Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 12-Month Finding on a Petition To List Calopogon oklahomensis as Threatened or Endangered, 61307-61321 [2011-25530]
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Conclusion: Although disease
resistance or tolerance may be important
to the long-term viability of
Oncorhynchus nerka at some scale, the
relevant question for this finding is
whether the Lake Sammamish kokanee
population is significant to the taxon as
a whole (i.e., all O. nerka populations
and life history forms throughout the
range of the species). Given that there is
no evidence indicating that the Lake
Sammamish kokanee are disease
resistant or disease tolerant, and that we
were unable to find any information on
IHN presence in other lakes containing
O. nerka populations in order to
determine whether Lake Sammamish is
atypical, we conclude that the
hypothesized disease resistance or
tolerance of the Lake Sammamish
kokanee population does not meet the
significance element of the DPS policy.
(B) Multiple run spawning timings:
Multiple run timings allow kokanee and
other salmonid populations the ability
to exploit a range of available habitats
and reduce risks to extirpation (e.g.,
stochastic events, predation, variable
climate) by diversifying spawning
distribution over space and time. The
Lake Sammamish/Lake Washington
kokanee population historically had at
least three distinct run timings
expressed in different locations within
the basin. The expression of multiplerun timings within populations appears
to be rare across the range of kokanee,
especially among tributaries (Wood
2009, pers comm.), although there are at
least a few other kokanee populations
that are known to exhibit this trait
(Shepard 1999). In addition, the
literature indicates that other kokanee
populations have run timings that occur
during similar times of the year as do
the run timings of the Lake Sammamish
kokanee (Scott and Crossman 1973, p.
167). With regard to the taxon-wide
examination, NOAAF (1997, p. 20)
states that Oncorhynchus nerka exhibits
the greatest diversity in selection of
spawning habitat among the Pacific
salmon, and great variation in river
entry timing and the duration of holding
in lakes prior to spawning. Bimodal run
timing (two spawning runs in a single
season) for O. nerka populations have
been demonstrated in the Russian River
in Alaska (Nelson 1979, p. 3), the
Klukshu River, Yukon Territory (Fillatre
et al. 2003, p. 1), and Karluk Lake on
Kodiak Island, Alaska (Schmidt et al.
1998, p. 744).
Conclusion: Under the DPS policy, we
are required to evaluate the Lake
Sammamish kokanee population
segment’s significance relative to the
taxon as a whole. Therefore, given the
available information on the number of
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O. nerka populations across the range of
the species (see sockeye and kokanee
abundance trends above), and the
presence of bimodal run timing in other
populations, we conclude the presence
of multiple run timings in Lake
Sammamish is not significant to the
taxon.
DPS Conclusion
On the basis of the best available
information, we conclude that the Lake
Sammamish kokanee population
segment is discrete due to marked
separation as a consequence of physical,
ecological, physiological, or behavioral
factors according to the 1996 DPS
policy. However, on the basis of the four
significance elements in the 1996 DPS
policy, we conclude this discrete
population segment is not significant to
the remainder of the taxon and
therefore, does not qualify as a DPS
under our 1996 DPS policy. As such, we
find the Lake Sammamish kokanee
population is not a listable entity under
the Act.
Finding
In making this finding, we considered
information provided by the petitioners,
as well as other information available to
us concerning the Lake Sammamish
kokanee population. We have carefully
assessed the best scientific and
commercial information available
regarding the status and threats to the
Lake Sammamish kokanee population.
We reviewed the petition and
unpublished scientific and commercial
information. We also consulted with
Federal and State land managers, and
scientists having expertise with
Oncorhynchus nerka. This 12-month
finding reflects and incorporates
information received from the public
following our 90-day finding or
obtained through consultation or
literature research.
On the basis of that review, we have
determined that the Lake Sammamish
kokanee does not meet the elements of
our 1996 DPS policy as being a valid
DPS. Consequently, we find the Lake
Sammamish kokanee population is not
a listable entity under the Act, and that
listing is not warranted.
References
A complete list of all references cited
is available at https://
www.regulations.gov, or upon request
from the Washington Fish and Wildlife
Office (see ADDRESSES).
Author
The primary authors of this document
are staff of Region 1, Pacific Region, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service.
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Authority
The authority for this action is the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
Dated: September 23, 2011.
Rowan W. Gould,
Acting Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–25595 Filed 10–3–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS–R3–ES–2010–0034; MO
92210–0–0008]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; 12-Month Finding on a
Petition To List Calopogon
oklahomensis as Threatened or
Endangered
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 12-month petition
finding.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, announce a 12-month
finding on a petition to list Calopogon
oklahomensis (Oklahoma grass pink
orchid) under the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended. After review
of the best available scientific and
commercial information, we find that
listing Calopogon oklahomensis is not
warranted at this time. However, we ask
the public to submit to us any new
information that becomes available
concerning the threats to Calopogon
oklahomensis or its habitat at any time.
DATES: The finding announced in this
document was made on October 4, 2011.
ADDRESSES: This finding is available on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket Number
FWS–R3–ES–2010–0034. Supporting
documentation used in preparing this
finding is available for public
inspection, by appointment, during
normal business hours at the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Chicago, Illinois
Ecological Services Field Office, 1250
South Grove, Suite 103, Barrington, IL
60010. Please submit any new
information, materials, comments, or
questions concerning this finding to the
above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Louise Clemency, Field Supervisor,
Chicago, Illinois Ecological Services
Field Office (see ADDRESSES); by
telephone at 847–381–2253; or by
facsimile at 847–381–2285. Persons who
SUMMARY:
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use a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at
800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Act (16
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), requires that, for
any petition to revise the Federal Lists
of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants that contains substantial
scientific or commercial information
that listing the species may be
warranted, we make a finding within 12
months of the date of receipt of the
petition. In this finding, we will
determine that the petitioned action is:
(1) Not warranted, (2) warranted, or (3)
warranted, but the immediate proposal
of a regulation implementing the
petitioned action is precluded by other
pending proposals to determine whether
species are threatened or endangered,
and expeditious progress is being made
to add or remove qualified species from
the Federal Lists of Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Section
4(b)(3)(C) of the Act requires that we
treat a petition for which the requested
action is found to be warranted but
precluded as though resubmitted on the
date of such finding, that is, requiring a
subsequent finding to be made within
12 months. We must publish these 12month findings in the Federal Register.
pmangrum on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS-1
Previous Federal Actions
On May 28, 2008, we received a
petition dated May 22, 2008, from Dr.
Douglas Goldman of the Harvard
University Herbaria requesting that
Calopogon oklahomensis be listed as
threatened or endangered under the Act.
Included in the petition was supporting
information regarding the species’
taxonomy and ecology, historical and
current distribution, present status, and
actual and potential causes of decline.
We acknowledged the receipt of the
petition in a letter to Dr. Douglas
Goldman, dated September 15, 2008. In
that letter we also stated that due to
funding constraints in fiscal year 2008,
we would not be able to begin
processing the petition at that time.
Funding became available in fiscal
year 2010, wherein work began on the
90-day finding. The 90-day finding was
published on August 24, 2010 (75 FR
51969). This notice constitutes the 12month finding on the May 22, 2008,
petition to list Calopogon oklahomensis
as threatened or endangered.
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Species Information
Taxonomy and Species Description
Calopogon oklahomensis, commonly
known as the Oklahoma grass pink or
prairie grass pink, is a terrestrial species
of orchid (family Orchidaceae) native to
the United States and primarily
occurring in the south-central United
States. It is a member of the genus
Calopogon, a group of terrestrial orchids
known as grass pinks.
The number of species identified as
belonging to the genus Calopogon has
varied since the genus was identified by
Linnaeus in 1753 (Correll 1978, p. 167).
The first species of the current genus
Calopogon, was identified by Linnaeus
as Limodorum tuberosum in 1753
(Correll 1978, p. 167). In 1788, Walter
originally identified Ophrys barbata,
with Ames (1908) later changing the
name to Calopogon barbatus, which was
subsequently accepted and conserved
(Correll, 1978, p. 167). Calopogon
multiflorus was first described by
Lindley in 1840 (Correll 1978, p. 169).
In 1860, Chapman identified and
described Calopogon pallidus (Correll
1978, p. 171). By 1888, Limodorum
tuberosum was accepted and given the
conserved name of Calopogon tuberosus
(L) by Britton, Sterns, and Poggenburg
(Jarvis and Cribb 2009, p. 368). In 1933,
Small (pp. 363–399) recognized six
species of Calopogon based on minor
variations, which Correll (1978, p. 167)
believed were difficult to interpret. By
1950, Correll, taking a more
conservative approach, recognized four
species of Calopogon: C. barbatus, C.
multiflorus, C. pallidus, and C.
pulchellus, with two variants of C.
pulchellus, the more northern variant,
latifolius, and the more southern
variant, simpsonii Ames (1904) (Correll
1978, pp. 167–176). The former species,
C. pulchellus, is now considered a
variant of C. tuberosus, that being, C.
tuberosus var. tuberosus. By 1989, it
was recognized that Calopogon
tuberosus encompassed two variants,
variant simpsonii (southern variant) and
variant tuberosus (northern variant).
The four species, C. barbatus, C.
multiflorus, C. pallidus, and C.
tuberosus, were thought to compose the
genus Calopogon until Goldman (1995,
p. 37) proposed a fifth species, C.
oklahomensis.
Goldman (1995, p. 41) asserts that
morphological and phenological
variation of the genus Calopogon in the
midwestern States was not previously
recognized by Correll (1978) or Luer
(1975) (Goldman 1995, p. 41) and that
while examining herbarium specimens
from eastern Texas, western Louisiana,
and northward to central Missouri, he
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(Dr. Douglas Goldman) observed several
morphological and ecological
characteristics, which he believed were
inconsistent with true C. tuberosus or C.
barbatus. These characteristics included
corm (a modified underground stem)
shape and formation, average leaf width,
leaf length verses inflorescence (a
branching stem with flowers) length,
bud characterization, anthesis (the
period from flowering to fruiting), floral
fragrance, dorsal sepal description,
lateral sepal description, distal portion
of labellum disc (portion of the lower
petal that is attached to the center of the
flower), and stigma (where deposited
pollen germinates) characteristics (Table
1) (Goldman 1995, pp. 37–39). In
addition, although C. oklahomensis may
occur in close geographic proximity to
C. tuberosus, they are temporally
isolated, as C. oklahomensis flowers at
different times of the year than C.
tuberosus (Goldman 1995, p. 40). In
Missouri, C. oklahomensis blooms from
early May to June, whereas C. tuberosus
blooms from mid-June to early July
(Summers 1987 in Goldman 1995, p.
40). Goldman (1995, p. 40) ascertained
from herbarium label data that in
eastern Texas and western Louisiana, C.
oklahomensis blooms from March to
early May, whereas C. tuberosus blooms
from May to June. Calopogon
oklahomensis was subsequently
described, by Goldman, as unique and
distinct from all other species of
Calopogon, with a large geographic
range, many consistent morphological
features, and temporal isolation from its
occasional associate, Calopogon
tuberosus (Goldman 1995, p. 41).
