LEILA SHULTZ RESEARCH PROFESSOR EMERITA DEPARTMENT OF WILDLAND RESOURCES State University Old Main Hill 5230 Logan, Utah 84322-5230 Digital Atlas: http://earth.gis.usu.edu/plants/. Phone: 435-232-2989 (cell)

EDUCATION

1969. B.S.: Biology, Education, & French, University of Tulsa 1975. M.A.: Organismal, Evolutionary, and Systematic Biology; University of 1983. Ph.D.: Systematic Botany; Claremont Graduate School

PROFESSIONAL HISTORY 2006 -- ~. Emerita Research Professor, Department of Wildland Resources, and Floristics Lab 2002-2006. Research Professor, Department of Forest, Range, and Wildlife Science. 1992-2002. Research Associate, Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA. 1995—01. Research Associate Professor, Department of Forest Resources, Utah State University. 1992—95. Research Assistant Professor, Department of Forest Resources, Utah State University. 1978—92. Curator of the Intermountain Herbarium, Department of Biology, Utah State University. 1973—78. Assistant Curator, Intermountain Herbarium, Department of Biology, Utah State University. 1971—73. Research Assistant, University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, Boulder. 1970—71. Teacher of Biology, Earth Science, General Science, and French. Elwood High School, Kansas.

PUBLICATIONS

Shultz, Leila M. 2012. Pocket Guide to Sagebrush. PRBO Conservation Service and NRCS.

Van Buren, R., J. Cooper, L. Shultz, K. Harper. 2011. Woody of Utah. Utah State University Press.

Shultz, L. M. 2011. L. in Baldwin et al. The Revised Jepson Manual of Plants. University of California Press.

Phillips, Nathan C., D. T. Drost, W. A. Varga, and L. M. Shultz. 2010. Demography, reproduction, and dormancy along altitudinal gradients in three intermountain Allium species with contrasting abundance and distribution. Flora 206: 164-171.

Shultz, L.M., R.D. Ramsey, W. Lindquist, and C. Garrard. 2010. Digital Atlas of the Vascular Plants of Utah. Utah State University, Logan, UT: http://earth.gis.usu.edu/plants/.

Shultz, L. M. 2009. Monograph of Artemisia subgenus Tridentatae. Systematic Botany Monographs 89: 1-129.

Aitken, M. A., D. R. Roberts, and L. M. Shultz. 2007. Modeling distributions of rare plants in the Great Basin,Western North America. Western North American Naturalist 67: 1—7.

Peng, Li, Hong Wu, Shilei Geng, Xiaofeng Wang, Wangjin Lu, Yuesheng Yang, L. Shultz, Tiexin Tang, Nanfeng Zhang. 2007. Germination and Dormancy of Seeds in Echinacea purpurea (L.) Moench (). Seed Science and Technology 35(1): 9—20.

Shultz, L. M. 2006. The Artemisia (Asteraceae: ), pp. 503—534. in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 19 : , part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2006. The Genus Picrothamnus (Asteraceae: Anthemideae), pp. 498—499. in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 19 : Asterales, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Lowrey, T. K. and L. M. Shultz 2006. The Genus Sphaeromeria (Asteraceae: Anthemideae), pp. 499—502. in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 19 : Asterales, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2005. Re-examination of Subgeneric Concepts in Artemisia. in Y. R. Ling, ed. International Symposium on Artemisia and its Allies. South China Institute of Botany, Guangzhou.

Shultz, L. M. 2005. New Combinations in Artemisia. Sida 21(3): 1637—1639.

Flora of North America Association. 2004. The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 4 : Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York. (as editor of Chenopodiaceae)

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Spinacea (Chenopodiaceae) in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol.4: Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Beta (Chenopodiaceae). in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 4: Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Aphanisma (Chenopodiaceae)in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol.4: Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Axyris (Chenopodiaceae)in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 4 : Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Allenrolfea (Chenopodiaceae) in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol.4; Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Polycnemum (Chenopodiaceae) in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 4 : Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M. 2004. The genus Dysphania (Chenopodiaceae) in The Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 4 : Caryophylliidae, part 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Ramsey, R. D. and L. M. Shultz. 2004. Evaluating the geographic distribution of plants in Utah from the Atlas of the Vascular Plants of Utah. Western North American Naturalist 64(4):421—432.

Applequist, Wendy and L. M. Shultz. 2004. Noteworthy Collections: . Madrono 50: 53—54.

