Seeds Available CARNILANDES, Harvest 2020
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Natural Heritage Program List of Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2016
Natural Heritage Program List of Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2016 Revised February 24, 2017 Compiled by Laura Gadd Robinson, Botanist John T. Finnegan, Information Systems Manager North Carolina Natural Heritage Program N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources Raleigh, NC 27699-1651 www.ncnhp.org C ur Alleghany rit Ashe Northampton Gates C uc Surry am k Stokes P d Rockingham Caswell Person Vance Warren a e P s n Hertford e qu Chowan r Granville q ot ui a Mountains Watauga Halifax m nk an Wilkes Yadkin s Mitchell Avery Forsyth Orange Guilford Franklin Bertie Alamance Durham Nash Yancey Alexander Madison Caldwell Davie Edgecombe Washington Tyrrell Iredell Martin Dare Burke Davidson Wake McDowell Randolph Chatham Wilson Buncombe Catawba Rowan Beaufort Haywood Pitt Swain Hyde Lee Lincoln Greene Rutherford Johnston Graham Henderson Jackson Cabarrus Montgomery Harnett Cleveland Wayne Polk Gaston Stanly Cherokee Macon Transylvania Lenoir Mecklenburg Moore Clay Pamlico Hoke Union d Cumberland Jones Anson on Sampson hm Duplin ic Craven Piedmont R nd tla Onslow Carteret co S Robeson Bladen Pender Sandhills Columbus New Hanover Tidewater Coastal Plain Brunswick THE COUNTIES AND PHYSIOGRAPHIC PROVINCES OF NORTH CAROLINA Natural Heritage Program List of Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2016 Compiled by Laura Gadd Robinson, Botanist John T. Finnegan, Information Systems Manager North Carolina Natural Heritage Program N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources Raleigh, NC 27699-1651 www.ncnhp.org This list is dynamic and is revised frequently as new data become available. New species are added to the list, and others are dropped from the list as appropriate. -
Federal Register/Vol. 84, No. 119/Thursday, June 20, 2019/Notices
28850 Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 119 / Thursday, June 20, 2019 / Notices or speech-impaired individuals may status reviews of 53 species under the Relay Service at 800–877–8339 for TTY access this number through TTY by Endangered Species Act, as amended. A assistance. calling the toll-free Federal Relay 5-year review is an assessment of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Service at 800–877–8339. best scientific and commercial data Dated: June 14, 2019. available at the time of the review. We Why do we conduct 5-year reviews? are requesting submission of Brian D. Montgomery, Under the Endangered Species Act of Acting Deputy Secretary. information that has become available since the last reviews of these species. 1973, as amended (ESA; 16 U.S.C. 1531 [FR Doc. 2019–13146 Filed 6–19–19; 8:45 am] et seq.), we maintain lists of endangered BILLING CODE 4210–67–P DATES: To allow us adequate time to and threatened wildlife and plant conduct these reviews, we must receive species in title 50 of the Code of Federal your comments or information on or Regulations (CFR) at 50 CFR 17.11 (for DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR before August 19, 2019. However, we wildlife) and 17.12 (for plants: List). will continue to accept new information Section 4(c)(2)(A) of the ESA requires us Fish and Wildlife Service about any listed species at any time. to review each listed species’ status at least once every 5 years. Our regulations [FWS–R4–ES–2019–N037; ADDRESSES: For instructions on how to FXES11130900000C2–190–FF09E32000] submit information and review at 50 CFR 424.21 require that we publish a notice in the Federal Register Endangered and Threatened Wildlife information that we receive on these species, see Request for New announcing those species under active and Plants; Initiation of 5-Year Status review. -
Carnivorous Plant Responses to Resource Availability
