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Tennessee Symbols, State Bird & State Flower
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Bird
Mockingbird
(Mimus polyglottos)
Adopted on April 11, 1933.
According to the Nashville Banner of April 16, 1933, the mockingbird, Mimus polyglottos, was selected on April 11, 1933, as state bird of Tennessee in an election conducted by the Tennessee Ornithological Society. The choice was confirmed by Senate Joint Resolution 51 adopted by the General Assembly in 1933.
The Mimus polyglottos, as the mockingbird is known scientifically, is about ten inches in length, including its relatively long tail. It has a light gray coat and a whitish underside. Its wings and tail are darker gray with white patches. The male and females look alike. Juvenile has spotted breast.
The common mockingbird is a superb songbird and mimic. Its own song has a pleasant lilt, varied and repetitive. Often it will sing all night long, especially in bright springtime moonlight. Unmated male mockingbirds sing more than mated ones. Both sexes sing in the fall to claim winter feeding territories. These areas are often different than their spring breeding territories.
The song of the mockingbird is, in fact, a medley of the calls of many other birds, each repeated several times. It will imitate other species' songs and calls, squeaky gates, pianos, sirens, barking dogs, etc. Each imitation is repeated two or three times, then another song is started, all in rapid succession. In the above sample audio file, the songs of four distinct species were recorded in the span of about seven seconds. It is common for an individual bird to have as many as 25-30 songs in its repertory.
The mockingbird is also known as a fierce protector of its nest and environment. It is sometimes seen swooping down on a dog, cat or predator that may be venturing too close to the bird's protected territory.
Abundance: Common urban bird
Length: 10 inches
Weight: 1¾ ounces
Wing Span: 14 inches
General description: Diurnal, omnivore, altricial
Sexual maturity : 1 year
Mating season: Spring and early summer. Mockingbirds usually nest twice a year sometimes 3 or 4 times when conditions are favorable.
Breeding territory: 1 pair per 20 acres
Gestation: Eggs hatch in 12-13 days, the young fledge 11-13 days after that.
Number of young: Eggs are blue-green with brown markings. The 2-6, usually 3-5, eggs per nest are a pale blue-greenish with brown spots.
Nest Location: Ground-low nesting
Nest Type: Open-cup The nest, a joint male/female project, is a bulky, open cup of grass, twigs and rootlets carelessly arranged in a dense.
Migration Status: Permanent resident. This year-round resident is known for its fierce defense of the family nest.
Diet: Mockingbirds require open grassy areas for their feeding, thick, thorny shrubs for hiding the nest and high perches where the male can sing and defend his territory. Gardens are among its favorite dwelling places especially if winter berries are available. The Mockingbird's primary diet is insects (beetles, ants, grasshoppers and spiders),berries and seed.
Facts:
- Only unmated males sing at night.
- Mockingbirds often form long-term pair bonds.
- Mockingbirds vigorously defend their territory against many other species including dogs, cats and man!
- Female mockingbirds often build a new nest while the males finish feeding older fledglings and teaching them to fly.
- Scientists have found that female mockingbirds are attracted to males that can make the most different sounds.
- Mockingbirds are the state bird of Arkansas, Florida, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas and one of the few birds found in every kind of habitat, from desert to forest to city.
- Mockingbirds are thought to raise and lower their wings in order to scare up a meal of insects, frighten snakes and impress their mates.
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| Kingdom |
Animalia -- animals |
| Phylum |
Chordata -- chordates |
| Subphylum |
Vertebrata -- vertebrates |
| Class |
Aves -- birds |
| Order |
Passeriformes -- perching birds |
| Family |
Sturnidae -- starlings |
| Genus |
Mimus Boie, 1826 -- mockingbirds |
| Species |
Mimus polyglottos (Linnaeus, 1758) -- Centzontle norteño, northern mockingbird |
Flower
Flower by: Santalady
Iris
State Cultivated Flower
(genus Iris L.)
Adopted in 1933; 1973 Redesignated.
In 1919, the General Assembly, by Senate Joint Resolution 13, provided that a state flower be chosen by the school children of Tennessee. Accordingly, a vote was taken and the passion flower was chosen. The January 26, 1919 issue of the Nashville Banner listed some of their favorites: the daisy, red clover, rose, water lily, elder bloom, goldenrod, wild rose, sunflower, and violet. The eventual winner, the passion flower, wasn't even mentioned! Although the passion flower was adopted as Tennessee's state flower in 1919, Tennesseean's loyalty shifted. Nashville, Tennessee became known as the Iris City. Iris fans joined forces and campaigned for the adoption of the iris as the Tennessee State flower. In 1933, however, the Legislature adopted Senate Joint Resolution 53 designating the iris as the “State Flower of Tennessee,” but failed to formally rescind the designation of the passion flower as the state flower. To eliminate this confusion, in 1973 the 88th General Assembly, by
Chapter 16, designated the passion flower the state wildflower and the iris the state cultivated flower.