Shultz, Leila M. 2002. Artemisia, pp. 117--120, 127. in Baldwin, Bruce B., Steve Boyd, Barbara Ertter, Robert W. Patterson, Thomas J. Rosatti, and Dieter H. Wilken, eds. ; Margriet Weatherwax, Managing Editor. The Jepson Desert Manual: Vascular Plants of Southeastern California. University of California Press, Berkeley. 624 p.

Flora of North America Association. 2002. Flora of North America North of Mexico. Volume 23: Magnoliophyta: Commelinidae (in part): Cyperaceae. Oxford University Press, New York. 608 p.

Shultz, Leila M. 2000. Using Geographic Information Systems in Floristic Studies. Sida. Bot. Misc. 18: 73—81.

Flora of North America Association. 2000. The Flora of North America North of Mexico. Volume 22: Alismatidae. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, Leila M, Nancy R. Morin, and R. Douglas Ramsey. 1998. “Floristics in North America: Tracking Rare Species Electronically” in C. I. Peng, ed. Rare, Threatened, and Endangered Floras of Asia and the Pacific Rim. Institute of Botany, Academia Sinica, Monograph Series No. 16: 259--273.

Shultz, Leila M. 1998. A new species of Eriogonum (Polygonaceae: Eriogonoideae) from Utah and . Harvard Papers in Botany 3(1): 49—52.

Shultz, Leila M. 1998. Flora of the Colorado Plateaus: What do we know? pp. 203—211. In Hill, Linda, ed. Learning from the Land: Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument Science Symposium Proceedings. 1997. U.S. Department of Interior BLM/UT/GI-98/006, Salt Lake City.

Shultz, L. M., ed. Cannabaceae (Hemp Family) in Flora of North America Association. 1997. The Flora of North America north of Mexico, vol. 3 : Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M., ed. Ulmaceae (Elm Family) in Flora of North America Association. 1997. The Flora of North America north of Mexico, vol. 3 : Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M., ed. Urticaceae (Nettle Family) in Flora of North America Association. 1997. The Flora of North America north of Mexico, vol. 3 : Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, L. M., ed. Moraceae (Mulberry Family) in Flora of North America Association. 1997. The Flora of North America north of Mexico, vol. 3 : Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, Leila M. 1997. Trema Loureiro (Ulmaceae), p. 379--380 in Flora of North America Association, eds. The Flora of North America north of Mexico, vol. 3. Oxford University Press, New York.

Sherman-Broyles, S., Wm. Barker, and L. M. Shultz. 1997. Ulmaceae Mirbel (Elm Family) (as an author of family treatment), p. 368—380 in Flora of North America Association, eds. The Flora of North America North of Mexico, vol. 3: Magnoliidae to Hammamelidae. Oxford University Press, New York.

Shultz, Leila M. 1993. Artemisia L. in THE REVISED JEPSON MANUAL: HIGHER PLANTS OF CALIFORNIA, pp. 202-- 205. J. Hickman, D. Wilken, D. Keil, eds. University of California Press, California.

Shultz, Leila M. 1993. Patterns of Endemism in the Utah Flora. pp. 249--263. in Southwestern Rare and Endangered Plants, Robert Sivinski and Karen Lightfoot, eds. New Mexico Department of Forestry and Resources Conservation Division, Misc. Publ. No. 2. Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Flora of North America Association 1993. The Flora of North America, north of Mexico. Vol. 1: Introduction. Oxford University Press, New York. ; Vol. 2 : Pteridophytes and Gymnosperms. Oxford University Press, New York.

Goldstein G., M. R. Sharifi, L. U. Kohorn, J. R. B. Lighton, L. Shultz, P. W. Rundel. 1991. Photosynthesis by inflated pods of a desert , Isomeris arborea (Capparaceae). Oecologia 85: 396--402.

Shultz, L. M. 1990. Artemisia L. "Wormwood or hinahina" pp. 262--266 in Manual of the Flowering Plants of Hawai'i. C. Sohmer, W.L. Wagner, D. Herbst, eds. University of Hawaii Press.

Meinzer, F. R., C. S. Wisdom, A. Gonzalez Coloma, P. W. Rundel, L. M. Shultz. 1990. Effects of Leaf Resin on Stomatal Behavior and Gas Exchange of Larrea tridentata (DC.) Cov. Functional Ecology 4: 579-584.

