Badlands
Wetlands
Prairies
Woodlands
Riparian
100

Flat-topped, very steep hill with flat sides

Butte

100

Tall marsh plants with seeds embedded in the thick, brown tops of the plant

Cattails

100

A powder produced by certain plants, must be carried from plant to plant in order for the plant to reproduce

Pollen

100

Hardwood trees that lose their leaves each fall

Deciduous trees

100

A small, shallow stream

Creek

200

Also called "evergreens" because the needles stay green all year long.

Coniferous trees

200

Wetland that contains a lot of peat, or dead plant material. Recieves its water from groundwater seepage.

Bog

200

Grass and other plants that grazing animals eat

Forage

200

The roof of the forest, formed by crowns of dominant and medium-sized trees

Canopy

200

A ridge of sand formed by the current of the water in a river

Sandbar

300

Native prairie wildflowers with deep roots

Forbs

300

Plants with hollow stems that may have a pithy (sponge-like) center

Rushes

300

Grass-covered soil that is held together by matted roots

Sod

300

Thin, young trees

Saplings

300

A lake formed by the water held back by a dam

Reservoir

400

Tall, thin pillar of rock with a capstone, or flat rock on top

Hoodoo

400

Look like grasses except they have solid, triangular stems

Sedges

400

Native prairie grasses that reach 6 to 7 feet in height

Tallgrass prairie

400

Animals eating leaves, stems and buds from plants

Browsing

400

The largest watersheds on the continent

River Basins

500

A plant that stores water in its pads

Succulent

500

Low spots in the ground where water collects

Potholes

500

Organic matter in the soil (from living things)

Humus

500

Plants that do not have woody stems

Herbaceous plants

500

A river that flows into another river

Tributary