![]() ![]() The Louisiana Digital Library (LDL) is the front door to Louisiana's digital cultural heritage. LSU Libraries' Technology Initiatives: for your interest in the Louisiana Digital Library. It runs on the Islandora open-source digital repository software. The Louisiana Digital Library platform has been developed by LSU Libraries on behalf of the Louisiana Digital Consortium. University of New Orleans: Vermilionville Living History Museum and Folklife Park: assistant/site support.Northwestern State University of Louisiana: Southern University: State Library of Louisiana: The Historic New Orleans Collection: Tulane University: University of Louisiana Lafayette: University of Louisiana Monroe:.Louisiana Tech University: Loyola University New Orleans: McNeese State University: Nicholls State University:.Louisiana State Museum: Louisiana State University: Louisiana State University Shreveport: Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center: Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Shreveport:.The Louisiana Digital Library is a service provider only and has no authority to grant permission to publish or supply high-resolution images. To find the contact who can help you, find the field called "Contact Information" next to the image of interest to you. Permission to publish and acquire images or requests for more information about materials that you find in the LDL should be directed to the institution that contributed the item to the LDL. The Louisiana Digital Library (LDL) is composed of collections from many different institutions. 156Ĭontact the Louisiana Digital Library Permissions/rights/reproduction and information requests: Other showy flowered members of the evening primrose family include the water primroses and the fuchsias, which are grown in cooler climates for their brightly colored flowers."-Lowell Urbatsch, in the Flora of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, LSU Press, 1991), p. Several other kinds of showy evening primroses are indigenous to Louisiana, but they are far less common than Oenothera speciosa. Presumably, this is the reason these plants are sometimes called buttercups. Copious amounts of yellow pollen grains strung together by viscid threads are produced by the eight stamens near the center of each flower. The flowers of this herbaceous plant have four sepals and four petals. These vivid floral displays are often encouraged by the sowing of seeds and by allowing the plants to mature until they reseed themselves. Great colonies of this plant may color vast areas of the landscape pink or sometimes white in the early spring. "Pink evening primrose, commonly seen along roadsides and in vacant lots, is one of our most abundant and showy wildflowers.
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