Identification and Conservation of Wetland Plants
2 Credit Hours
May 25–29, 2026
Instructors: Dr. Joey Shaw, UT-Chattanooga
Cost: $500.00
This course is designed for anyone wishing to strengthen their skills in observing, collecting, identifying, and assessing the ecological “quality” of wetland plant species. Accurate identification is essential not only for understanding wetland integrity and ecological condition, but also for conducting professional wetland delineations.
Whether you are new to wetland flora or looking to sharpen existing skills, this course offers a supportive environment for learners at multiple levels. Students should have a basic understanding of botanical terminology and plant structures, but there is no expectation that everyone enters with the same experience. Participants may focus on different plant groups—woody species, graminoids, or others—collecting specimens that align with their individual interests.
Each day features a field excursion to a local wetland within roughly an hour of the Station. Students will collect plant specimens of interest, then return to the lab for hands-on identification work using dichotomous keys, online herbarium resources, and other reference materials. Together, we will use tools such as coefficients of conservatism to better understand the ecological integrity of the wetlands we explore.
While the range of wetland types will be limited to what is found regionally, the focus of the course is on building practical, adaptable identification skills. Throughout the week, Dr. Shaw will serve as a guide in interpreting key couplets, terminology, and diagnostic features. Students will also be encouraged to develop their own reference collections; the final portion of the course will be devoted to assembling and refining these materials.
A working draft of the instructor’s forthcoming Second Edition of the Guide to the Vascular Plants of Tennessee will serve as the primary key for species identification, and copies will be provided.
Meet the Instructor
Joey is a Distinguished Service UC Foundation Professor at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. He earned both an MS and PhD in Botany from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Joey regularly teaches Plant Morphology, Plant Taxonomy, Field Botany, and Biogeography at UTC and Biology and Identification of Ferns and Allies, Wetland Plants, Sedges, and other courses at Highlands Biological Station. Joey is an author and editor of the Guide to the Vascular Plants of Tennessee and he loves teaching students how to better interpret and understand plant parts and their alignment to dichotomous keys.
joey-shaw@utc.edu