In addition to timing of flower
emergence and a suite of morphological
features differing from Calopogon
tuberosus and C. barbatus, C.
oklahomensis has been shown to have
unique genetic characteristics. Genetic
analysis has shown C. oklahomensis to
be hexaploid (having six sets of
chromosomes), where all other taxa
within Calopogon are diploid
(consisting of two sets of chromosomes),
suggesting that this species may be an
alloploid (number of chromosomes is
doubled in the hybrid), possibly derived
from ancient hybridization between C.
barbatus and C. tuberosus (Goldman
2000, p. 79). Recent genetic analyses by
Goldman et al. (2004a, p. 719), however,
concluded that if hybrid in origin, the
cross is ancient, and it may be prudent
to conclude that the origin and affinities
of C. oklahomensis remain uncertain
(Goldman et al. 2004a, p. 719). Trapnell
et al. (2004, p. 314) conducted
additional genetic testing for genetic
variation among the five species of the
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terrestrial orchid genus Calopogon, with
results indicating that C. oklahomensis
is the most genetically diverse species of
the five species tested.
The review of Calopogon
oklahomensis is complete, and the name
is accepted by Govaerts (1999) and
Govaerts (2003). Recognition of C.
oklahomensis as the fifth Calopogon
species was affirmed in Flora of North
America (Goldman 2002, pp. 601–602),
and reaffirmed by Brown (2006, p. 21;
2008, p. 177), who describes the genus
Calopogon as being composed of five
species: C. barbatus, C. multiflorus, C.
pallidus, C. tuberosus, and C.
oklahomensis (Brown 2006, p. 21).
Currently, Govaerts et al. (2011, entire)
and Kartesz (2011, in press) also
recognize C. oklahomensis as a distinct
species.
For these reasons, we accept the
characterization of Calopogon
oklahomensis as a distinct species of
Calopogon, with a large geographic
range, many consistent morphological
features, temporal isolation in flower
timing from other species in the genus
Calopogon, and genetic differentiation
from all other Calopogon (Brown 2006,
p. 22; Goldman 1995, p. 41; Goldman
2002, pp. 601–602), and, therefore, a
listable entity under the Act.
Calopogon oklahomensis is a
terrestrial plant growing (6 to 14 inches
(in) (15 to 36 centimeters (cm)) tall
(Brown 2006, p. 22). It has a forked
corm, with the new corm at the base of
the leaf and the inflorescence rapidly
growing distally at the time of anthesis
(Goldman 1995, p. 39). It has one or two
leaves, which are lanceolate, slender,
and 0.2 to 0.6 in (0.5 to 1.5 cm) wide
by 3 to 14 in (7 to 35 cm) long (Brown
2006, p. 22; Goldman 1995, p. 37). The
leaf is almost always as long as or longer
than the inflorescence (Goldman 1995,
p. 39). The flower buds are deeply
grooved longitudinally, waxy, and shiny
with elongated acuminate apices
(narrowing to a point at the tip). The
flower has three to seven non-resupinate
flowers (labellum is uppermost) that are
fragrant (smelling of citronella) and
open simultaneously, with the color
being highly variable, from lilac blue to
bright magenta pink or, in the form
albiflorus, white. All have a golden crest
61309
on the lip (Brown 2006, p. 22; Goldman
1995, p. 39). The labellum disk is
pinkish with a basal region of short to
long yellow hairs, above which there is
a triangular region of short, stout,
pinkish hairs, which extend to the
labellum apex (terminal end of the
lower petal) (Goldman 1995, p. 39).
Calopogon oklahomensis has a
winged column with two soft pollinia (a
mass of pollen grains) (Goldman 2000,
p. 3). The stigma is flat against the
column surface (Goldman 1995, p. 40),
and the species blooms April
throughout May or June (Brown 2006, p.
22). Calopogon oklahomensis flowers
produce little or no nectar and offer no
pollen reward; they attract pollinators
using showy yellow and pink lip hairs
that resemble a mass of pollen. When an
insect lands on the labellum, if it is
heavy enough, the labellum swings
down and the insect’s posterior comes
into contact with the sticky pollinia
located on the end of the column
(Trapnell et al. 2004, p. 308). The tiny,
dustlike seeds are wind dispersed
(Trapnell et al. 2004, p. 308).
TABLE 1—COMPARISON OF 11 CHARACTERS USED TO DISTINGUISH CALOPOGON OKLAHOMENSIS FROM C. TUBEROSUS
AND C. BARBATUS, OBTAINED FROM GOLDMAN’S PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS, CORRELL (1978), AND LUER (1972,
1975) (GOLDMAN 1995, P. 39)
Character
Calopogon oklahomensis
Calopogon tuberosus
Corm ..............................................
New corm forming distally at anthesis.
Average leaf width (range) * ..........
Forked ...........................................
Yes ................................................
Spherical .......................................
No .................................................
Spherical.
No.
7 mm (0.28 inches) (5–15 mm
(0.20–0.59 inches)).
About equal ..................................
(10 mm (0.39 inches) (4–37 mm
0.16–1.46 inches)).
Usually shorter ..............................
2 mm (0.08 inches) (1–4 mm
(0.04–0.16 inches)).
Shorter.
Grooved
longitudinally,
acuminate, very waxy.
Flowers open in rapid succession
Yes ................................................
Lanceolate, average 19 mm × 6
mm (0.75 inches × 0.24
inches), straight to reflexed
backwards.
Acuminate, grooved longitudinally,
recurved backwards.
Same color as most of flower, triangular region of short, pink
hairs.
Flat against column surface .........
Generally smooth, acute or
apiculate, waxy.
Flowers open in slow succession
No .................................................
Oblong-elliptical, average 22 mm
× 8 mm (0.87 inches × 0.31
inches), straight.
Smooth, acute or apiculate, waxy.
Leaf length vs. inflorescence
length.
Buds ...............................................
Anthesis .........................................
Floral fragrance ..............................
Dorsal sepal * .................................
Lateral sepals * ..............................
Distal portion of labellum disc ........
Stigma ............................................
Calopogon barbatus
Apiculate, smooth, straight ...........
White, generally circular region of
short, white, yellow, or orange
hairs.
Most often perpendicular to column surface.
Flowers open in rapid succession.
No.
Oblong-elliptical, average 16 mm
× 5 mm (0.63 inches × 0.20
inches), straight to reflexed
backwards.
Apiculate, longitudinally grooved,
recurved backwards.
Same color as most of flower, triangular, region of short, pink
hairs.
Flat against column surface.
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* Based on 60 herbarium specimens of Calopogon oklahomensis, 60 specimens of C. tuberosus, and 30 specimens of C. barbatus, collected
throughout the geographic range of each species.
Distribution and Population Status
Calopogon oklahomensis was
originally thought to be restricted to the
prairies of the south-central States;
however, herbarium specimens
(Goldman 1995, pp. 37, 40–41) indicate
that it was previously much more
widespread (Brown 2006, p. 22).
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Goldman (1995, p. 41) based his
description of the species’ range on
collected specimens in six States
(Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri,
Oklahoma, and Texas), and
hypothesized that overall, the historical
range covered 17 States (Alabama,
Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Iowa,
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana,
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Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, and Wisconsin) (Goldman 2008a,
pp. 2–3). Brown (2006, p. 22) identifies
the historical range of C. oklahomensis
as occurring in only 10 States (Arkansas,
Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana,
Minnesota, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas,
and Wisconsin) and does not list this
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species as occurring in Florida, South
Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Indiana,
Tennessee, or Mississippi. NatureServe
(2011) identifies the historical range of
the species in 14 States (Alabama,
Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Indiana,
Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin);
however, the source of this information
is also Goldman (2008a).
Goldman (2008a, pp. 2–3) states that
there are 233 historical occurrences
from 17 States (Table 2). A thorough
review of the available information on
the distribution of Calopogon
oklahomensis, however, indicates that
there are 86 to 90 historical occurrences
of C. oklahomensis from 11 States
(Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and
Wisconsin (Table 2). This 11-State
historical range, which is based on a
review of actual occurrences rather than
the generalized range discussion
presented above, is what we used in
conducting our assessment of the
species’ status.
TABLE 2—A COMPARISON OF INFORMATION ON HISTORICAL AND EXTANT OCCURRENCES OF CALOPOGON OKLAHOMENSIS,
BASED ON GOLDMAN’S (2008b, P. 3) REVIEW OF HERBARIUM SPECIMENS AS PROVIDED IN THE PETITION AND INFORMATION AVAILABLE TO THE SERVICE, PRIMARILY FROM STATE DATABASES
State
Number of
historical
records
(based on State
databases)
Number of
historical
records
(Goldman)
Last observed
(Goldman)
Estimated extant
populations
(Goldman)
Estimated extant
populations
(based on State
databases)
AL * ...............................................
AR ................................................
FL * ...............................................
GA * ..............................................
IA ..................................................
IL ..................................................
IN * ................................................
KS ................................................
LA .................................................
MN * ..............................................
MO ...............................................
MS ................................................
OK ................................................
SC * ..............................................
TN ................................................
TX .................................................
WI .................................................
1887
1995
1882
1943
1941
2006?
1933
1980
1996
1884
1994
2006
2004
?
1939
2004
1987
5
22
1
1
8
42
15
1
22
5
16
4
53
1
2
27
8
0
25
0
0
3 to 6
7
0
1
3
0
2
1
24
0
1
12 to 13
7?
0
3 to 5
0
0
0
1
0
0
3 to 6
0
4 to 6
2 to 3
10?
0
0
1 to 3
1
0
17
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
11
3
6
0
0
1
1
Total ......................................
................................
233
86 to 90
25 to 35
41
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* The Service does not consider these States to be within the historical range for the species.
The historical range suggested by
Goldman (2008a, p. 6) includes the
States of Florida and Georgia. Goldman
(2008a, p. 6) describes one historical
herbarium specimen of Calopogon
oklahomensis from Florida, dated 1882
and labeled only as ‘‘Florida’’ for the
locality. He hypothesizes that it may
have been collected from the western
Florida panhandle (Goldman 2008a, p.
6). This record is questionable because
Florida has no other information or
records regarding historical or extant
occurrences of C. oklahomensis in the
State (Brown 2011, pers. comm.;
Johnson 2011, pers. comm.; Knight
2009, pers. comm.; Halupa 2009, pers.
comm.). Based on the lack of records,
we believe this species is not a
component of the Florida flora and,
therefore, do not include Florida in the
range for this species.
Goldman (2008a, p. 6) states that one
specimen of Calopogon oklahomensis
was collected in southwestern Georgia
by Robert Thorne in 1947. As in the case
of Florida, because we have no other
historical or extant records of C.
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oklahomensis as occurring in Georgia
(Pattavina 2009, pers. comm.), we do
not include Georgia in the range of C.
oklahomensis.
There are no confirmed specimens
from South Carolina for this species
(Holling 2011, pers. comm.; Pittman
2011, pers. comm.); however, there is
one specimen (probably over 200 years
old) housed at the herbarium at the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, which is
marked simply as ‘‘S.C.,’’ but without
information on collector, locality, or
date (Goldman 2010, pers. comm.). We
do not include South Carolina in the
current or historical range of Calopogon
oklahomensis because we have no other
information of C. oklahomensis as
occurring in South Carolina (Holling
2011, pers. comm.).
We do not have comprehensive
survey information for Calopogon
oklahomensis. Therefore, we do not
know the full extent of the species’
distribution or if the distribution has
changed over time. The following
paragraphs outline the distribution and
status information that is available.