Morin, N. R., T. M. Barkley, L. M. Shultz, M. R. Crosby. 1989. The Flora of North America Project in Floristics for the Twenty-First Century. Monographs in Systematic Botany 28: 44--57

ALBEE, B., L. M. SHULTZ AND S. GOODRICH. 1988. ATLAS OF THE VASCULAR PLANTS OF UTAH. University of Utah Museum of Natural History, Salt Lake City. 670 p.

Shultz, L. M., E. Neeley and J. Tuhy. 1987. Flora of the Orange Cliffs of Utah. Great Basin Naturalist, 47(2): 287--298.

Miller, R. F. and L. M. Shultz. 1987. Development and longevity of ephemeral and perennial leaves of Artemisia tridentata subsp. wyomingensis. Great Basin Naturalist 47(2): 227--230.

Shultz, L.M. and J.S. Shultz. 1987. Flora of Western Utah: Early Cenozoic to the Present, p. 65--74. In R.S. Kopp, ed. The Cenozoic of Utah. Utah Geological Association Publ. 16.

Shultz, L. M. 1986. Comparative Leaf Anatomy of Sagebrush: Ecological Considerations, p. 253--264. in The Biology of Artemisia and Chrysothamnus. E.D. McArthur and B.L. Welch, eds. U.S. Forest Service Publ. INT-200, Provo.

Shultz, L. M. 1986. Taxonomic and geographic limits of Artemisia subgenus Tridentatae (Asteraceae), p. 9--22. in The Biology of Artemisia and Chrysothamnus. E. D. McArthur and B. L. Welch, eds. U.S. For. Serv. Publ. INT- 200, Provo.

Miller, R. F. and L. M. Shultz. 1986. Water relations and leaf morphology of Juniperus occidentalis in the Great Basin. Forest Science 33(3): 690--706.

Shultz, L. M. and J. S. Shultz. 1985. Vegetation Zones of the Bonneville Basin of Utah and Nevada. Utah Geol. Assoc. Publ. 13: 261--268.

Shultz, L. M. and J. S. Shultz. 1985. Penstemon pinorum, a new species from Utah. Brittonia 37(l): 98--l0l.

Tiehm, J. A. and L. M. Shultz. 1985. Haplopappus graniticus, A new Haplopappus from Nevada. Brittonia 37(2): 165- -168. 1985.

Shultz, L. M. 1984. Crownvetch (Coronilla varia Linn.): a new problem weed in Utah? Utah Science: l2--l4.

Holmgren, N. H. and L. M. Shultz. 1982. A new species of Penstemon from southwestern Utah. Brittonia 34(4): 38l-- 383.

Shultz, L. M. and J. S. Shultz. 1981. A new species of Hackelia (Boraginaceae) from Utah. Brittonia 33(2): l59--l6l.

Shultz, L. M. and A. H. Holmgren. 1980. A new species of Townsendia (Asteraceae) from northern Arizona. Brittonia 32(2): l44--l47.

Holmgren, A. H., L. M. Shultz, and T. K. Lowrey. 1976. Sphaeromeria: A genus closer to Artemisia than Tanacetum. Brittonia 28(2): 255--262.

Shultz, L. M. 1974. Random-Access Key to Genera of Colorado Wildflowers. University of Colorado Museum, Boulder.

TECHNICAL REPORTS (1978—2000)

Shultz, L. M. and J. S. Shultz. 1978. Flora of the Salt River and Wyoming Ranges, Wyoming. U.S.D.A. Forest Service, Tech. Report. 78--100. Ogden, UT. l44 p. Also see Fertig.

Shultz, L. M. and K. E. Mutz. 1979. Threatened and endangered plants of the Willow Creek drainage, Uinta Basin, Utah, Bureau of Land Management Tech. Report, 93 (parts 1 & 2). 310 p.

Shultz, L. M. and J. S. Shultz. 1979. Floristic Survey of the Caribou National Forest of ; U.S. Forest Service Tech. Report 79--100. l03 p.

Barkworth, M. E. and L. M. Shultz. 1979. The Intermountain Herbarium. Utah Science 40(2): 34--37.

Shultz, L. M. 1979. Arthur Holmgren: Botanist (biographical sketch). Biologue 2 (1): 8--9.

Shultz, L. M. 1981. Rare Mosses of Utah. Sego Lily.

