Botanists At Grand Canyon National Park Working to Bring Plant Back from the Brink

• 

Posted March 28th, 2010 by Kurt Repanshek on National Parks Traveler

It’s a tiny plant, one with a beautiful purple flower, and it just might be one that can be brought back from the brink of extinction.

Earlier this month botanists at Grand Canyon National Park were beaming when one of their sentry milk-vetch (Astragalus cremnophylax var. cremnophylax) began to bloom. That was no small victory, as it marked a significant achievement in the park’s efforts to bring the plant off the list of endangered species.

The sentry milk-vetch is the only endangered plant in the Grand Canyon. Efforts to bolster its populations began in 2009 when a greenhouse collection of the plants was started with hopes of producing enough seeds and plants to start recolonizing areas of the park.

According to park officials, there currently are 94 sentry milk-vetch plants in the greenhouse. All were grown from seed that was hand-collected from the wild. In 2009, the park built a passive solar greenhouse for propagation and seed production of sentry milk-vetch plants. The greenhouse was funded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service through Grand Canyon Association, Grand Canyon National Park’s official fund-raising partner.

Sentry milk-vetch only grows in three locations in shallow soil pockets atop the highly porous Kaibab Limestone near the rim of Grand Canyon. The plant was listed as endangered in 1990; and there were only 1,125 plants known to exist in the wild in 2009. According to the 2006 Sentry Milk-vetch Recovery Plan, the plant will be considered recovered when there are eight stable populations of 1,000 plants each. The species will be eligible for downlisting when there are four stable populations of 1,000 plants each.

Plants in Grand Canyon’s native plant nursery form the second ex situ population of sentry milk-vetch. The first was established at the Arboretum at Flagstaff, one of the partners in the sentry milk-vetch recovery program. Park scientists have worked closely with the Arboretum’s Research Scientist Dr. Kristin Haskins and Research Botanist Sheila Murray to incorporate their wealth of knowledge and experience into the Grand Canyon’s successful effort.Park Horticulturalist Janice Busco, who is leading the park’s sentry milk-vetch recovery efforts, said, the availability of seeds “has been one of the limiting factors for recovery efforts, so it is an important breakthrough that we already have little sentry milk-vetch plants thriving and blooming in our greenhouse population that was started just last year.”

“We will be pollinating the plants by hand, using techniques developed by the Arboretum at Flagstaff,” she added. “As the seeds set, we will collect them for use in reintroduction trials at a restoration site near Maricopa Point starting in 2011.”

The largest population of sentry milk-vetch exists near Maricopa Point on the South Rim’s Hermit Road, according to park officials. In 2008, the National Park Service removed a parking lot there to provide additional habitat for sentry milk-vetch plants. This summer, the park’s Vegetation Program will begin a complex site restoration program in a portion of the former Maricopa Point parking lot to recreate the unique topography and habitat that this plant requires. In 2011, the park plans to begin experimental plantings of sentry milk-vetch plants and seeds produced in the park’s native plant nursery.

“I was so excited when I first learned that plants in our greenhouse population were already blooming. This important event is a huge credit to Janice Busco and Student Conservation Association Plant Conservation intern Emily Douglas, who have worked so hard to start the greenhouse population and to tend these tiny plants,” said the park’s vegetation program manager, Lori Makarick. “I look forward to seeing how successful these plants are in producing seed after they are hand-pollinated, and then being able to move forward from there with our recovery program.”

Posted March 28th, 2010 by Kurt Repanshek on National Parks Traveler

Student Conservation Association