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Goldman (2008a, p. 3) estimates 25 to
35 extant Calopogon oklahomensis
populations from 8 States (Arkansas,
Illinois, Louisiana, Missouri,
Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas, and
Wisconsin) (Table 2). The Service
cannot confirm Goldman’s information
regarding extant populations of C.
oklahomensis in Louisiana. The Service
has information from Goldman’s
personal collection data (provided as
supplemental information to the
petition (Goldman 2008b)) of three
specimens from Louisiana dated 1995 to
1996. More recent information,
however, is not available regarding the
sites from where these specimens
originated.
Alabama has no extant occurrences of
Calopogon oklahomensis (Everson 2009,
pers. comm.; Schotz 2011, pers. comm.).
Goldman (2008a, p. 5) asserts that this
species was collected in Alabama a
handful of times in the late 1800s, near
the town of Mount Vernon, but over a
few visits to this area in the last 10
years, the species has not been found,
even under favorable conditions.
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Arkansas has 25 documented
historical occurrences of Calopogon
oklahomensis, of these, 17 are extant
populations (Witsell 2009, pers. comm.).
Illinois has seven historical
specimens, which perhaps were
originally misidentified as Calopogon
pulchellus and C. tuberosus, then, in
1999, determined to be C. oklahomensis
by Goldman (Phillippe 2010, pers.
comm.). Currently, Illinois has two
extant populations of C. oklahomensis
(Phillippe et al. 2008, p. 11; Armstrong
2010, pers. comm.; Kieninger 2010,
pers. comm.; Catchpole 2010, pers.
comm.).
There is one record of Calopogon
oklahomensis collected in Lake County,
Indiana. It was originally (in 1912)
identified in the Indiana Natural
Heritage Database as C. pulchellus,
however, it was later (in 1999)
determined to be C. oklahomensis by
Goldman (Phillippe 2010, pers. comm.).
Indiana has records of the closely
related congener, C. puchellus, that
were collected prior to C. oklahomensis
being described as a unique species
(Deam 1940, p. 347; King 2009, pers.
comm.). We have no information of
extant C. oklahomensis populations in
Indiana.
There are no known extant
populations of Calopogon oklahomensis
in Iowa. Our information indicates that
only historical records exist, but we do
not know how many historical records
exist. The species is believed to be
extirpated in the State (Pearson 2009,
pers. comm.).
Kansas has one historical record of
Calopogon oklahomensis from Cherokee
County, dated May 1980 (Freeman 2011,
pers. comm.). This specimen was
annotated as C. oklahomensis by
Goldman in 1999 (Freeman 2008, pers.
comm.). This site and other prairie hay
meadows in the county have been
searched for C. oklahomensis over the
past 30 years, with no populations of
this species located (Freeman 2011,
pers. comm.).
Mississippi has three known extant
populations of Calopogon oklahomensis
located at the Camp Shelby Joint Forces
Training Center (Camp Shelby), a
National Guard installation operating
under a special use permit on U.S.
Forest Service land. These three
populations are separated by more than
1 mile (1.6 kilometers (km)) each and
occur in three separate watersheds;
therefore, they are considered separate
populations (Wiggers 2011b, pers.
comm.). The Poplar Creek population
includes four separate colonies. One
colony was last surveyed in 2004, with
an estimated population of 1 to 10
individuals (Wiggers 2011b, pers.
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comm.; 2011c, pers. comm.). The
second and third colonies were last
surveyed in 2006, with one population
estimated at 11 to 50 individuals and
the other population estimated at 101 to
1,000 individuals (Wiggers 2011b, pers.
comm.; 2011c, pers. comm.). The fourth
Poplar Creek colony size is unknown
(Wiggers 2011c, pers. comm.). The
minimum population size of all the
Poplar Creek colonies is estimated at
113 individuals (Wiggers 2011c, pers.
comm.).
In Mississippi, the Clear Creek
population includes two colonies, one
of which was last surveyed in 1999,
with a population estimate of 11 to 50
individual plants, and the other colony
last surveyed in 2004, with a population
estimate of 1 to 10 individuals (Wiggers
2011b, pers. comm.; 2011c, pers.
comm.). The minimum population size
of all Clear Creek colonies is 12
individuals (Wiggers 2011c, pers.
comm.).
The Pearces Creek population in
Mississippi consists of two colonies of
Calopogon oklahomensis, both with a
population estimate of 1 to 10
individuals, with one colony last
surveyed in 1999 and the other last
surveyed in 2004 (Wiggers 2011b, pers.
comm.; 2011c, pers. comm.). The
minimum population size of both
Pearces Creek colonies is two
individuals (Wiggers 2011c, pers.
comm.). The total Camp Shelby
population estimate of C. oklahomensis
is 127 individuals; however, this is only
a rough estimate, as current population
counts are unavailable (Wiggers 2011b,
pers. comm.). Within Camp Shelby,
there may be other areas of C.
oklahomensis located within an ‘‘impact
area’’ (an area containing unexploded
ordnance), which has been protected
from active training, draining, and
clearing since World War I (Wiggers
2011a, pers. comm.; Lyman 2011a, pers.
comm.). Surveys have not been
conducted in this ‘‘impact area’’ due to
its restricted access (Wiggers 2011b,
pers. comm.).
In Missouri, prior to describing
Calopogon oklahomensis as distinct
from C. tuberosus, C. oklahomensis was
not tracked in the Missouri Natural
Heritage Database. Once C. tuberosus
was split into the two species, Missouri
began tracking only the rarer and rangelimited C. tuberosus (Yatskievych 2009,
pers. comm.; Kruse 2010, pers. comm.);
however, the Missouri Botanical Garden
indicates that Missouri has at least 11
sites with extant populations of C.
oklahomensis (Yatskievych 2009, pers.
comm.). At least 10 of the 11 extant sites
occur on public lands that are managed
as native prairie, however, there are no
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61311
current studies in Missouri on
population size, success of
reproduction, or other indicators of
status (Yatskievych 2009, pers. comm.).
Oklahoma has 24 historical
populations of Calopogon oklahomensis
from 15 counties, with 6 sites having
extant populations, 5 of which occur on
private land (Hoagland et al. 2004,
entire; Buthod 2010, pers. comm.). The
site of the sixth C. oklahomensis
population in Oklahoma is owned by
the State of Oklahoma and used by the
Department of Corrections as the Jess
Dunn Prison.
Tennessee acknowledges a single
occurrence of Calopogon oklahomensis
in the Tennessee Natural Heritage
Program Geographic Information System
(GIS) database. It was last observed in
1937, with no details available in the
record regarding location or abundance
(Call 2009, pers. comm.). To our
knowledge, the species has not been
recorded in Tennessee for more than 20
years, and is possibly extirpated from
the State (Call 2009, pers. comm.).
Texas has historical records of 12 to
13 specimens of C. oklahomensis from
12 counties, including information from
the University of Texas herbarium
database, which lists only 5 specimens
collected from 1927 to 1965 (Poole
2008, pers. comm.). It is believed that
some of the sites from where the
specimens were collected may no longer
be extant (Poole 2008, pers. comm.; Best
2009, pers. comm.). The most recent
specimen from Brazos County, Texas,
was last observed by Goldman in 2004
(Goldman 2008a, p. 9). Although this
species is not tracked in Texas, we
assume presence of C. oklahomensis at
the Brazos County site because it was
last observed in 2004, although no
further surveys have taken place since
then. We acknowledge that there may be
other extant sites of C. oklahomensis in
Texas, but because this species is not
tracked in Texas, we have no
information other than what is stated
above.
In Wisconsin, records indicate that
Calopogon oklahomensis was
historically known from seven sites in
five counties between 1872 and 2005
(Anderson 2010a, pers. comm.;
Anderson 2010b, pers. comm.).
Currently, Greene Prairie at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Arboretum supports perhaps the only
extant population of C. oklahomensis in
Wisconsin (Anderson 2010a, pers.
comm.). The plants at Greene Prairie
originated from a site in Sauk County
near Sauk City, but the exact location is
unknown. Wisconsin’s historical
collections do not contain specific site
information other than they originated
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from Dane, Grant, Monroe, Sauk, and
Waukesha Counties (Anderson 2010a,
pers. comm.; Anderson 2010b, pers.
comm.). Although the Arboretum
population is not naturally occurring, it
is considered a self-sustaining
introduction and relocation, which is
valuable for biodiversity conservation
(O’Connor 2011, pers. comm.).
The Minnesota Department of Natural
Resource’s Rare Features Database
contains no records for this species
(Delphey 2009, pers. comm.).
Based on the information described
above regarding locations of extant
populations, we believe the current
range of Calopogon oklahomensis
includes the seven States of Arkansas,
Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin.
The State Natural Heritage programs
and NatureServe (NatureServe 2010c, p.
3) rank Calopogon oklahomensis as S1
in Illinois, Mississippi, and Texas. The
S1 designation indicates the species is
considered critically imperiled because
of extreme rarity (5 or fewer occurrences
or less than 1,000 individuals) or
because of extreme vulnerability to
extinction due to some natural or
human-made factor. The Arkansas and
Oklahoma State Natural Heritage
Programs rank C. oklahomensis
populations in Arkansas and Oklahoma
as S2, meaning the species is considered
imperiled because of rarity (6 to 20
occurrences of less than 3,000
individuals) or because of vulnerability
to extinction due to some natural or
man-made factor (NatureServe 2010c, p.
3). In Wisconsin, the State Natural
Heritage program ranks C. oklahomensis
as SH, meaning the species is possibly
extirpated in that State (NatureServe
2010c. p. 3). These State heritage
program rankings are not legal
designations and do not confer State
regulatory protection to this species.
This species is either not State ranked
or is under review in the States of Iowa,
Minnesota, and Missouri (NatureServe
2010c). In Missouri, the species is not
tracked by the State; however, status
surveys for Calopogon oklahomensis are
being conducted in 2011 (Yatskievych
2009, pers. comm.; 2011, pers. comm.).
Based on the available information, as
summarized above, we believe the
historical range of Calopogon
oklahomensis includes 11 States
(Arkansas, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and
Wisconsin), and the current range
includes 7 States (Arkansas, Illinois,
Missouri, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Texas,
and Wisconsin).
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Habitat
Calopogon oklahomensis inhabits a
variety of habitats, including moist to
seasonally dry-mesic prairies; tallgrass
and coastal prairies; prairiehaymeadows; upland prairies; savannas;
open woodlands (e.g., post oakblackjack oak woodlands); hillside
seepage bogs; edges of bogs; and
occasionally pine plantations, acidic
wet barrens, or claypan savannas
(Goldman 1995, p. 40; Brown 2006, p.
22). The species is not found in the
wetter habitats preferred by most of the
other species in the genus (Goldman
1995, p. 40; Brown 2006, p. 22;
Goldman 2008, p. 2). It is also found in
prairie remnants such as those beside
railroads, as well as other mowed
meadows, savannas (e.g., longleaf pine
(Pinus palustris) savannas), and wetland
savanna borders (NatureServe 2010b, p.