Shultz, L. M. and J. S. Shultz. 1984. The Alpine Species of Bald Mountain, Utah County. Sego Lily 7(6):3--5.

Shultz, Leila M. 1995. Two Species of Utah's Hanging Gardens. Sego Lily 18(3): 2-3.

Shultz, Leila M. and Molly T. Hysell. 1996. Floristics and Vegetation of Camp G. W. Williams, a Utah National Guard Site in Central Utah. Department of Forest Resources, Utah State University, Logan.

Shultz, L. M. in Sharik, T. L., M. R. Conover, E. W. Evans, C. R. Hawkins, R. D. Ramsey, D. W. Roberts, L. M. Shultz, N. E. West, and M. L. Wolfe. 1995—2000. Population, Distribution, and Habitat Study for Threatened, Endangered, and Sensitive Species of Plants and Animals within the Hill Air Force Base (HAFB) Restricted Air Space and Associated Public Lands. Utah State University Colleges of Natural Resources and Science, USU-BLM Agreement No. D910-A3-0210 (Task Order 5). Final report filed with the Quinney Library, College of Natural Resources, Utah State University. (300 pp. + CD ROM that includes a geospatially referenced digital database for over 13,000 collection of 1,156 species of vascular plants in the Great Basin portion of Utah)

Long, J., J. L. Crane, K. Bartsch, J. Godfrey, T. Van Niel, D. Johnson, R. Dunton, P. Gram, A. Rasmussen, L. Shultz, M. Brunson, M. Wolfe, and M. Jenkins. 1999. Integrated Natural Resources Management Plan, Camp W. G. Williams, Utah. Utah National Guard/Utah State University. Logan, Utah,

PRESENTATIONS AT PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS WITH PUBLISHED ABSTRACTS (1976-2010):

1976. Anatomical Studies of Sphaeromeria Nutt. in relation to generic alignments within Asteraceae. American Society of Taxonomists, for the American Institute of Biological Science Meetings, New Orleans. 1981. Leaf Anatomy of Artemisia L. sect. Tridentatae (Asteraceae: Anthemideae): Structure in relation to function and phylogeny. Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Botanical Congress, Sydney, Australia. 1982. Epidermal patterns in leaves of Artemisia subgen. Tridentatae (Asteraceae). Amer. Bot. Soc. Misc. Publ. 62: l07. 1983. Origin and distribution of Artemisia rothrockii A. Gray, a California endemic. Am. J. Bot. 70(5): 3l--32. 1983. Leaf vessel measurements in desert perennials. Am. J. Bot. 70(5): 129.