Carnivorous plant responses to resource availability: environmental interactions, morphology and biochemistry Christopher R. Hatcher A doctoral thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of requirements for the award of Doctor of Philosophy of Loughborough University November 2019 © by Christopher R. Hatcher (2019) Abstract Understanding how organisms respond to resources available in the environment is a fundamental goal of ecology. Resource availability controls ecological processes at all levels of organisation, from molecular characteristics of individuals to community and biosphere. Climate change and other anthropogenically driven factors are altering environmental resource availability, and likely affects ecology at all levels of organisation. It is critical, therefore, to understand the ecological impact of environmental variation at a range of spatial and temporal scales. Consequently, I bring physiological, ecological, biochemical and evolutionary research together to determine how plants respond to resource availability. In this thesis I have measured the effects of resource availability on phenotypic plasticity, intraspecific trait variation and metabolic responses of carnivorous sundew plants. Carnivorous plants are interesting model systems for a range of evolutionary and ecological questions because of their specific adaptations to attaining nutrients. They can, therefore, provide interesting perspectives on existing questions, in this case trait-environment interactions, plant strategies and plant responses to predicted future environmental scenarios. In a manipulative experiment, I measured the phenotypic plasticity of naturally shaded Drosera rotundifolia in response to disturbance mediated changes in light availability over successive growing seasons. Following selective disturbance, D. rotundifolia became more carnivorous by increasing the number of trichomes and trichome density. These plants derived more N from prey and flowered earlier. -
Natural Heritage Program List of Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2012
Natural Heritage Program List of Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2012 Edited by Laura E. Gadd, Botanist John T. Finnegan, Information Systems Manager North Carolina Natural Heritage Program Office of Conservation, Planning, and Community Affairs N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources 1601 MSC, Raleigh, NC 27699-1601 Natural Heritage Program List of Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2012 Edited by Laura E. Gadd, Botanist John T. Finnegan, Information Systems Manager North Carolina Natural Heritage Program Office of Conservation, Planning, and Community Affairs N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources 1601 MSC, Raleigh, NC 27699-1601 www.ncnhp.org NATURAL HERITAGE PROGRAM LIST OF THE RARE PLANTS OF NORTH CAROLINA 2012 Edition Edited by Laura E. Gadd, Botanist and John Finnegan, Information Systems Manager North Carolina Natural Heritage Program, Office of Conservation, Planning, and Community Affairs Department of Environment and Natural Resources, 1601 MSC, Raleigh, NC 27699-1601 www.ncnhp.org Table of Contents LIST FORMAT ......................................................................................................................................................................... 3 NORTH CAROLINA RARE PLANT LIST ......................................................................................................................... 10 NORTH CAROLINA PLANT WATCH LIST ..................................................................................................................... 71 Watch Category -
Pl (Sarracenia Tcher Plant
Green Pll tcher Plant (Sarracenia U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Southeast Region Atlanta, Georgia GREEN PITCHER PLANT Sar.raceni a oreophi 1a RECOVERY PLAN (Original Approved: May 11, 1983) (First Revision Approved: April 5, 1985) (Second Revision Approved: Dec. 12, 1994 Prepared by Green Pitcher Plant Recovery Team Dennis Jordan, Leader Revised by Cary Norquist U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Jackson, Mississippi for Southeast Region Atlanta, Georgia Approved: Acting Regional Director, outheast Region U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Date: Recovery plans delineate reasonable actions which are believed to be required to recover and/or protect the listed species. Plans are prepared by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, sometimes with the assistance of recovery teams, contractors, State agencies, and others. Objectives will only be attained and funds expended contingent upon appropriations, priorities, and other budgetary constraints. Recovery plans do not necessarily represent the views nor the official positions or approvals of any individuals or agencies, other than the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, involved in the plan formulation. They represent the official position of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ~~jy after they have been signed by the Regional Director or Director as approved. Approved recovery plans are subject to modification as dictated by new findings, changes in species’ status, and the completion of recovery tasks. Acknowledgement Appreciation is expressed to the University of Georgia Press for permission to use Barbara Culbertson’s illustration from Aauatic & Wetland Plans of Southeastern United States: Dicotyledons, authors Godfrey and Wooten, on the front cover. Literature citations should read as follows: U.S. -