10). The upland prairies often contain
‘‘pimple mounds’’ (naturally occurring
low, flattened, circular to oval,
domelike, mounds composed of loose,
sandy loam or loamy sand lying either
on a more or less flat or slightly, but
noticeably depressed, clayey B horizon
(subsoil layer)). In Arkansas, Missouri,
and Oklahoma, the species occupies
moist to seasonally dry-mesic prairies
and high-quality hay meadow
associated with pimple mounds
(Goldman 2008a, p. 8).
Biology
Calopogon oklahomensis occurs
sporadically at known locations, with
the number of flowering plants varying
dramatically from year to year. The
number of flowering plants may depend
on management practices; for example,
abundance of C. oklahomensis increases
significantly after a fire has occurred
(Goldman 2008a, p. 10). Calopogon
oklahomensis appears to thrive under
relatively frequent fires (every 1 to 3
years), particularly dormant-season
burns; late-season haymeadow mowing,
where most or all of the above-ground
vegetation is removed once every 1 to 2
years, with no thatch left behind; and
light grazing (Osborne 2010, pers.
comm.). The species also appears to
respond favorably to summer haying
(late June or July) on prairie remnants
managed as hayfields (Osborne 2010,
pers. comm.).
Goldman (2008a, pp. 4–5) describes
the genus Calopogon as having two
growing points, which means that the
plant has two chances for reproductive
success in a given year. He has observed
that if both growing points initiate, they
do so at different times, one earlier in
the season and one slightly later. When
dormant, Calopogon corms can survive
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some drying, but if drought or other
disturbance strikes while they are
forming new leaves or flowering, they
can be severely damaged or killed. The
second growing point, by initiating up
to a few months later when
environmental conditions may have
improved, seems to be an adaptation to
survive springtime drought or other
disturbance such as fires or grazing
(Goldman 2008a, p. 5). Most other
vascular plants survive such
disturbance by resprouting from
multiple tiny, dormant buds, or forming
new buds. Therefore, Calopogon may be
more vulnerable to local extirpation
because of the limitation of having only
two growing points (Goldman 2008a,
p. 5).
Summary of Information Pertaining to
the Five Factors
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533)
and implementing regulations (50 CFR
part 424) set forth procedures for adding
species to, removing species from, or
reclassifying species on the Federal
Lists of Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife and Plants. Under section
4(a)(1) of the Act, a species may be
determined to be endangered or
threatened based on any of the
following five factors:
(A) The present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range;
(B) Overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes;
(C) Disease or predation;
(D) The inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms; or
(E) Other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence.
In making this finding, information
pertaining to Calopogon oklahomensis
in relation to the five factors provided
in section 4(a)(1) of the Act is discussed
below. In considering what factors
might constitute threats, we must look
beyond the mere exposure of the species
to the factor to determine whether the
species responds to the factor in a way
that causes actual impacts to the
species. If there is exposure to a factor,
but no response, or only a positive
response, that factor is not a threat. If
there is exposure and the species
responds negatively, the factor may be
a threat and we then attempt to
determine how significant a threat it is.
If the threat is significant, it may drive
or contribute to the risk of extinction of
the species such that the species
warrants listing as threatened or
endangered as those terms are defined
by the Act. This does not necessarily
require empirical proof of a threat. The
combination of exposure and some
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corroborating evidence of how the
species is likely impacted could suffice.
The mere identification of factors that
could impact a species negatively is not
sufficient to compel a finding that
listing is appropriate; we require
evidence that these factors are operative
threats that act on the species to the
point that the species meets the
definition of threatened or endangered
under the Act.
In making our 12-month finding on
the petition to list Calopogon
oklahomensis, we considered and
evaluated the best available scientific
and commercial information.
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Factor A. The Present or Threatened
Destruction, Modification, or
Curtailment of Its Habitat or Range
Some habitats of Calopogon
oklahomensis, such as tallgrass prairie,
remnant prairie, prairie-haymeadow,
and mowed meadow, have historically
suffered destruction across their entire
range through development, plowing,
lowering of the water table, fire
suppression, construction, and
conversion to nonnative grasses.
Appropriate management for these
habitats (typically burning or haying) to
prevent the encroachment of woody
vegetation and nonnative species is
crucial for the continued existence of
prairie-dependent species within these
habitats, including C. oklahomensis.
Because these habitats are the preferred
habitat of C. oklahomensis, and because
proper management of prairie habitat on
public land cannot be ensured, and is
even less ensured on private land, it is
reasonable to conclude that overall
habitat of C. oklahomensis has been
modified and destroyed in the past, and
could foreseeably continue into the
future. However, this threat does not
rise to the level where listing C.
oklahomensis as threatened or
endangered is warranted, as discussed
below.
There are 41 extant sites supporting
populations of Calopogon oklahomensis
within the 7-State range (Arkansas,
Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin) of the
species (Table 3). Many of the remaining
populations of C. oklahomensis occur
within high-quality habitat, which is
protected from further modification and
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destruction by various measures, as
further described below. In Arkansas, 9
of the 17 extant occurrences of C.
oklahomensis occur in high-quality,
unplowed tallgrass prairie remnants
(Leone 2011, pers. comm.; Witsell 2010,
pers. comm.; Osborne 2010, pers.
comm.), which are currently protected
and managed on 9 State Natural Areas
in five counties. The Arkansas Natural
Heritage Commission (ANHC) is
charged with the responsibility of
protecting the best of the last remaining
vestiges of the State’s natural
communities through its System of
Natural Areas. Natural Areas are lands
specifically managed to preserve, and
sometimes restore, rare natural
communities. These nine State Natural
Areas have specific ‘‘conservation
visions’’ that guide site management in
maintaining native prairie communities
(ANHC 2010, pp. 10–88). In addition,
ANHC rules and regulations prohibit the
collection or removal of plants
(including fruits, nuts, or edible plant
parts), animals, fungi, rocks, minerals,
fossils, archaeological artifacts, soil,
downed wood, or any other natural
material, alive or dead (ANHC 2010,
p. 1). Although these ‘‘conservation
visions’’ do not specifically address
management for C. oklahomensis, they
include appropriate management for the
continued existence of C. oklahomensis
at these sites, through burning or haying
to prevent the encroachment of woody
vegetation and nonnative species.
Of the 9 extant Calopogon
oklahomensis populations within
Arkansas State Natural Areas, C.
oklahomensis was last observed in 2002
at Baker Prairie with 75 to 100 plants in
bloom, in Searles Prairie in 2003 with
at least 35 plants in bloom, Chesney
Prairie in 2003 had several hundred C.
oklahomensis plants in bloom, and
Cherokee Prairie had several hundred to
at least 1,000 plants in 2003 (Arkansas
Natural Heritage Commission (ANHC)
2011). In 2008, three other C.
oklahomensis populations surveyed at
three different Natural Areas (Downs
Prairie, Konecny Prairie, and Roth
Prairie) had 5, 12, and more than 50
blooming plants, respectively (ANHC
2011). The H.E. Flanagan Prairie,
surveyed in 2007, had hundreds of C.
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61313
oklahomensis blooms, and the Railroad
Prairie was surveyed in 2009, with 3 C.
oklahomensis plants found (ANHC
2011).
One Calopogon oklahomensis
population in Arkansas occurs on the
Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center
(Fort Chaffee). Management specifically
for C. oklahomensis does not occur at
Fort Chaffee; however, Fort Chaffee has
the largest known population of the
federally endangered American burying
beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) and is
implementing a ‘‘Conservation Plan for
the American Burying Beetle’’ (CPABB
2010) (Leone 2011, pers. comm.). The
goal of the Conservation Plan is to
maintain existing populations of the
American burying beetle, with
sustainable habitat. American burying
beetles require large tracts of open oak
woodland and prairie, some of which
are also occupied by C. oklahomensis at
Fort Chaffee. The Conservation Plan
outlines a strategy that limits long-term
and short-term habitat loss,
fragmentation, and degradation to the
greatest extent possible (CPABB 2010, p.
31). Another strategy in the
Conservation Plan uses fire as a
management tool and evaluates the
effects that fire has on the habitat
(CPABB 2010, p. 36). Such fire
management is also beneficial to C.
oklahomensis habitat (Goldman 2008a,
p. 10).
Because the Conservation Plan
manages for American burying beetle
habitat, including prairie, its
implementation also will benefit
Calopogon oklahomensis, which occurs
in that prairie habitat. Although the
Conservation Plan does not specifically
address C. oklahomensis, this plan
includes appropriate management tools
to manage for the continued existence of
C. oklahomensis at this site.
Arkansas has seven additional
Calopogon oklahomensis populations
that occur on private land (Table 3), of
which four are managed as hayfield, two
are managed for prairie, and one is
mowed (Leone 2011, pers. comm.).
These seven populations are not
currently protected from conversion to
other uses, and habitat destruction or
modification may be a threat to these C.
oklahomensis populations.
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TABLE 3—EXTANT CALOPOGON OKLAHOMENSIS POPULATION INFORMATION BY STATE
State
Est. extant
pops.
Site/location NA
= Natural Area
Land ownership
Current habitat management plan
and future plans
No ................
No ................
1
Cherokee Prairie
NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Chesney Prairie
NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Downs Prairie
NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
H. E. Flanagan
Prairie NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Konecny Prairie
NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Railroad Prairie
NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Roth Prairie NA
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Searles Prairie
NA.
AR Natural Heritage Commission.
AR ................
1
Baker Prairie NA
AR Natural Heritage Commission and The
Nature Conservancy (TNC).
AR ................
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AR ................
1
Ft. Chaffee Military Base.
Department of
Defense.
AR ................
1
Gray ...................
Private ................
The conservation vision is to restore and protect biological diversity representative of tallgrass
prairies of the western Arkansas
Valley by maintaining natural
ecosystem processes.
The conservation vision is to restore and protect biological diversity representative of Northwest Arkansas prairies by maintaining natural ecosystem processes.
The conservation vision is to maintain representative communities
and species related to the
landform, hydrology, fire, and
other ecosystem processes of
the Grand Prairie.
The conservation vision is to restore and protect the biological
diversity
representative
of
tallgrass prairies of the western
Arkansas Valley by maintaining
natural ecosystem processes.
The conservation vision is to maintain the integrity of this remnant
of tallgrass prairie community
representative of the vegetation
and biota of the Grand Prairie.
The conservation vision is to maintain a representative transect of
communities and species related
to the landform, hydrology, fire
and other ecosystem processes
of the Grand Prairie of eastern
Arkansas.
The conservation vision is to work
in conjunction with Arkansas
State University to maintain the
viability and associated biological diversity of a remnant
tallgrass prairie in the Grand
Prairie of eastern Arkansas.
The conservation vision is to protect the biological diversity characteristic of a tallgrass prairie
remnant on the Springfield Plateau of the Ozark Mountains.
The conservation vision is to maintain a mosaic of prairie communities and associated ecological
diversity buffered from the
stresses of nearby development.
C. oklahomensis falls on a tract
owned by TNC.
This site has an Integrated Natural
Resource Management Plan and
an American burying beetle
(ABB) Conservation Plan. The
goal of the ABB plan is to maintain existing populations with
sustainable habitat. ABBs require large tracts of open oak
woodland and prairie.
Managed as prairie ........................
AR ................
1
Crossett Airport ..
Private ................
Mowed ............................................
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Protection
status
Threats
Yes.
Yes.
Yes ...............
