species Project

Thismia americana was published by University of Chicago botanical Ph.D. candidate Norma Pfeiffer, who became the first and only scientist to observe and describe the species. By examining the rare plant's morphology, Pfeiffer determined that it was a species of the genus Thismia, a genus that at the time was believed to occur only in the Southern Hemisphere. No one knows how this isolated population survived in North America until historic times.

Thismia americana Calumet Heritage Partnership

Thismia americana Illinois Find Thismia A quick guide to help you rediscover

Thismia americana Through Handlens and Binoculars August 2011

References

Thismia americana Wikipedia