(Sarracenia) Provide a 21St-Century Perspective on Infraspecific Ranks and Interspecific Hybrids: a Modest Proposal* for Appropriate Recognition and Usage
Systematic Botany (2014), 39(3) © Copyright 2014 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists DOI 10.1600/036364414X681473 Date of publication 05/27/2014 Pitcher Plants (Sarracenia) Provide a 21st-Century Perspective on Infraspecific Ranks and Interspecific Hybrids: A Modest Proposal* for Appropriate Recognition and Usage Aaron M. Ellison,1,5 Charles C. Davis,2 Patrick J. Calie,3 and Robert F. C. Naczi4 1Harvard University, Harvard Forest, 324 North Main Street, Petersham, Massachusetts 01366, U. S. A. 2Harvard University Herbaria, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, 22 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, U. S. A. 3Eastern Kentucky University, Department of Biological Sciences, 521 Lancaster Avenue, Richmond, Kentucky 40475, U. S. A. 4The New York Botanical Garden, 2900 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, New York 10458, U. S. A. 5Author for correspondence ([email protected]) Communicating Editor: Chuck Bell Abstract—The taxonomic use of infraspecific ranks (subspecies, variety, subvariety, form, and subform), and the formal recognition of interspecific hybrid taxa, is permitted by the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants. However, considerable confusion regarding the biological and systematic merits is caused by current practice in the use of infraspecific ranks, which obscures the meaningful variability on which natural selection operates, and by the formal recognition of those interspecific hybrids that lack the potential for inter-lineage gene flow. These issues also may have pragmatic and legal consequences, especially regarding the legal delimitation and management of threatened and endangered species. A detailed comparison of three contemporary floras highlights the degree to which infraspecific and interspecific variation are treated inconsistently. -
Federal Register/Vol. 74, No. 44/Monday, March 9, 2009/Notices
10064 Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 44 / Monday, March 9, 2009 / Notices Applicant: Copperhead Environmental (Rhus michauxii), bunched arrowhead March 24–26, 2009. The meeting is open Consulting, Inc., Paint Lick, (Sagittaria fasciculata), mountain sweet to the public. The meeting agenda will Kentucky, TE171516 pitcher-plant (Sarracenia jonesii), include reports from the Subcommittees The applicant requests amendment of largeflower skullcap (Scutellaria on Incentives, Legal, Science Tools & existing authorization to add authority montana), blue ridge goldenrod Procedures, and Synthesis, and to capture, handle, and release 31 (Solidago spithamaea), Virginia spirea discussion of the draft species of freshwater mussel for (Spiraea virginiana), Cooley’s Recommendations to the Secretary. presence surveys throughout the species meadowrue (Thalictrum cooleyi), and DATES: The meeting is scheduled for ranges in the eastern United States. running buffalo clover (Trifolium March 24–26, 2009, from 11 a.m. to stoloniferum) to develop and maintain Applicant: South Carolina Parks, 5:30 p.m. on March 24, 8 a.m. to 5:30 germ plasm and propagated specimens Recreation and Tourism, Columbia, p.m. on March 25, and 8 a.m. to 3:30 of plants collected from throughout South Carolina TE207117 p.m. on March 26. North Carolina, South Carolina, The applicant requests authorization ADDRESSES: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Service, 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Rooms to harass, inspect nest cavities, and West Virginia, Virginia, and Maryland. conduct other management activities 200 A & B, Arlington, VA 22203. For Applicant: International Carnivorous with the red-cockaded woodpecker more information, see ‘‘Meeting Plant Society, Pinole, California, (Picoides borealis) throughout South Location Information.’’ TE061005 Carolina. -
2010 Online Catalog