1986. Aluminum accumulation as a phylogenetic character in the alignment of the Diapensiaceae. Am. J. Bot. 73(5): 786. 1987. Morphometric analysis of anatomical structure using computer-enhanced color images. Am. J. Bot. 74(5): 630--631. 1988. Pollen morphology of Artemisia subgenus Tridentatae McArthur (Asteraceae: Anthemideae). Am. J. Bot. 75(6): 221--222. 1989. Leaf anatomy and carbon stable isotopes in a tropical rain forest: watering response of an understory shrub. Assoc. of Tropical Biology Abstracts: 30. (with P. W. Rundel, S. K. Mulkey, S. J. Wright) 1990. Carbon isotope discrimination and gas exchange in photosynthetic fruits. Abstracts, Ecological Society of America. (with G. Goldstein, M. R. Sharifi, P. W. Rundel). 1990. VA mycorrhizal fungi associated with Artemisia tridentata subsp. tridentata across Western North America. Mycological Society of America. (with M.A. Allen, C. F. Friese, E. B. Allen) 1991. Phenotypic plasticity of leaf morphology in response to environmental Stress. Proc. of the Pacific Division, Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci. 10(1): 45. 1991. Phenotypic Variation in Artemisia tridentata in Transplant Gardens: Effects of Mycorrhizal Fungi. Proc. of the Pacific Division of the Amer. Assoc. Adv. Science 10(1): 27. (with E. B. Allen and M. A. Allen) 1991. Stomatal size as an indicator of ploidy level in Artemisia L. (Asteraceae). Amer. J. Bot. 78(6): 34--35. (with E. B. Allen and M. A. Allen) 1991. Carbon Isotope discrimination and gas exchange in Metrosideros polymorpha (ohia). Ecological Society of America Abstracts. (with P. W. Rundel, G. Goldsten, F. C. Meinzer, and M. R. Sharifi). 1993. Botanical survey of a military reservation in central Utah. Bot. Soc. Abstracts. (Poster for the American Institute of Biological Science Meetings: Science and Public Policy Meetings, Knoxville, Tennessee, with J. L. Crane and M. T. Hysell) 1995. Floristic Survey of Camp W. G. Williams in central Utah, a Utah National Guard Installation. Ecological Society of America Abstracts. Snowbird, Utah (July) 1996. Floristics in North America: Tracking Rare Species Electronically. Symposium on the Rare, Threatened, and Endangered Floras of Asia and the Pacific Rim. Institute of Botany, Academia Sinica, Taiwan. * 1997. Integrating Botanical Databases into GIS Systems. Botanical Society of America, AIBS Meetings, Montreal, Canada. (with Tom VanNiel , Kimberly Patraw, and Molly Hysell) 1997. Flora of the Colorado Plateaus: What do we know? Symposium on the Biology and Geology of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Cedar City, Utah. (Nov. 1—5) 1998. Using Geographic Information Systems in Floristic Studies. Symposium on the Floristics of the Southeastern , sponsored by the Botanical Research Institute of Texas (April 23—26) * 1998. Geographic Information Systems and Floras. Symposium on Floristics co-sponsored by the American Association of Botanic Gardens and Arboreta and the Flora of North America project. American Institute of Biological Sciences, Baltimore, Maryland (August 2—5) 1998. The Continuing Importance of Floristics. Symposium on Floristics, XVIth International Botanical Congress, St. Louis (August) * 1999. Targeting the Knowledge Assembly Process: Lessons from the Flora of North America project. Environmental Protection Agency Conference on the use of Geographic Information Systems. EPA Technical Abstracts. Cincinnati (September) * 1999. Using Geographic Information Systems for the Flora of North America (Harvard University Libraries, invited speaker for GIS Day. (November) * 1999. Using GIS in developing models to predict plant habitats in Utah. invited speaker for the New England Botanical Club. Summary published in Rhodora. * 1999. Floristic Studies: real world applications in North America. XVI International Botanical Congress Abstract Number 5323.. (with Steve Clemants) * 2000. Using an atlas of vascular plants to determine patterns of biodiversity in Utah. (with R. D. Ramsey and P. Terletzky). Ecological Society of America 85th Annual Meetings. August 6—10. ESA Abstracts: 337. 2004. Predicting distributions of rare plants in the eastern Great Basin of Utah from vegetation models. Botanical Society of America/Ecological Section; http://www.botanyconference.org/engine/search/index.ph. August 1-5 (with M. A. Aitken & D. W. Roberts)

2004. Biodiversity studies of Utah Plants. (with R.D. Ramsey and P. Terletzky) . American Society of Plant Taxonomists. Aug 1—5. Snowbird. 2005. Systematic relationships of the genus Artemisia in North America. International Symposium on Artemisia. Keynote speaker. South China Institute of Botany, Guangzhou. * 2006. Revised Atlas of Utah Plants. U.S. Forest Service Region 4 meetings, Ogden (March 31st) * 2006. A putative hybrid in the Artemisia tridentata complex (presentation by my graduate student Heather Garrison, Botany Meetings in Chico, California) 2006. Three hotspots of endemism in Utah: Uinta Basin, northern Wasatch, and White Dome areas. Utah Native Plant Society Annual Meeting. * 2008. Tracking Rare Plants in Utah. Utah Native Plant Society, Salt Lake City (Mar) * 2008. Evolution of Sagebrush: Dept. of Wildland Science Seminar (Jan) * 2008. Systematics of Sagebrush. Botanical Society of America Meetings, Vancouver, B.C. 2009. Rare Plants of Utah; 5th SW Conference on Rare Plants., Salt Lake City * (as one of the organizers) 2009. Sagebrush Classification (NRCS Workshop, Park City, UT)* 2010. Sagebrush Classification (NRCS Workshops, Burns, OR and Lander WY)*

* Invited speaker.