Factor B (poaching at one
State Natural
Area).
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
04OCP1
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
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TABLE 3—EXTANT CALOPOGON OKLAHOMENSIS POPULATION INFORMATION BY STATE—Continued
State
Est. extant
pops.
Site/location NA
= Natural Area
Land ownership
Current habitat management plan
and future plans
Protection
status
Threats
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
Factor A (No
land protection
status).
Factor C (predation).
1
Burt Prairie .........
Private ................
Managed as hayfield ......................
No ................
AR ................
1
McFarren ...........
Private ................
Managed as hayfield ......................
No ................
AR ................
1
Stump ................
Private ................
Managed as hayfield ......................
No ................
AR ................
1
Halijan ................
Private ................
Managed as hayfield ......................
No ................
AR ................
1
Weber Prairie .....
Private ................
Managed as hayfield ......................
No ................
IL ..................
1
Hitt’s Siding Prairie Nature Preserve.
............................
1
Braidwood Nature Preserve.
MO ...............
8
............................
MO ...............
2
Coyne Prairie .....
MO ...............
1
............................
Managed by the Nature Preserves
with regular burns, and control
of exotic species (woody and
herbaceous).
............................ Managed by the Forest Preserve
District of Will County with regular burns, and control of exotic
species (woody and herbaceous).
2 to 3 sites
Managed by MO Department of
owned by TNC.
Conservation for prairie habitat.
MO Prairie Foun- Managed for prairie habitat ............
dation.
Private ................ No management plan in effect ......
Yes ...............
IL ..................
MS ................
3
Camp Shelby
Joint Forces
Training Center.
U.S. Forest Service/Dept. of
Defense with
special use
permit.
OK ................
5
............................
Private ................
OK ................
1
............................
TX ................
1
College Station,
Brazos County.
State of Oklahoma/Dept. of
Corrections.
City owned park
WI .................
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AR ................
1
Greene Prairie ...
Total ......
41
Illinois has two extant Calopogon
oklahomensis populations, which occur
within designated Illinois Nature
Preserves (Table 3). This designation
affords land protection only to highquality natural areas. Dedication as a
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University of Wisconsin Arboretum.
No known management plan in effect, however portions of these
populations receive incidental
protection because they are located within a 165 foot buffer for
the federally endangered Isoetes
louisianensis
(Louisiana
quillwort).
No known management plans in
effect.
Frm 00029
Fmt 4702
Yes.
Yes.
No ................
Factor A (No
land protection
status; lack of
management).
Yes.
No ................
No known management plans in
effect.
No known management plan in effect.
No ................
Managed for prairie habitat ............
Factor A (No
land protection
status; development and/or
conversion to
fescue for
grazing use).
?
Yes.
Nature Preserve is the strongest
protection given to land in Illinois, and
provides permanent protection. The
landowner retains custody of the
property, but voluntarily restricts future
uses of the land in perpetuity to
PO 00000
Yes.
Sfmt 4702
Factor A (No
land protection
status; development; lack of
appropriate
management).
preserve its natural state and to
perpetuate natural conditions. Illinois
Nature Preserves are managed for native
plant communities. This type of
management is appropriate for the
continued existence of C. oklahomensis
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at these sites, as the species occurs
within native prairie communities.
In Mississippi, all three extant
Calopogon oklahomensis populations
occur on U.S. Forest Service (USFS)
land (Table 3), with a special use permit
issued to the Camp Shelby. Under the
Act, the USFS must ensure that
activities they implement, fund, or
permit are not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of a listed species.
Federal agencies are also instructed to
implement programs for the
conservation of listed species. Portions
of two of the C. oklahomensis
populations (Poplar Creek and Clear
Creek) in Mississippi and on USFS land
receive incidental protection from
future forest clearing and development
because they are located within the 165foot (ft) (50-meter (m)) buffer of the
federally endangered Isoetes
louisianensis (Louisiana quillwort)
(Lyman 2011, pers. comm.; Wiggers
2011b, pers. comm.). This buffer was
established in the Federal recovery plan
for I. louisianensis and includes
restricted timber harvest and riparian
zone protection to ensure that habitat
conditions are not altered, such as
changes in ambient light, increase in
sediment load from runoff, or alteration
of stream flow from debris deposition
(USFWS 1996, p. 18). Because these
populations of C. oklahomensis occur
within the 165-ft (50-m) buffer for I.
louisianensis, the protections in place
for the quillwort also protect those
portions of the Poplar Creek and Clear
Creek populations of C. oklahomensis
(FEIS 2008).
Missouri has experienced declines in
prairie habitat (less than 0.5 percent of
original prairie acreage remains),
possibly resulting in Calopogon
oklahomensis being uncommon in this
State. At least 10 of the 11 extant sites
in Missouri occur on public lands
managed as native prairie (Table 3)
(Yatskievych 2009, pers. comm.).
Although C. oklahomensis is considered
uncommon in Missouri, it is not
considered so rare as to be tracked.
Therefore, population status studies in
Missouri have not been conducted. Even
so, Yatskievych (2009, pers. comm.)
believes the existing sites are reasonably
secure. Kruse (2010, pers. comm.)
believes that management of public
prairies will ensure the stable and
continued existence of Missouri’s
populations of C. oklahomensis (Kruse
2010, pers. comm.). This species is
reported from a number of prairie
preserves in southwestern Missouri, and
likely is more secure in Missouri than
any other State (Goldman 2008a, p. 3).
Goldman (2008a, p. 8) believes
Oklahoma had the greatest number of
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records of the species from the last 30
years; however, there are currently six
extant sites of Calopogon oklahomensis
in Oklahoma (Table 3) (Buthod 2010,
pers. comm.) Buthod (2010, pers.
comm.) indicates that portions of C.
oklahomensis habitat in Oklahoma are
being converted to fescue and being
used for grazing, as five of the six extant
populations are on private land. The site
of the sixth C. oklahomensis population
in Oklahoma is owned by the State of
Oklahoma and used by the Department
of Corrections (Table 3) as the Jess Dunn
Prison. Current information indicates
that the prison grounds have no native
grass pasture and are actively hayed and
growing fescue (Frye 2011, pers.
comm.). In 2009 and 2010, personnel
from the Oklahoma Biological Survey
and the Oklahoma Natural Heritage
collected information on the status of
extant C. oklahomensis populations on
private land in Oklahoma (Buthod 2010,
pers. comm.). Two populations of C.
oklahomensis exist in Bryan County,
Oklahoma. One of those population’s
sites is described as having native
prairie hay meadow elements, but C.
oklahomensis could not be located at
this site (Buthod 2011, pers. comm.).
This site is on the outskirts of Durant,
Oklahoma, where the land is currently
not in use, but exhibits evidence of
disturbance from pipeline construction,
and is expected to be developed for
commercial or private use (Buthod
2011, pers. comm.). The second C.
oklahomensis population in Bryan
County, Oklahoma, was surveyed in
May 2010. It has some native prairie hay
meadow elements, but is used for hay.
Calopogon oklahomensis could not be
located at that site in 2010 (Buthod
2011, pers. comm.).
Two other Calopogon oklahomensis
populations occur in LeFlore County,
Oklahoma. Surveys conducted in May
2009 indicated 20 plants of C.
oklahomensis at one LeFlore County
site, which is mowed for hay (Buthod
2011, pers. comm.). The other site in
LeFlore County had one C.
oklahomensis plant observed in native
prairie hay meadow with mima mounds
(natural domelike soil mounds) (Buthod
2011, pers. comm.).
The fifth Calopogon oklahomensis
population in Oklahoma that is on
private land is in Muskogee County.
Over 50 stems of C. oklahomensis (80
percent in bloom) were seen in May
2009 (Buthod 2011, pers. comm.). The
site is mowed for hay and also has mima
mounds.
The destruction, modification, or
curtailment of Calopogon oklahomensis
habitat may be a threat for at least five
of Oklahoma’s six extant populations
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because they occur on private land. The
private land, as currently managed, does
not afford the species any land
protection status or certainty on future
land use, nor does it provide an
obligation for management, such as
burning or mowing, conducive to the
continued existence of C. oklahomensis.
In Texas, there is one extant
population of C. oklahomensis located
in Brazos County, which exists in a cityowned park near College Station, Texas
(Goldman 2008a, p. 9). We have no
information on the management of the
site other than Goldman (2008a, p. 9)
believes the site is not burned, even
occasionally, and, therefore, is
experiencing tree and shrub
encroachment.
In Wisconsin, Calopogon
oklahomensis occurs within the
University of Wisconsin Arboretum’s
Greene Prairie. Greene Prairie is not
specifically managed for C.
oklahomensis, but it is managed to
maintain native prairie communities,
which is the preferred habitat of C.
oklahomensis.
Summary of Factor A
The destruction and modification of
Calopogon oklahomensis habitat,
specifically tallgrass prairie, remnant
prairie, prairie-haymeadow, and mowed
meadow, has historically occurred
rangewide. Furthermore, the destruction
and modification of some types of C.
oklahomensis habitat (tallgrass prairie,
remnant prairie, prairie haymeadow,
and mowed meadow) currently
continues rangewide. However, of the
41 extant C. oklahomensis populations,
26 are on land that is protected, and
although those sites may not be
managed specifically for C.
oklahomensis, the management focuses
on the continued existence of native
prairie communities, which benefits C.
oklahomensis as its preferred habitat is
native prairie communities. Therefore,
we believe this threat may only be
applicable to 15 of the 41 extant
populations in 4 (Arkansas, Oklahoma,
Missouri, and Texas) of the 7 States
where the species currently occurs
(Table 3).
Of the 15 extant populations that may
be threatened by destruction or
modification of habitat, 14 populations
occur on private land with no land
protection status, and we have no
information on the land protection
status for one other population that
occurs on land owned by the State of
Oklahoma Department of Corrections.
The 14 populations that occur on
private land, and that are documented
as having no land protection status, may
be threatened by destruction or
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modification of habitat from drainage,
clearing, plowing, development, and
lack of management, including the
conversion to fescue for grazing (Table
3). In Arkansas, where 7 of those 14
populations occur, 4 sites are managed
as hayfield, 2 as prairie, and 1 is
mowed. The management of these seven
extant Calopogon oklahomensis
populations on private land may be
adequate to maintain their continued
existence.
Fourteen populations of Calopogon
oklahomensis occur on private land,
which are not protected from
destruction or modification of habitat.
Habitat destruction and modification,
however, have not been linked to
widespread declines throughout the
range of the species. The majority of C.
oklahomensis populations (26
populations) occur on protected, public
land that is managed for native plant
communities. These 26 protected
populations occur in 5 (Arkansas,
Mississippi, Missouri, Illinois, and
Wisconsin) of the 7 States within the
species’ current range. Furthermore,
although the 14 populations that occur
on private land are not specifically
protected from habitat destruction, we
have no information indicating that
these 14 populations are expected to be
destroyed in the future. Therefore, a
review of the best available information
indicates that although some
populations of C. oklahomensis may be
threatened by habitat destruction or
modification, the continued existence of
the species is not threatened throughout
all of its range by the present or
threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range, or
likely to become so.