Meadowview Biological Research Station 2010 Catalog $5.00 S. „Craig Rudman‟ pg. 25 Utricularia radiata pg. 37 S. „Caroline‟ pg. 25 Meadowview Biological Research Station 8390 Fredericksburg Tnpk. Woodford, VA 22580 (804) 633-4336 [email protected] www.pitcherplant.org A non-profit 501(c)(3) organization As an incentive to become a Meadowview sponsor, we are offering a 50% dis- count on our plants when you become a sponsor with an annual donation of $25.00 or more. This entitles you to excellent prices on our plants while at the same time supporting our conservation and restoration efforts. Our focus is on the pitcher plant genus Sarracenia but we also offer a number of interesting associate and novelty tropical plants for sale at Meadowview Biological Research Station. All plants are from propagated material. If there are plants you are interested in but do not see in our catalog please ask us. We have limited quantities of many species which are not listed in this cata- log available to those involved in ecological restoration. We have propagated pitcher plant populations of varieties found from Virginia to Texas, which you may be interested in using for your restoration project, depending upon the geographic area. Please inquire as to location and availability of those plants. Feel free to visit our facility by appointment, where you may make your own selections from our stock. Unlike other companies, we ship only mature plants to ensure the highest quality plants and a satisfied customer. We suggest ordering in late winter before plants have started growth to get both the best plants we have avail- able and to ensure that plants have a full season of growth. -
Flora of the Carolinas, Virginia, and Georgia, Working Draft of 17 March 2004 -- BIBLIOGRAPHY
Flora of the Carolinas, Virginia, and Georgia, Working Draft of 17 March 2004 -- BIBLIOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY Ackerfield, J., and J. Wen. 2002. A morphometric analysis of Hedera L. (the ivy genus, Araliaceae) and its taxonomic implications. Adansonia 24: 197-212. Adams, P. 1961. Observations on the Sagittaria subulata complex. Rhodora 63: 247-265. Adams, R.M. II, and W.J. Dress. 1982. Nodding Lilium species of eastern North America (Liliaceae). Baileya 21: 165-188. Adams, R.P. 1986. Geographic variation in Juniperus silicicola and J. virginiana of the Southeastern United States: multivariant analyses of morphology and terpenoids. Taxon 35: 31-75. ------. 1995. Revisionary study of Caribbean species of Juniperus (Cupressaceae). Phytologia 78: 134-150. ------, and T. Demeke. 1993. Systematic relationships in Juniperus based on random amplified polymorphic DNAs (RAPDs). Taxon 42: 553-571. Adams, W.P. 1957. A revision of the genus Ascyrum (Hypericaceae). Rhodora 59: 73-95. ------. 1962. Studies in the Guttiferae. I. A synopsis of Hypericum section Myriandra. Contr. Gray Herbarium Harv. 182: 1-51. ------, and N.K.B. Robson. 1961. A re-evaluation of the generic status of Ascyrum and Crookea (Guttiferae). Rhodora 63: 10-16. Adams, W.P. 1973. Clusiaceae of the southeastern United States. J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 89: 62-71. Adler, L. 1999. Polygonum perfoliatum (mile-a-minute weed). Chinquapin 7: 4. Aedo, C., J.J. Aldasoro, and C. Navarro. 1998. Taxonomic revision of Geranium sections Batrachioidea and Divaricata (Geraniaceae). Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 85: 594-630. Affolter, J.M. 1985. A monograph of the genus Lilaeopsis (Umbelliferae). Systematic Bot. Monographs 6. Ahles, H.E., and A.E. -
Genetics of Sarracenia Leaf and Flower Color PHIL SHERIDAN
Genetics of Sarracenia leaf and flower color PHIL SHERIDAN Virginia Commonwealth Meadowview Biological Research University Station 8390 Fredericksburg Turnpike Department of Biology Woodford, VA 22580 816 Park Avenue Keywords: genetics: pigmentation-genetics: Sarracenia. Abstract Sarracenia is a genus of insectivorous plants confined to wetlands of eastern U.S. and Canada. Eight species are generally recognized with flower and leaf color ranging from yellow to red. Fertile hybrids occur in the wild under disturbed conditions and can be artificially produced in the greenhouse. Thus genetic barriers between species are weak. Normally when crosses occur or are induced between species or between different color types the progeny exhibit a blending of parental phenotypes called incomplete or partial dominance. In most species all-green mutants have been found which lack any red pigment in leaves, flowers or growth point. Controlled crosses were performed on all-green mutants from S. purpurea and two subspecies of the S. rubra complex. Self pollinated all-green plants Figure 1: A pink flowered hybrid in cultivation. This result in all-green offspring specimen was collected by Fred Case and is the cross S. and self pollinated wild-type rubra subsp. wherry) x S. alata. red plants result in red offspring. Crosses between red and all-green plants produce wild-type colored red progeny. These results suggest that the red alleles are "dominant" to the "recessive" all green mutant alleles in the three independent all-green variants tested. Since partial dominance is the usual genetic pattern in the genus, dominant/recessive characteristics are an unusual phenomenon. 