SELECTED GRANTS: National Science Foundation "Flora of North America Project". NSF BSR-8800128. $250,000 (as co-PI with N. R. Morin and R. Spellenberg, $28,000 subcontract to Utah State University, 1988--94); National Science Foundation "Reciprocal transplant studies in Artemisia to determine effects of mycorrhizal associations on structure and physiology" NSF BSR-8806251. $220,000 (as co-PI with M. A. Allen and E. B. Allen, $70,000 subcontract to Utah State University 1989--1994); Smithsonian Institution, Visiting Scientist Grant (laboratory development and field studies in ecological and physiological leaf anatomy), Barro Colorado Island, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama $6,000 (1988-1989) ; Oklahoma Biological Survey (studies of molecular DNA and genetic relationships in Artemisia, 1991--92). Utah State University: Ecological Assessment of a U.S. Army National Guard Training Area (USDI/Fish and Wildlife Award No. 14-16-0009-1555: $405,455 to Utah State University, with Charles Grier, L. Shultz, M. Wolfe as co-PIs 1992—94, Jim Long as PI since 1994; Botanical Inventory, $80,000 for 1992—95. 1995-2000. Study of Populations of Threatened, Endangered, and Sensitive Plant Species within the Hill Air Force Base Military Operations Area, Utah (an area encompassing the eastern Great Basin of Utah and parts of Nevada, ca. 11.2 million acres). Bureau of Land Management/College of Natural Resources Cooperative Grant D910-A3-0210, Utah State University (as P.I. for floristic studies). 2001— 2002. Utah National Guard, Biodiversity Inventories of Training Sites in Utah (Acct. 5-43402), approx. $20,000 per year. 2003. National Park Service (CooperativeEcosystem Studies Unit through Utah State University), for revision of species lists in 5 national parks. $20,680 + $11,833. 2003—2006. Utah National Guard: Biodiversity inventories & Effects of Invasive Weeds on Native Species. 2004—2006. National Park Service [Cooperative Ecosystems Study Unit (CESU) ]: study of relict vegetation in the Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument. 2007-2009: Utah Botanical Garden: selecting native plants for landscape trials; USDA Forest Service: Taxonomic and ecological studies of sagebrush (Artemisia subgenus Tridentatae); Bureau of Land Management: Revision of the Atlas of Utah Plants.

CLASSES TAUGHT: Field Botany: Flora of the Colorado Plateaus (Moab Campus, 2009-2011). Field Botany: Flora of the Tetons (1988—2006) and Grass Workshop (2005); Science and Creative Writing" (2005, with Kenneth Brewer; Environment and Society); of Wildland Plants (Utah State University, Department of Biology, 1976--79), Advanced Systematics (Utah State University, Department of Biology, 1977), Vegetation of the Colorado Plateaus (Univ. Oklahoma, 1992); Introductory Botany (as Visiting Professor, Univ. Oklahoma, Department of Botany, 1991-92); Vegetation Classification and Taxonomy for Summer Forestry Camp (Utah State University, 1998--2001); Green Biology (Bentley College, Waltham, Mass. 2001—02).

Discoveries other than those cited in publications:

Mentzelia shultziorum. “Shultz blazing star”

Astragalus shultziorum. “Shultz milkvetch”

Sagebrush Steppe, general consultation topics:

Restoration. Pekas, K. 2010; Sagegrouse Habitats. Rowland et al. 2006; Growth of Sagebrush and Bitterbrush. Bilbrough and Richards. 1993.

General Interest: Artemisia, E. Green, L.A. Times 2005; Wild about Utah, Strand. 2009.

PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES/ELECTED APPOINTMENTS: Systematics Representative, American Botanical Society (1989-91); Publicity Chair, American Society of Plant Taxonomists (1988-1990); Council Member, American Society of Plant Taxonomists (1990-93); Lifetime Member (Honorary Appointment), Utah Native Plant Society

(1988—); NSF Panel member, Biotic Resources and Inventories Division of the National Science Foundation (1995- 96); Management Committee, Flora of North America Project (1997—1999); Graduate Awards Committee, New England Botanical Club (1996—2002); Board of Directors, Teton Science School, 2001—2006; Board of Directors, Flora of North America Association (2004—); Board of Directors, Utah Native Plant Society (2007-- ).

PROFESSIONAL COMMITMENTS AND COMMUNITY SERVICE: As a member of the executive board for the Flora of North America project, I continue to collaborate on the timely completion of 27 volumes by the end of 2013. My responsibilities have included time on the Executive Committee and Taxon Editor for families Ulmaceae, Moraceae, Cannabaceae, Chenopodiaceae, Podostemaceae, Haloragaceae, Elaeagnaceae, Capparaceae, Cleomaceae, Koeberliniaceae, Lentibulariaceae, as well as a number of smaller families.