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Factor B. Overutilization for
Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or
Educational Purposes
In Arkansas, poaching of Calopogon
oklahomensis was observed at one State
Natural Area (Down’s Prairie) in recent
years (Osborne 2010, pers. comm.). In
this case, a number of obvious and fresh
shovel holes were observed in the center
of a patch of C. oklahomensis during the
blooming period (Osborne 2010, pers.
comm.). The poaching was noted as a
one-time event, and C. oklahomensis
persisted at this location after the
incident (Osborne 2011, pers. comm.).
This State Natural Area is regularly
monitored with no additional poaching
observed, but it is difficult to determine
the true impact of this one-time
poaching event as population numbers
of C. oklahomensis fluctuate greatly
from one year to the next (Osborne
2011, pers. comm.).
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We have no other information
regarding overutilization of this species
for commercial, recreational, scientific,
or educational purposes. Because
poaching of plants is known to have
occurred at only 1 extant Calopogon
oklahomensis population and does not
appear to have adversely impacted that
population, poaching does not
constitute a threat to the species
throughout its range. In summary, a
review of the best available information
indicates that C. oklahomensis is not
threatened by overutilization for
commercial, recreational, scientific, or
educational purposes throughout its
range.
Factor C. Disease or Predation
Disease and herbivory by insects,
wildlife, or livestock was documented
for Calopogon oklahomensis at only one
location. At Hitt’s Siding Prairie Nature
Preserve, the State of Illinois has
documented deer browse on the species
and seed capsule destruction by weevils
(Masi 2010, pers. comm.). We do not
know how widespread this herbivory
may be or if it resulted in detrimental
effects on C. oklahomensis as deer and
weevils naturally feed on many plant
species. We have no other evidence of
unnatural levels of predation for this
species, and we do not have any
information indicating that disease
impacts C. oklahomensis. In summary, a
review of the best available information
indicates that C. oklahomensis is not
threatened by disease or predation
throughout its range.
Factor D. The Inadequacy of Existing
Regulatory Mechanisms
There are no Federal laws that
specifically protect Calopogon
oklahomensis. At the State level, of the
seven States within the current range of
the species, C. oklahomensis is
currently protected by State regulations
only in Illinois, where it is State listed
as endangered. The species is also State
listed as endangered in Tennessee, but
the species is believed to be extirpated
there.
The Illinois Endangered Species
Protection Act requires State and
municipal agencies taking actions that
might affect State or federally listed
species (including plants) to avoid,
minimize, or mitigate impacts to the
listed species (https://www.ilga.gov/
legislation/lcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=1730&
ChapterID=43&Print=True accessed on
09/06/2011). Furthermore, it is unlawful
in the State of Illinois for any person to
take plants on the List of Endangered
and Threatened Species in Illinois
without the express written permission
of the landowner, or to sell or offer for
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61317
sale plants or plant products of
endangered species. In addition,
Illinois’s two extant Calopogon
oklahomensis sites occur on dedicated
Nature Preserve land, which affords the
species additional protections. Only
high-quality natural areas qualify for
this land protection status. Dedication
as a Nature Preserve is the strongest
protection that can be given to land in
Illinois, and provides permanent
protection. The landowner retains
custody of the property, but voluntarily
restricts future uses of the land in
perpetuity to preserve its natural state
and to perpetuate natural conditions.
In the State of Tennessee, Calopogon
oklahomensis is considered endangered
and possibly extirpated, as it has not
been seen in the State for the past 20
years. It is possible that C. oklahomensis
may no longer occur in Tennessee,
however, if it is determined that the
species still persists in Tennessee,
under Tennessee Code Annotated 70–8–
309, it is a violation for any person,
other than the landowner, lessee, or
other person entitled to possession, or
the manager, in the case of publicly
owned land, or a person with the
written permission of the landowner or
manager, to knowingly uproot, dig, take,
remove, damage, destroy, possess, or
otherwise disturb for any purpose any
endangered species (Tenn. Code Ann.
2011).
Despite the lack of regulatory
mechanisms to protect Calopogon
oklahomensis in most States, we found
that there are no threats that are placing
the species at risk (Factors A, B, C, and
E) that require regulatory mechanisms to
protect the species. Therefore, we do not
consider the inadequacy of regulatory
mechanisms a threat to this species. We
conclude that the best scientific and
commercial information available
indicates that Calopogon oklahomensis
is not threatened throughout its range
due to the inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms.
Factor E. Other Natural or Manmade
Factors Affecting Its Continued
Existence
Small, Isolated Populations
Goldman (2008a, pp. 4–5) describes
Calopogon species as having a unique
biology that makes small or widely
scattered populations more vulnerable
to extirpation. A Calopogon corm
contains only two growing points
compared to other vascular plants,
which have multiple tiny, dormant buds
(Goldman 2008a, pp. 4–5). Because
Calopogon does not form new buds, this
species has only two chances for
success at perpetuating the plant
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through the next winter (Goldman
2008a, pp. 4–5). Therefore, the species
may be particularly vulnerable to
stochastic events, which, if they occur at
a certain time (when the buds have
formed or are forming), may destroy the
chance for the plant to reproduce that
year. Historically, the species most
likely relied on a widespread mosaic of
large populations, and thus some
populations were able to escape local or
regional droughts, allowing the species
to persist and recolonize the droughtaffected areas. This species now consists
of smaller populations that may be
geographically disconnected from each
other. Existence in small, isolated
populations can render species
vulnerable to local, regional, or
widespread extirpation due to
uncontrollable natural forces, including
local or regional climate perturbation
such as drought. Such an event could
eliminate most or all of a small
population.
Species that are known from few,
widely dispersed locations are
inherently more vulnerable to extinction
than widespread species because of the
higher risks from genetic bottlenecks,
random demographic fluctuations, and
localized catastrophes such as long-term
drought (Lande 1988, p. 1455; Pimm et
al. 1988, p. 757; Mangel and Tier 1994,
p. 607). These problems are further
magnified when populations are few
and restricted to a limited geographic
area, and the number of individuals is
very small. Populations with these
characteristics face an increased
likelihood of stochastic extinction due
to changes in demography, the
environment, genetics, or other factors,
in a process described as an ‘‘extinction
´
vortex’’ by Gilpin and Soule (1986, pp.
24–25). Small, isolated populations
often exhibit a reduced level of genetic
variability or genetic depression due to
inbreeding, which diminishes the
species’ capacity to adapt and respond
to environmental changes, thereby
lessening the probability of long-term
´
persistence (Soule 1987, pp. 4–7).
Inbreeding depression as the result of
isolated, small populations can result in
death, decreased fertility, smaller body
size, loss of vigor, reduced fitness, and
various chromosome abnormalities
(Smith 1974, p. 350).
Although changes in the environment
may cause populations to fluctuate
naturally, small and low-density
populations are more likely to fluctuate
below a minimum viable population
(the minimum or threshold number of
individuals needed in a population to
persist in a viable state for a given
interval) (Shaffer 1981, p. 131; Shaffer
and Samson 1985, pp. 148–150; Gilpin
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´
and Soule 1986, pp. 25–33). The
problems associated with small
population size and vulnerability to
random demographic fluctuations or
natural catastrophes are further
magnified by synergistic interactions
with other potential threats, such as
those discussed above under Factor A.
Despite evolutionary adaptations for
rarity, habitat loss and degradation
increase a species’ vulnerability to
extinction (Noss and Cooperrider 1994,
pp. 58–62). Historically, Calopogon
oklahomensis was more widespread. An
important benefit of this greater
historical range resulted in an advantage
of redundancy: Additional populations
separated by some distance likely
allowed some populations to be spared
the impacts of localized or more discrete
catastrophic events, such as drought.
However, this advantage of redundancy
may be lost with the reduction in C.
oklahomensis range. Additionally, the
unique biological features of C.
oklahomensis described by Goldman
(2008a, pp. 4–5), which limit
reproduction and the ability to
recolonize, may make this species more
vulnerable to the effects of small
population sizes and fragmented
habitats.
Our assessment of this species’ status
is complicated by the fact that we have
limited information regarding
population sizes of Calopogon
oklahomensis. Although C.
oklahomensis may be considered
uncommon, it is not considered so rare
as to be tracked by most States. (This
may also be due to the recent
recognition of C. oklahomensis as a
distinct species). Therefore, population
status studies have not been regularly
conducted across its range for the 41
extant populations. Throughout the
range of C. oklahomensis (the States of
Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi,
Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and
Wisconsin), we have limited population
status information for three States
(Arkansas, Mississippi and Oklahoma).
Further complicating the availability of
population data, the number of
flowering plants annually can vary
dramatically at any C. oklahomensis
site, with this species not appearing
some years (Witsell 2009, pers. comm.).
In addition, because this species was
relatively recently identified (1995), C.
oklahomensis specimens have been
confused for other Calopogon species,
especially C. tuberosus, due to the
difficulty in distinguishing the two
species (Goldman 1995, pp. 37–41;
Goldman et al. 2004b pp. 37–38;
Anderson 2010a, pers. comm.). For
these reasons, meaningful long-term
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monitoring of the species is difficult,
and long-term population abundance
datasets are absent.
Unique features of the species’
biology increase its vulnerability to
extirpation because it now exists in
small, isolated populations. However,
we have population density information
only for some populations, and for some
years, in three (Arkansas, Mississippi,
and Oklahoma) of the seven States
(Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi,
Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and
Wisconsin) where Calopogon
oklahomensis is believed to be extant.
Populations may be large enough to
withstand stochastic events. In addition,
because C. oklahomensis is not tracked
in four of the seven States where it
exists, and there is, thus, likely
unsurveyed potential habitat, there may
be other, as yet unknown populations of
C. oklahomensis. Although C.
oklahomensis may be exposed to a
potential threat from small population
size and fragmented habitats, we have
no evidence of a response to this factor.
Rangewide, C. oklahomensis habitat is
fragmented compared to historical
occurrences of the species, and it’s
unique biology may make it more
vulnerable to extirpation than other
vascular plants; however, we have no
information that this threat may act on
this species to the point that the species
itself may be at risk or likely to become
so.
Climate Change
The Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) was established
in 1988 by the World Meteorological
Organization and the United Nations
Environment Program in response to
growing concerns about climate change
and, in particular, the effects of global
warming. The IPCC Fourth Assessment
Report (IPCC 2007, entire) synthesized
the projections of the Coupled Model
Intercomparison Project (CMIP) Phase 3,
a coordinated large set of climate model
runs performed at modeling centers
worldwide using 22 global climate
models (Ray et al. 2010, p. 11). Based on
these projections, the IPCC has
concluded that the warming of the
climate system is unequivocal, as
evidenced from observations of
increases in global average air and ocean
temperatures, widespread melting of
snow and ice, and rising global average
sea level (IPCC 2007, pp. 6, 30; Karl et
al. 2009, p. 17). Changes in the global
climate system during the 21st century
are likely to be larger than those
observed during the 20th century (IPCC
2007, p. 19). Several scenarios are
virtually certain or very likely to occur
in the 21st century including: (1) Over
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most land, weather will be warmer, with
fewer cold days and nights, and more
frequent hot days and nights; (2) areas
affected by drought will increase; and
(3) the frequency of warm spells and
heat waves over most land areas will
likely increase (IPCC 2007, pp. 13, 53).
