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Texas Native Plants Magazine

Latest Issues

Winter 2024 Member Magazine

From Pines to Petals: Exploring the Pineywoods | 2023 Society Award Recipients | No-Freeze Trees | Water-Wise Strategies | Conservation Champions | Power Plants for Pollinators | Using the Invasive Plant Database | Coming Soon: More Native Milkweed! | Native Gardens are For the Birds | Native Plants Thriving in Town Hall | Promoting Native Milkweeds | Engaging the Next Generation | Native Plant Student Art Showcased | If You Know What to Look For

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Fall 2023 Member Magazine

Texas really IS like a whole ‘nother country. Its sheer size, variety of terrain, and biological diversity is staggering. The great Lone Star state contains barrier islands and coastal lowlands, large river floodplain forests, rolling plains and plateaus, forested hills, deserts, and a wide variety of aquatic habitats.

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Distribution

  • Texas Native Plants is published quarterly and the digital version is distributed free to all Society members in current standing.
  • The digital version is also available in our library below.
  • Print versions are mailed at no cost to Society members in current standing who select to receive a print copy when they join/renew.
  • Libraries, educational institutions and other organizations may qualify to receive the publication for a $5 annual fee.
  • Contact the membership coordinator.
  • Many of our chapters publish their own newsletters and websites.
  • These have their own deadlines and guidelines. See list of chapters.

History

Since its founding the Society has provided a news periodical to its members. there have been a variety of names and formats. The Texas Wildfower Newsletter edited by Carroll Abbott served as the first newsletter. He advocated the formation of the Native Plant Society of Texas in his quarterly publication Texas Wildflower Newsletter. After the Society was created in 1980, a free subscription to Abbott’s newsletter was provided as a benefit to all members. His declining health eventually prompted Abbott to request that the Society start its own newsletter. Lean more about the Carroll Abbott story.

Beginning in 1983 our own official publication has documented the evolution of the native plant movement and the Native Plant Society of Texas. The publication has had several slightly different names and formats over the years. By 2005 it had evolved into a full-color glossy magazine.

Editorial Submissions

The Native Plant Society of Texas encourages submission of articles, photos, pertinent news or other interesting information for publication.

  • Submit articles or written items as email attachments.
  • Send photos as email attachments in JPG, RAW or TIFF format.
  • Larger file size and best quality are preferable.
  • Contact the Editor for more information.

We reserve the right to edit all submissions for accuracy, relevance, length, grammar or for other reason. In matters of style our print publication generally follows the Chicago Manual of Style.

Unless prior arrangements with the editor are made, submissions may also appear on our website and linked on our social media pages. We do not accept outside advertising in any of our publications.

Publications Library

Click below to view issues by year/editor. Or visit our online archive.

  • Sort

1987 – Mar/Apr

Volume 5, No. 2
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Building a Living Library of Endangered Plants
  • Gossip About Red Cedar: Juniperus sp.
  • Treasures of Alaakua: East Maui, Hawaii
  • Crataegus sp.

1987 – Jan/Feb

Volume 5, No. 1
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Mary Jo Laughlin Memorial
  • Guidelines for Collecting Rare Plants

1986 – Nov/Dec

Volume 4, No. 6
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Bottomland Protection
  • LBJ National Grassland

1986 – Sep/Oct

Volume 4, No. 5
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Amendments to Bylaws
  • How to grow Eustoma

1986 – Jul/Aug

Volume 4, No. 4
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Chinquapin Oak
  • Wider Distribution for Endemic Quillwort

1986 – May/June

Volume 4, No. 3
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Endangered, Threatened or Rare plants of Texas
  • The Roses of St. John

1986 – Mar/Apr

Volume 4, No. 2
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Crataegus reverchonii
  • Louisiana Iris
  • Focus: Chalk Maple & Shagbark Hickory

1986 – Jan/Feb

Volume 4, No. 1
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Nancy Jean Benedict Memorial (1923 – 1985)
  • Shin Oak
  • In Search of Rare Plant: Hoffmannseggia tenella

1985 – Nov/Dec

Volume 3, No. 6
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Creating Your Own Small Prairie
  • Propagation Notes

1985 – Sep/Oct

Volume 3, No. 5
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Pollination Ecology

1985 – Jul/Aug

Volume 3, No. 4
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Adaptation of Native Plants
  • Dodecatheon meadia (Shooting Star)
  • Texas Bluebonnets (Seed & Soil Treatment)

1985 – May/June

Volume 3, No. 3
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • In Loca Deserta
  • Seed Collecting Simplified

1985 – Mar/Apr

Volume 3, No. 2
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Savia penstemonoides
  • Hedeoma drummondii

1985 – Jan/Feb

Volume 3, No. 1
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Native Texas Roses
  • Texas Snowbell
  • Solidago sp. (Goldenrods)
  • Interview: Benny Simpson

1984 – Nov/Dec

Volume 2, No. 6
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Penstemon sp.
  • Tallgrass Prairies

1984 – Sep/Oct

Volume 2, No. 5
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Carroll Abbott Memorial: 1926-1984
  • Sage Advice: Salvia sp.
  • Abronia macrocarpa
  • Texas First Botanist: Edwin James, Part II

1984 – Jul/Aug

Volume 2, No. 4
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Hot Bloomers: Malvaceae species
  • Population Documentation: Paronychia sp.
  • Native Prairies of North Texas
  • Texas First Botanist: Edwin James

1984 – May/June

Volume 2, No. 3
Editor: Manuel Flores
  • Preservation of Texas Natural Areas

1984 – Mar/Apr

Volume 2, No. 2
Editor: Jim Hunt
  • Leonhardt Prairie Field Trip
  • Ft. Richardson Wildflower Field Day

1984 – Jan/Feb

Volume 2, No. 1
Editor: Jim Hunt
  • Proposed Bylaws