I am pleased to have contributed to environmental education through a number of venues, including field classes for the National Wildlife Federation Conservation Summits (1972—1995); botanical workshops for “Expanding Your Horizons” for Young Women in Science at Utah State University (1985—1998); help in the development of a native plant garden at the Edith Bowen Laboratory School in Logan (1988—89), work with a pilot outdoor environmental education program for the Cache County Schools (1989—91), volunteer teacher in environmental science for students from inner-city Boston (Dorchester YMCA, 1993—97); workshops for teachers at the Teton Science School (1996—present), and trips for the Stokes Nature Center.

As part of my ongoing work with Artemisia, I am examining evolutionary relationships among species and revising a number of taxonomic treatments in various regional and national floras.

THE Floristic Lab at Utah State University is dedicated to the ongoing documentation of floristic diversity in Utah. The lab maintains geospatial data (approximately 80,000 records) for the approximately 3,000 species of native or naturalized plants found in Utah. The lab also serves as a general floristic resource for the College of Natural Resources. Records for the Digital Atlas of Utah Plants are updated in the lab, with web-based access provided through the RS/GIS Lab. Associates of the lab (students and faculty) work on floristic treatments, analysis of biodiversity patterns, and predictive models for plant distributions. With my official retirement in 2006, most of my effort has been dealing with species conservation, revision of the website for the Atlas of Utah Plants, publications on systematics of Artemisia, and development of field guides for sagebrush plant communities.

GRADUATE STUDENTS*: Catherine Jean, M.S. 1990, Forest Ecology, “Ecology and biology of tree islands in southern Utah”; Leanna Ballard, M. S. 1992, Environmental Education, “Programs in field-based environmental education for the Cache County Schools”; *Robert Fitts, M.S. 1995, Forest Ecology, “Reproductive ecology of the rare endemic primrose Primula alcalina in its varied habitat”; Robert Weiss, M.S. 1997, Forest Ecology, “Revegetation of semiarid military ranges at Camp Williams”; Martha Aitken, M. S. 1998, Forest Ecology, “Predictive modeling of rare plant habitat in the eastern Great Basin”; Michele Weidner, M. S. 2000, Forest Ecology, “Plant species richness and vegetation diversity at local and regional scales on the Shoshone National Forest, Wyoming”; Patricia Hernandez, Ph.D. 2002, Forest Ecology; Trent Toler, M. S. 2001, Biology, “Sand dunes as a reservoir of hymenoptera diversity in central Utah”; Sara Goeking, M.S. 2003, Forest Ecology; Lee Bjerregaard, M.S. 2004, Biology "Highly structured populations of a narrow endemic Primrose"; Kelly McCloskey, Ph.D., Ecology 2006 “ species richness and distribution in a heterogeneous landscape”; Heather D. Garrison* M.S. Ecology 2006 “Studies of a putative taxon in the Artemisia tridentata complex”; Nathan G. Phillips, Ph.D., Plant Science 2007 “Diversity and adaptation along altitudinal gradients in three wild Allium species native to Utah and implications for horticultural practices”; Paul C. Rogers, Ph.D. Ecology 2007 “Factors influencing epiphytic lichen communities in aspen-associated forests of the Bear River Range, Idaho and Utah”; Mark Ellis, Biology, Ph.D. 2008; Anthony Kusbach, Ph.D., Forest Ecology, 2010. * = MAJOR PROFESSOR – ALL OTHERS AS A COMMITTEE MEMBER, UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL. ALSO: Mary Grace Culp, M.S. 1986, Dept. Biology University of Nevada, “Anatomical and Morphological adaptations of plants to aridity in Death Valley National Monument.”

L. Shultz. 2011. Page 10

GRADUATE THESES: Shultz, L. M. 1975. "Random-access key to genera of Colorado Wildflowers." 39 pp. + 230 p. card deck, a polyclave system that was the first computer-generated key for use in the field (cited by Pankhurst). University of Colorado, Boulder.

Shultz, L. M. 1983. "Systematics and Anatomical studies of Artemisia subgenus Tridentatae (Asteraceae: Anthemideae)", a study of ecological correlations in patterns of leaf structure and the relationship to patterns of evolutionary divergence in western North America. Claremont Graduate School, California.