In instances for which a direct cause
and effect relationship between global
climate change and regional effects to a
specific species has not been
documented, we rely primarily on
synthesis documents (e.g., IPCC 2007,
entire; Karl et al. 2009, entire) to inform
our evaluation of the extent that
regional impacts due to climate change
may affect our species. These synthesis
documents present the consensus view
of climate change experts from around
the world. Typically, the projections of
downscaled models agree with the
projections of the global climate models
(Ray et al. 2010, p. 25). Climate change
projections are based on models with
assumptions and are not absolute.
Portions of the global climate change
models can be used to predict changes
at the regional-landscape scale;
however, this approach contains higher
levels of uncertainty than using global
models to examine changes on a larger
scale. The uncertainty arises due to
various factors related to difficulty in
applying data to a smaller scale, and to
the paucity of information in these
models such as regional weather
patterns, local physiographic
conditions, life stages of individual
species, generation time of species, and
species reactions to changing carbon
dioxide levels. Additionally, global
climate models do not incorporate a
variety of plant-related factors that
could be informative in determining
how climate change could affect plant
species (e.g., effect of elevated carbon
dioxide on plant water-use efficiency,
the life stage at which the limit affects
the species (seedling versus adult), the
lifespan of the species, and the
movement of other organisms into the
species’ range) (Shafer et al. 2001, p.
207).
Regional landscapes also can be
examined by downscaling global
climate models. Global climate models
can play an important role in
characterizing the types of changes that
may occur, so that the potential impacts
on natural systems can be assessed
(Shafer et al. 2001, p. 213).
Climate change is likely to affect the
habitat of Calopogon oklahomensis, but
we lack scientific information on what
those changes may ultimately mean for
the status of the species. Climate change
effects are not limited to the timing and
amount of precipitation; other factors
potentially influenced by climate
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change may in turn affect the habitat
conditions for C. oklahomensis. For
example, fire frequency may be
influenced by climate change (Logan
and Powell 2001, p. 170; Westerling et
al. 2006, pp. 942–943) and may in turn
increase suitable habitat of C.
oklahomensis, as it is believed that
frequent burns tend to increase
population numbers of C. oklahomensis
(Goldman 2008, p. 10). Impacts of
specific events on C. oklahomensis and
its habitat have not been analyzed.
Climate change is likely to affect
multiple variables that may influence
the suitability of habitat for C.
oklahomensis. As habitat conditions
have fluctuated in the past, and C.
oklahomensis has persisted throughout
these fluctuations, this species should
be able to persist so long as climate
change does not result in extreme
changes to important characteristics of
the species habitat or life cycle, such as
the complete loss of prairie habitat or
the complete loss of available moisture
at a crucial life stage. At this time, the
best available scientific information
does not indicate that impacts from
climate change are likely to be a threat
to the species to the point that the
species may be at risk or likely to
become so.
Summary of Factor E
Based on our evaluation, we find that
Calopogon oklahomensis is not
threatened by other natural or manmade
factors. Calopogon oklahomensis may
be more vulnerable to other natural or
manmade factors such as genetic
bottlenecks, random demographic
fluctuations, climate change, and
localized catastrophes such as long-term
drought because of its unique biology
and because populations may be small
and fragmented from each other. At this
time, the best available information on
long-term population abundance does
not enable us to make a connection
between the species unique biology and
small population size and the potential
impacts outlined above. For this reason,
a review of the best available
information indicates that threats
considered under Factor E may act on
C. oklahomensis, but not to the point
that the species is at risk now or now
or likely to become so.
Finding
As required by the Act, we considered
the five factors in assessing whether
Calopogon oklahomensis is threatened
or endangered throughout all of its
range. We examined the best scientific
and commercial information available
regarding the past, present, and future
threats faced by Calopogon
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oklahomensis. We reviewed the
petition, information available in our
files, other available published and
unpublished information, and we
consulted with species and habitat
experts, and other Federal, State, and
tribal agencies.
The available information indicates
that C. oklahomensis is a fairly wideranging species with relatively stable,
protected populations in much of its
current range. Based on our review of
the best available scientific and
commercial information pertaining to
the five factors, we find that despite
range reductions that have resulted in
smaller, disconnected populations, and
the species’ reproductive biology, which
may make it more vulnerable to
extirpation through stochastic events,
the threats, either individually or in
combination, are not of sufficient
imminence, intensity, or magnitude to
indicate that Calopogon oklahomensis is
in danger of extinction (endangered), or
likely to become endangered within the
foreseeable future (threatened),
throughout all of its range.
Significant Portion of the Range
Having determined that Calopogon
oklahomensis is not in danger of
extinction or likely to become so within
the foreseeable future throughout all of
its range, we must next consider
whether there are any significant
portions of the range where C.
oklahomensis is in danger of extinction
or is likely to become in danger of
extinction in the foreseeable future. The
Act defines ‘‘endangered species’’ as
any species which is ‘‘in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant
portion of its range,’’ and ‘‘threatened
species’’ as any species which is ‘‘likely
to become an endangered species within
the foreseeable future throughout all or
a significant portion of its range.’’ The
definition of ‘‘species’’ is also relevant
to this discussion. The Act defines the
term ‘‘species’’ as follows: ‘‘The term
‘species’ includes any subspecies of fish
or wildlife or plants, and any distinct
population segment [DPS] of any
species of vertebrate fish or wildlife
which interbreeds when mature.’’ The
phrase ‘‘significant portion of its range’’
(SPR) is not defined by the statute, and
we have never addressed in our
regulations: (1) The consequences of a
determination that a species is either
endangered or likely to become so
throughout a significant portion of its
range, but not throughout all of its
range; or (2) what qualifies a portion of
a range as ‘‘significant.’’
Two recent district court decisions
have addressed whether the significant
portion of its range language allows the
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Service to list or protect less than all
members of a defined ‘‘species’’:
Defenders of Wildlife v. Salazar, 729 F.
Supp. 2d 1207 (D. Mont. 2010),
concerning the Service’s delisting of the
Northern Rocky Mountain gray wolf (74
FR 15123, Apr. 2, 2009); and WildEarth
Guardians v. Salazar, 2010 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 105253 (D. Ariz. Sept. 30, 2010),
concerning the Service’s 2008 finding
on a petition to list the Gunnison’s
prairie dog (73 FR 6660, Feb. 5, 2008).
The Service had asserted in both of
these determinations that it had
authority, in effect, to protect only some
members of a ‘‘species,’’ as defined by
the Act (i.e., species, subspecies, or
DPS), under the Act. Both courts ruled
that the determinations were arbitrary
and capricious on the grounds that this
approach violated the plain and
unambiguous language of the Act. The
courts concluded that reading the
significant portion of its range language
to allow protecting only a portion of a
species’ range is inconsistent with the
Act’s definition of ‘‘species.’’ The courts
concluded that once a determination is
made that a species (i.e., species,
subspecies, or DPS) meets the definition
of ‘‘endangered species’’ or ‘‘threatened
species,’’ it must be placed on the list
in its entirety and the Act’s protections
applied consistently to all members of
that species (subject to modification of
protections through special rules under
sections 4(d) and 10(j) of the Act).
Consistent with that interpretation,
and for the purposes of this finding, we
interpret the phrase ‘‘significant portion
of its range’’ in the Act’s definitions of
‘‘endangered species’’ and ‘‘threatened
species’’ to provide an independent
basis for listing; thus there are two
situations (or factual bases) under which
a species would qualify for listing: a
species may be endangered or
threatened throughout all of its range; or
a species may be endangered or
threatened in only a significant portion
of its range. If a species is in danger of
extinction throughout a significant
portion of its range, it, the species, is an
‘‘endangered species.’’ The same
analysis applies to ‘‘threatened species.’’
Therefore, the consequence of finding
that a species is endangered or
threatened in only a significant portion
of its range is that the entire species
shall be listed as endangered or
threatened, respectively, and the Act’s
protections shall be applied across the
species’ entire range.
We conclude, for the purposes of this
finding, that interpreting the significant
portion of its range phrase as providing
an independent basis for listing is the
best interpretation of the Act because it
is consistent with the purposes and the
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plain meaning of the key definitions of
the Act; it does not conflict with
established past agency practice (i.e.,
prior to the March 16, 2007,
Memorandum Opinion issued by the
Solicitor of the Department of the
Interior, ‘‘The Meaning of ‘In Danger of
Extinction Throughout All or a
Significant Portion of Its Range’ ’’) as no
consistent, long-term agency practice
has been established; and it is consistent
with the judicial opinions that have
most closely examined this issue.
Having concluded that the phrase
‘‘significant portion of its range’’
provides an independent basis for
listing and protecting the entire species,
we next turn to the meaning of
‘‘significant’’ to determine the threshold
for when such an independent basis for
listing exists.
Although there are potentially many
ways to determine whether a portion of
a species’ range is ‘‘significant,’’ we
conclude, for the purposes of this
finding, that the significance of the
portion of the range should be
determined based on its biological
contribution to the conservation of the
species. For this reason, we describe the
threshold for ‘‘significant’’ in terms of
an increase in the risk of extinction for
the species. We conclude that a
biologically based definition of
‘‘significant’’ best conforms to the
purposes of the Act, is consistent with
judicial interpretations, and best
ensures species’ conservation. Thus, for
the purposes of this finding, a portion
of the range of a species is ‘‘significant’’
if its contribution to the viability of the
species is so important that, without
that portion, the species would be in
danger of extinction.
We evaluate biological significance
based on the principles of conservation
biology using the concepts of
redundancy, resiliency, and
representation. Resiliency describes the
characteristics of a species that allow it
to recover from periodic disturbance.
Redundancy (having multiple
populations distributed across the
landscape) may be needed to provide a
margin of safety for the species to
withstand catastrophic events.
Representation (the range of variation
found in a species) ensures that the
species’ adaptive capabilities are
conserved. Redundancy, resiliency, and
representation are not independent of
each other, and some characteristic of a
species or area may contribute to all
three. For example, distribution across a
wide variety of habitats is an indicator
of representation, but it may also
indicate a broad geographic distribution
contributing to redundancy (decreasing
the chance that any one event affects the
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entire species), and the likelihood that
some habitat types are less susceptible
to certain threats, contributing to
resiliency (the ability of the species to
recover from disturbance). None of these
concepts is intended to be mutually
exclusive, and a portion of a species’
range may be determined to be
‘‘significant’’ due to its contributions
under any one of these concepts.
For the purposes of this finding, we
determine if a portion’s biological
contribution is so important that the
portion qualifies as ‘‘significant’’ by
asking whether, without that portion,
the representation, redundancy, or
resiliency of the species would be so
impaired that the species would have an
increased vulnerability to threats to the
point that the overall species would be
in danger of extinction (i.e., would be
‘‘endangered’’). Conversely, we would
not consider the portion of the range at
issue to be ‘‘significant’’ if there is
sufficient resiliency, redundancy, and
representation elsewhere in the species’
range that the species would not be in
danger of extinction throughout its
range if the population in that portion
of the range in question became
extirpated (extinct locally).