1 Introduction The Sarraceniaceae (American pitcher plants) is a family of insectivorous pitcher plants restricted to wet, sunny, generally acid, nutrient poor habitats of the southeastern United States, Canada, northern California, southern Oregon, Venezuela, British Guiana (Lloyd, 1942), and Brazil (Maguire, 1978). -
Threatened and Endangered Species List
Effective April 15, 2009 - List is subject to revision For a complete list of Tennessee's Rare and Endangered Species, visit the Natural Areas website at http://tennessee.gov/environment/na/ Aquatic and Semi-aquatic Plants and Aquatic Animals with Protected Status State Federal Type Class Order Scientific Name Common Name Status Status Habit Amphibian Amphibia Anura Gyrinophilus gulolineatus Berry Cave Salamander T Amphibian Amphibia Anura Gyrinophilus palleucus Tennessee Cave Salamander T Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus bouchardi Big South Fork Crayfish E Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus cymatilis A Crayfish E Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus deweesae Valley Flame Crayfish E Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus extraneus Chickamauga Crayfish T Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus obeyensis Obey Crayfish T Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus pristinus A Crayfish E Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Cambarus williami "Brawley's Fork Crayfish" E Crustacean Malacostraca Decapoda Fallicambarus hortoni Hatchie Burrowing Crayfish E Crustacean Malocostraca Decapoda Orconectes incomptus Tennessee Cave Crayfish E Crustacean Malocostraca Decapoda Orconectes shoupi Nashville Crayfish E LE Crustacean Malocostraca Decapoda Orconectes wrighti A Crayfish E Fern and Fern Ally Filicopsida Polypodiales Dryopteris carthusiana Spinulose Shield Fern T Bogs Fern and Fern Ally Filicopsida Polypodiales Dryopteris cristata Crested Shield-Fern T FACW, OBL, Bogs Fern and Fern Ally Filicopsida Polypodiales Trichomanes boschianum -
Federally Protected Plant Species in Georgia Dr
Pub. No. 50 December 2016 Federally Protected Plant Species In Georgia Dr. Kim D. Coder, Professor of Tree Biology & Health Care Warnell School of Forestry & Natural Resources, University of Georgia Endangered and threatened species of plants are given federal protection under regulations and agreements stemming from the Endangered Species Act, as amended. Federal protection includes individuals of a listed species, habitats essential for their survival, and specific limitations on pesticide use. This publication lists endangered and threatened plant species by scientific name, common name, federal listing status, and general Georgia county name locations. Figure 1 is a map giving county locations of federally protected plant species in Georgia by identification number. This publication was developed for educational purposes and is not a regulatory document. The State of Georgia (Department of Natural Resources) maintains a com- plete list of both federal and state endangered, threatened, rare and unusual plant species for Georgia. Included at the end of this publication are plant species with a federal status of "candidate," or "in a petition process," for potential listing. Figure 2. Endangered / Threatened Plant Species ID common name #(scientific name) status1 county distribution2 1. Little amphianthus / pool sprite / snorklewort (Amphianthus pusillus) T Granite outcrops in Butts, Columbia, Dekalb, Douglas, Greene, Gwinnett, Hancock, Harris, Heard, Henry, Meriwether, Newton, Oglethorpe, Pike, Putnam, Rockdale, & Walton Dr. Kim D. Coder Warnell School University of Georgia 1 ID common name #(scientific name) status1 county distribution2 2. Georgia rockcress T Chatahoochee, Clay, Harris, (Arabis georgiana) Muscogee, & Stewart 3. hairy rattleweed / cobwebby wild indigo (Baptisia arachnifera) E Brantley & Wayne 4. Alabama leatherflower (Clematis socialis) E Floyd 5.