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   » » Wiki: Iris Virginica
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Iris virginica
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Iris virginica, with the common name Virginia blueflag, Virginia iris, great blue flag, or southern blue flag, is a of in the (iris) family, native to central and eastern North America.

It was identified as a separate species by , and is one of the three Iris species in Anderson's Iris flower data set, used by in his 1936 paper "The use of multiple measurements in taxonomic problems" as an example of linear discriminant analysis.


Description
Iris virginica is a perennial plant that grows up to tall. The plant's sword-shaped basal leaves are erect or sometimes arching and measure up to long and across at the base. The leaves have smooth margins and are bluish green to green and . Unbranched or sparingly branched flowering stalks rise from the basal leaves to a height of up to . Small, alternate leaves are located on the stalks, with 1 to 2 flowers emerging from the axil of each of these leaves on that are long.

The flowers, which bloom May to July, are blue to blue-violet and are a typical iris shape. Each flower has 3 drooping , called "falls", that have white marks and yellow near the throat, and 3 upright , called "standards". Flowers measure across.


Distribution and habitat
Iris virginica is native in the United States from Nebraska to the west, Florida and Texas to the south, New York to the east, and the Canadian border to the north. In Canada, it is native in Ontario and Quebec. It grows in wet areas, sometimes in shallow water, including marshes, , swamps, river bottoms, sloughs, ditches, bottomland prairies, edges of sinkhole ponds, and in shallow water.


Uses
The use this for traditional medicinal uses. The root is pounded into a paste that is used as a for the skin. An made from the root is used to treat ailments of the , and a decoction of the root is used to treat "yellowish urine". The University of Michigan at Dearborn: Native American Ethnobotany of Iris virginicaHamel, Paul B. and Mary U. Chiltoskey 1975 Cherokee Plants and Their Uses -- A 400 Year History. Sylva, N.C. Herald Publishing Co. (p. 41)

It may be one of the Iris species used by the to treat "shock following alligator-bite".

Iris virginica is one of three iris species in Ronald Fisher's Iris flower data set.


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