The iris (genus Iris) was designated as the state cultivated flower by the Legislature in 1933. While there are several different colors among the iris, the purple iris is commonly accepted as the state flower.
The iris, genus Iris, is an herbacious perennial of which there are about 170 species, including several North American varieties, the most common of which is the Blue Flag. While there are several different colors among the iris, and the act naming the iris as the state flower did not name a particular color, by common acceptance the purple iris is considered the state flower.
The iris family is closely related to the lily and amaryllis families, differing from them in having three stamens rather than six. The cultivated irises (genus Iris ), freesias (genus Freesia ), and gladioli (genus Gladiolus ) show a wide variety of colors in their large, usually perfumed blossoms; they are mostly hybrids of Old World species. The many species of wild iris are most common in temperate and subarctic regions of North America, where they are often called flags, or blue flags.
The iris flower belongs to the natural order Iridaceae of the class Monocotyledons, which is characterized by a petaloid six-parted perianth, an inferior ovary and only three stamens (the outer series), being thus distinguished from the Amaryllidaceae family, which has six stamens. They are handsome showy-flowered plants, the Greek name having been applied on account of the hues of the flowers. True irises (the genus Iris, containing more than 200 species) grow from thick underground stems called rhizomes. Admired for their beauty since very ancient times, irises were nevertheless cultivated by the ancient Egyptians primarily for these rhizomes, which were used as a source of medicine and perfumes, a practice brought to Europe by the Greeks and continued until the early part of the 20th century.
Rhizomatous irises are divided into three groups - the bearded, the crested, and the beardless. The designation "bearded" derives from the fuzzy caterpillar-like appendage that runs down the center of each of the flower's three drooping outer segments, or falls; the three inner, more upright, segments are called standards
Height x width: 4"-48" depending on species
Growth rate: moderate to fast
Foliage: narrow, generally linear to lanceolate, sheathing base, parallel-veined, mostly basal in fans or from bulb center
Flowers: generally 1-6 on stalks above leaves; 3 outer flower segments (falls) often drooping downwards (reflexed), sometimes with a central "beard" of colored hairs or ridge, often with a patch of different color (signal); 3 inner flower segments (standards) often upright and narrow in some species; standards and falls may be different colors, most colors available
Hardiness: zones 3 to 6 - 8 to 9
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| Kingdom |
Plantae -- Plants |
| Subkingdom |
Tracheobionta -- Vascular plants |
| Superdivision |
Spermatophyta -- Seed plants |
| Division |
Magnoliophyta -- Flowering plants |
| Class |
Liliopsida – Monocotyledons |
| Subclass |
Liliidae – |
| Order |
Liliales – |
| Family |
Iridaceae – Iris family |
| Genus |
Iris L. – iris |
Flower
Passion Flower
State Wildflower
(Passiflora incarnata)
Adopted in 1919; 1973 Redesignated
In 1919, the General Assembly, by Senate Joint Resolution 13, provided that a state flower be chosen by the school children of Tennessee. Accordingly, a vote was taken and the passion flower was chosen. The January 26, 1919 issue of the Nashville Banner listed some of their favorites: the daisy, red clover, rose, water lily, elder bloom, goldenrod, wild rose, sunflower, and violet. The eventual winner, the passion flower, wasn't even mentioned! Although the passion flower was adopted as Tennessee's state flower in 1919, Tennesseean's loyalty shifted. Nashville, Tennessee became known as the Iris City. Iris fans joined forces and campaigned for the adoption of the iris as the Tennessee State flower. In 1933, however, the Legislature adopted Senate Joint Resolution 53 designating the iris as the “State Flower of Tennessee,” but failed to formally rescind the designation of the passion flower as the state flower. To eliminate this confusion, in 1973 the
88th General Assembly, by Chapter 16, designated the passion flower the state wildflower and the iris the state cultivated flower.
