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The Conservatory features a tropical house
with pond and waterfall and a desert house
for the display of the teaching collection. The collection of
more than 1200 plant species represents nearly 120 families.
Several courses conduct laboratory exercises and classes in the
Conservatory, including plant modification and adaptations, floral
diversity, pollination mechanisms and studies in plant systematics.
Despite foul weather outside, art students enjoy the warmth of
the tropics while learning basic drawing techniques in courses
offered through the Department of Art.
Visit the Conservatory from afar through
the virtual tour link to the left.
The tropical room with its 35' peak is
accented by an 18' specimen of Cycas circinalis, the Fern
Palm. Though no records of earlier greenhouse collections survive,
photographs show that the original botany greenhouses, built
in 1914, were filled with numerous cycads and ferns. It is conceivable
that this specimen was in the original collection. Cycads, which
date back to the age of the dinosaurs, are endangered species.
A pond and waterfall display a variety of aquatic
flora. Water lilies, Cyperus, canna, as well as the tiny
floating Azolla grace the water. Beneath the surface,
Elodea and ferny Myriophyllum grow. Maidenhair
ferns and the clover-like Marsilia emerge from the edges
of the waterfall. A top pool holds species of ferns and Cyperus
whose roots form a natural filtration system for the pond.
The collection has an assortment of economically
importance species. Among them, several cultivars of banana,
tropical almond, passion flower, soursop, date palm and chicle.
The fruits of papaya, ponderosa lemon, calamondin orange and
coffee ripen on the plants for an educational experience beyond
the grocery store. The fragrant blossoms of jasmine which yield
the oil used in fragrances, clusters of orchid blooms and red
heart-shaped Anthurium flowers popularly found in the
local florists shop appear among a backdrop of foliages in every
imaginable shade of green.
Cacti, agaves, euphorbs
and other succulents in the collection are displayed in a separate
desert house where environmental conditions are programmed to
mimic their native habitat. The only exceptions are the Giant
Saguaro, the Pony-tail Palm, and a specimen of the Madagascar
Palm. These specimens were too tall to fit in the desert house
so they have been placed in the higher peaked tropical house.
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