This page links to reprints from the Montana Native Plant Society quarterly newsletter, Kelseya that may be of particular interest. Each link is to an edited version of the originally published article in a standardized format.
Summer 2018
Winter 2009
Fall 2008
- Carlton Ridge Research Natural Area by Steve Shelly
- MNPS and Audubon Petition to List Russian Olive as a Noxious Weed by Peter Lesica
Spring 2008
Winter 2008
- Opinion: Beartooth Travel Management DEIS by Don Heinze
- Will Plants Run Your Car? by Peter Lesica
- Windflower Native Plant Nursery: Re-establishing Native Plants in NW Montana by Betty Kuropat
Spring 2007
- 20th Anniversary Celebration: MNPS Annual Meeting at Georgetown by Scott Mincemoyer
- Focus on Westscape Wholesale Nursery: Native and Adapted Plants for the Northern Rockies by Linda Iverson
- Stuck Between a Squirrel and a Hot Place by Peter Lesica
Winter 2007
- Kelseya uniflora and Francis Kelsey by Kathy Ahlenslager and Peter Lesica
- Phylogenetic position of Kelseya based on molecular data by Dan Potter and Shannon Still
Fall 2006
- Fabulous, Fantastic Frasera Facts by Kelly Chadwick
- Natural Prairie Holds Key to Sustainable Fuels by Deane Morrison
- Montana Conservation Assessment for Spalding’s Catchfly from the Montana Natural Heritage Program
Summer 2006
- Can Botanists Be Bought? by Jim Habeck
- Focus on Valley Nursery by Patrick Plantenberg and Kathy Lloyd
- What’s a Tree to Do? by Adam Siepielski
Spring 2006
- Auspicious Beginnings by Rebecca Durham
- Jove’s Buttercup Found in the Pryors by Clayton McCracken
- My Favorite Garden Plants by Sheila Morrison
Winter 2006
- Montana’s Plant Species of Concern: From Acoris to Zizia by Scott Mincemoyer
- Natives in the Winter Garden by Linda Iverson
Fall 2005
- Al Joyes Receives the MNPS Outstanding Service Award by the Awards Committee
- Flower Creek Restoration Project: A Small Grant Report by Vicky Lawrence
- A Book Reviewof Wildflowers of Glacier National Park and Surrounding Areas (S. Fitzpatrick Kimball and P. Lesica; Published by Trillium Press) by Annie Garde & Diane Hafeman
Summer 2005
- Landscaping with Native Grasses by Mark Majerus
- MONTU Awarded National Science Foundation Grant by Peter Lesica and Elizabeth Crone
- UM Native Plant Gardeners Honored by Kelly Chadwick
Spring 2005
- Orchid Seed Longevity by Dee Strickler
- Are Spring Flowers Blooming Earlier in Montana? by Sharon Eversman
- Pollinators and Predators by Peter Lesica
- Prunus pensylvanica at the Lewis and Clark Herbarium by H. Wayne Phillips
Winter 2005
- Riparian Forests of the Upper Missouri Wild and Scenic River by Greg Kudray
- Weed Watch List by Kathy Lloyd
- New Native Plant Display Garden at ZooMontana by Sandy King
Fall 2004
- A Little Mustard that Looks for Land Mines by Peter Lesica
- Peatlands Need Bigger Buffers to Protect Species by Marc Jones
- SW Montana Plant Surveys Yield New Finds by Sue Crispin
Summer 2004
Spring 2004
- Lewis and Clark Plants Coming to Montana Historical Society
- Tree Planting Group Makes Committment to Native Plants by Janet Ellis
Winter 2004
- An Agropyron by any other name… is still a wheatgrass by Peter Lesica and Matt Lavin
- Green Wheatgrass: Reclamation Savior or Ecological Demon? by Garth Wruck, reprinted from Native Plant News, the newsletter of the Native Plant Society of Saskatchewan Inc. Seed and Restoration Special Edition, 2003
Fall 2003
- Native Plants and Agriculture…Can they co-exist? by Helen Atthowe
- Did Native Americans Have Use For Algae? by Johan H. Dormaar
- Montana’s National Forests… Natives and Weeds by Anne Banks
Summer 2003
- Owl clover leads a complex life by Jim Habeck
- Line Creek Plateau Research Natural Area by Steve Shelly
- Montana Native Plant Society and the Nursery and Landscape Association team up to stop the introduction of invasive plants by Peter Lesica
Spring 2003
- Who says plants don’t move? by Peter Lesica
- The release of three native plants announced by Leslie Marty
- Small grants advance conservation of Montana’s native flora by Cathie Jean
Winter 2003
- Mosses – Biological Antifreeze? by Joe Elliot
- Keeping Track- notes on keeping an illustrated journal by Lyn Baldwin
Fall 2002
Summer 2002
- What good is a sterile stamen? by Peter Lesica
- Protecting our natural heritage by Kim Goodwin and Roger Sheley