The passion flower (genus Passiflora) received its name from early Christian missionaries to South America, who saw in the flower's various parts symbols of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
There are over 400 hundred species in the genus Passiflora. Most are tender evergreen tropical vines and most are commonly called passion flowers. Passiflora incarnata is an exception in that it is deciduous, can survive winter freezes and is commonly called maypop as well as passion flower
The passion flower, genus Passiflora, which grows wild in the southern part of the United States and in South America, is also commonly known as the maypop, the wild apricot and the ocoee. The last is the Indian name that has also been applied to the Ocoee River and valley. The Indians prized the ocoee as the most abundant and beautiful of all their flowers. The passion flower received its name from the early Christian missionaries to South America, who saw in the various parts of the curiously constructed flower symbols of the Crucifixion—the three crosses, the crown of thorns, nails and cords.
Passion Flower was first discovered in Peru by a Spanish doctor named Monardes in 1569 who documented the indigenous uses and took it back to the Old World where it quickly became a favorite herb tea. Spanish conquerors of Mexico and South America also learned its use from the Aztec Indians and it eventually became widely cultivated in Europe. Since its discovery, Maracuja has been widely used as a sedative, antispasmodic and nerve tonic. Indians throughout the Amazon use the leaf tea as a sedative. When introduced into Europe in the 1500's it was used as a calming and sedative tea. It was introduced in North American medicine in the mid 1800's as a sedative through native and slave use in the South as a tea, as well as bruising the leaves for headache, bruises and pain. In many countries in Europe and in the U.S. and Canada, the use of Passion Flower to tranquilize and settle edgy nerves has been documented for over 200 years. Its long documented history in herbal
medicine has included its uses for colic, diarrhea, dysentery, dysmenorrhea, epilepsy, eruptions, insomnia, morphinism, neuralgia, neurosis, opthalmia, piles and spasm.
Passion Flower is widely employed by herbalists and natural health practitioners around the world today. It is mostly employed as a sedative, hypnotic (inducing sleep), nervine, anti-spasmodic and pain reliever. In the United States, P. incarnata is the species most used to treat insomnia, Parkinson's Disease, seizures and convulsions, muscle cramps, hysteria, high blood pressure, tetanus, shingles, neuralgia, dysmenorrhea, menstrual cramps and PMS, epilepsy, and as a pain reliever in various conditions. In Europe, it is employed for nervous disorders, insomnia, spasms, neuralgia, alcoholism, hyperactivity in children, rapid heart beat, headaches, and as a pain reliever and antispasmodic. In South America, P. edulis is the species most used as a sedative, diuretic, antispasmodic, and anthelmintic (expelling intestinal worms) which is used to treat convulsions, paralysis, alcoholism, headaches, insomnia, colic in infants, diarrhea, gripe, hysteria,
neuralgia, menopausal symptoms and hypertension. In both South and North America as well as in Europe, Maracuja is used topically for skin disorders, inflammation, hemorrhoids, and burns; having an anti-inflammatory and pain-relieving effects.
Passion Flower has been the subject of much scientific research. After almost 100 years of study the sedative, antispasmodic and analgesic effects of Maracuja have been firmly established in science yet these effects have not been correlated to any one chemical or group of chemicals found in the plant. Passion flower contains two major groups of chemicals - glycosides and flavonoids as well as alkaloids. When these chemicals are isolated and tested individually they have demonstrated the opposite reactions for which the plant is commonly used for and only when the two are combined as a whole herb, do researchers observe the plant's sedative effect. The analgesic effects of Passion Flower were first clinically documented in 1897 while the sedative effects were first recorded in 1904. Antispasmodic, anxiolytic and hypertensive actions were clinically validated in the early 1980's.
Passion Flower is classified as "Generally Regarded as Safe" by the FDA, is the subject of various European monographs for medicinal plants and is generally regarded as safe even for children and infants. Herbalists usually recommend six grams of the herb daily in an infusion (tea).
Tennessee Code Annotated
4-1-306. State wild flower.
The passion flower (passiflora incarnata) is designated as the state wild flower.
[Acts 1973, ch. 16, § 1; T.C.A., § 4-117.]
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|
| Kingdom |
Plantae -- Plants |
| Subkingdom |
Tracheobionta -- Vascular plants |
| Superdivision |
Spermatophyta -- Seed plants |
| Division |
Magnoliophyta -- Flowering plants |
| Class |
Magnoliopsida -- Dicotyledons |
| Subclass |
Dilleniidae – |
| Order |
Violales – |
| Family |
Passifloraceae – Passion-flower family |
| Genus |
Passiflora L. – passionflower |
| Species |
Passiflora incarnata L. – purple passionflower |
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National Forests
Cherokee National Forest Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area |
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