We recognize that this definition of
‘‘significant’’ establishes a threshold
that is relatively high. On the one hand,
given that the consequences of finding
a species to be endangered or threatened
in a significant portion of its range
would be listing the species throughout
its entire range, it is important to use a
threshold for ‘‘significant’’ that is
robust. It would not be meaningful or
appropriate to establish a very low
threshold whereby a portion of the
range can be considered ‘‘significant’’
even if only a negligible increase in
extinction risk would result from its
loss. Because nearly any portion of a
species’ range can be said to contribute
some increment to a species’ viability,
use of such a low threshold would
require us to impose restrictions and
expend conservation resources
disproportionately to conservation
benefit: listing would be rangewide,
even if only a portion of the range of
minor conservation importance to the
species is imperiled. On the other hand,
it would be inappropriate to establish a
threshold for ‘‘significant’’ that is too
high. This would be the case if the
standard were, for example, that a
portion of the range can be considered
‘‘significant’’ only if threats in that
portion result in the entire species’
being currently endangered or
threatened. Such a high bar would not
give the significant portion of its range
phrase independent meaning, as the
Ninth Circuit held in Defenders of
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Wildlife v. Norton, 258 F.3d 1136 (9th
Cir. 2001).
The definition of ‘‘significant’’ used in
this finding carefully balances these
concerns. By setting a relatively high
threshold, we minimize the degree to
which restrictions will be imposed or
resources expended that do not
contribute substantially to species
conservation. But we have not set the
threshold so high that the phrase ‘‘in a
significant portion of its range’’ loses
independent meaning. Specifically, we
have not set the threshold as high as it
was under the interpretation presented
by the Service in the Defenders
litigation. Under that interpretation, the
portion of the range would have to be
so important that current imperilment
there would mean that the species
would be currently imperiled
everywhere. Under the definition of
‘‘significant’’ used in this finding, the
portion of the range need not rise to
such an exceptionally high level of
biological significance. (We recognize
that if the species is imperiled in a
portion that rises to that level of
biological significance, then we should
conclude that the species is in fact
imperiled throughout all of its range,
and that we would not need to rely on
the significant portion of its range
language for such a listing.) Rather,
under this interpretation we ask
whether the species would be in danger
of extinction everywhere without that
portion, i.e., if the species was
completely extirpated from that portion.
The range of a species can
theoretically be divided into portions in
an infinite number of ways. However,
there is no purpose to analyzing
portions of the range that have no
reasonable potential to be significant
and threatened or endangered. To
identify only those portions that warrant
further consideration, we determine
whether there is substantial information
indicating that: (1) The portions may be
‘‘significant,’’ and (2) the species may be
in danger of extinction there or likely to
become so within the foreseeable future.
Depending on the biology of the species,
its range, and the threats it faces, it
might be more efficient for us to address
the significance question first or the
status question first. Thus, if we
determine that a portion of the range is
not ‘‘significant,’’ we do not need to
determine whether the species is
endangered or threatened there; if we
determine that the species is not
endangered or threatened in a portion of
its range, we do not need to determine
if that portion is ‘‘significant.’’ In
practice, a key part of the portion status
analysis is whether the threats are
geographically concentrated in some
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way. If the threats to the species are
essentially uniform throughout its
range, no portion is likely to warrant
further consideration. Moreover, if any
concentration of threats applies only to
portions of the species’ range that
clearly would not meet the biologically
based definition of ‘‘significant,’’ such
portions will not warrant further
consideration.
In determining whether Calopogon
oklahomensis is threatened or
endangered in a significant portion of its
range, we first addressed whether any
portions of the range of C. oklahomensis
warrant further consideration. We have
no evidence that any particular
population or portion of the range of C.
oklahomensis is critical to the species’
survival. Calopogon oklahomensis may
actually occur continuously across its
known range, but consistent, range-wide
surveys have not been done. The
population areas delineated in this
document were derived from existing
data and information; however,
information on the species’ distribution
and numbers may change with more
survey effort. Other than the potential
threat of habitat destruction and
modification, which is concentrated on
private land, other potential threats to
the species are essentially uniform
throughout its range. The 14 C.
oklahomensis populations that occur on
private lands, which are not specifically
protected from habitat destruction or
modification, are not contiguous, but
scattered throughout the range of the
species. Other than the land ownership,
there is nothing unique about these 14
populations that would contribute to the
resiliency, redundancy, or
representation of the species—they have
the same biological characteristics that
contribute to the species resiliency to
periodic disturbance; even in their
absence, there are multiple, stable and
protected populations distributed
throughout the species’ range; and they
do not contain unique genetic,
morphological, physiological,
behavioral, or ecological diversity of the
species that is not represented in the
protected populations. Therefore, we
find that C. oklahomensis is not in
danger of extinction now, nor is it likely
to become endangered within the
foreseeable future throughout all or a
significant portion of its range.
Therefore, listing C. oklahomensis as
threatened or endangered under the Act
is not warranted at this time.
We request that you submit any new
information concerning the status of, or
threats to, Calopogon oklahomensis to
our Chicago, Illinois Fish and Wildlife
Office (see ADDRESSES) whenever it
becomes available. New information
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61321
will help us monitor C. oklahomensis
and encourage its conservation. If an
emergency situation develops for C.
oklahomensis or any other species, we
will act to provide immediate
protection.
References Cited
A complete list of references cited is
available on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov and upon request
from the Chicago, Illinois Fish and
Wildlife Office (see ADDRESSES).
Author
The primary author of this notice is a
staff member of the Chicago, Illinois
Ecological Services Field Office.
Authority
The authority for this section is
section 4 of the Endangered Species Act
of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.).
Dated: September 23, 2011.
Rowan Gould,
Acting Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–25530 Filed 10–3–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS–R8–ES–2007–0023; MO
92210–0–0008–B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; 12-Month Finding on a
Petition to List the Amargosa River
Population of the Mojave Fringe-Toed
Lizard as an Endangered or
Threatened Distinct Population
Segment
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 12-month petition
finding.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce a
12-month finding on a petition to list
the Amargosa River population of the
Mojave fringe-toed lizard (Uma
scoparia) located in San Bernardino
County, California, as an endangered or
threatened distinct population segment
(DPS), under the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended (Act). After a
thorough review of all available
scientific and commercial information,
we find that the Amargosa River
population of the Mojave fringe-toed
lizard does not constitute a DPS under
our 1996 policy and, therefore, is not a
listable entity under the Act. We ask the
SUMMARY:
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[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 192 (Tuesday, October 4, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 61307-61321]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-25530]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R3-ES-2010-0034; MO 92210-0-0008]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 12-Month Finding
on a Petition To List Calopogon oklahomensis as Threatened or
Endangered
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 12-month petition finding.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, announce a 12-month
finding on a petition to list Calopogon oklahomensis (Oklahoma grass
pink orchid) under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended.
After review of the best available scientific and commercial
information, we find that listing Calopogon oklahomensis is not
warranted at this time. However, we ask the public to submit to us any
new information that becomes available concerning the threats to
Calopogon oklahomensis or its habitat at any time.
DATES: The finding announced in this document was made on October 4,
2011.
ADDRESSES: This finding is available on the Internet at https://www.regulations.gov at Docket Number FWS-R3-ES-2010-0034. Supporting
documentation used in preparing this finding is available for public
inspection, by appointment, during normal business hours at the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Chicago, Illinois Ecological Services Field
Office, 1250 South Grove, Suite 103, Barrington, IL 60010. Please
submit any new information, materials, comments, or questions
concerning this finding to the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Louise Clemency, Field Supervisor,
Chicago, Illinois Ecological Services Field Office (see ADDRESSES); by
telephone at 847-381-2253; or by facsimile at 847-381-2285. Persons who
[[Page 61308]]
use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), requires
that, for any petition to revise the Federal Lists of Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife and Plants that contains substantial scientific or
commercial information that listing the species may be warranted, we
make a finding within 12 months of the date of receipt of the petition.
In this finding, we will determine that the petitioned action is: (1)
Not warranted, (2) warranted, or (3) warranted, but the immediate
proposal of a regulation implementing the petitioned action is
precluded by other pending proposals to determine whether species are
threatened or endangered, and expeditious progress is being made to add
or remove qualified species from the Federal Lists of Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Section 4(b)(3)(C) of the Act requires
that we treat a petition for which the requested action is found to be
warranted but precluded as though resubmitted on the date of such
finding, that is, requiring a subsequent finding to be made within 12
months. We must publish these 12-month findings in the Federal
Register.
Previous Federal Actions
On May 28, 2008, we received a petition dated May 22, 2008, from
Dr. Douglas Goldman of the Harvard University Herbaria requesting that
Calopogon oklahomensis be listed as threatened or endangered under the
Act. Included in the petition was supporting information regarding the
species' taxonomy and ecology, historical and current distribution,
present status, and actual and potential causes of decline. We
acknowledged the receipt of the petition in a letter to Dr. Douglas
Goldman, dated September 15, 2008. In that letter we also stated that
due to funding constraints in fiscal year 2008, we would not be able to
begin processing the petition at that time.
Funding became available in fiscal year 2010, wherein work began on
the 90-day finding. The 90-day finding was published on August 24, 2010
(75 FR 51969). This notice constitutes the 12-month finding on the May
22, 2008, petition to list Calopogon oklahomensis as threatened or
endangered.
Species Information
Taxonomy and Species Description
Calopogon oklahomensis, commonly known as the Oklahoma grass pink
or prairie grass pink, is a terrestrial species of orchid (family
Orchidaceae) native to the United States and primarily occurring in the
south-central United States. It is a member of the genus Calopogon, a
group of terrestrial orchids known as grass pinks.
The number of species identified as belonging to the genus
Calopogon has varied since the genus was identified by Linnaeus in 1753
(Correll 1978, p. 167). The first species of the current genus
Calopogon, was identified by Linnaeus as Limodorum tuberosum in 1753
(Correll 1978, p. 167). In 1788, Walter originally identified Ophrys
barbata, with Ames (1908) later changing the name to Calopogon
barbatus, which was subsequently accepted and conserved (Correll, 1978,
p. 167). Calopogon multiflorus was first described by Lindley in 1840
(Correll 1978, p. 169). In 1860, Chapman identified and described
Calopogon pallidus (Correll 1978, p. 171). By 1888, Limodorum tuberosum
was accepted and given the conserved name of Calopogon tuberosus (L) by
Britton, Sterns, and Poggenburg (Jarvis and Cribb 2009, p. 368). In
1933, Small (pp. 363-399) recognized six species of Calopogon based on
minor variations, which Correll (1978, p. 167) believed were difficult
to interpret. By 1950, Correll, taking a more conservative approach,
recognized four species of Calopogon: C. barbatus, C. multiflorus, C.
pallidus, and C. pulchellus, with two variants of C. pulchellus, the
more northern variant, latifolius, and the more southern variant,
simpsonii Ames (1904) (Correll 1978, pp. 167-176). The former species,
C. pulchellus, is now considered a variant of C. tuberosus, that being,
C. tuberosus var. tuberosus. By 1989, it was recognized that Calopogon
tuberosus encompassed two variants, variant simpsonii (southern
variant) and variant tuberosus (northern variant). The four species, C.
barbatus, C. multiflorus, C. pallidus, and C. tuberosus, were thought
to compose the genus Calopogon until Goldman (1995, p. 37) proposed a
fifth species, C. oklahomensis.
Goldman (1995, p. 41) asserts that morphological and phenological
variation of the genus Calopogon in the midwestern States was not
previously recognized by Correll (1978) or Luer (1975) (Goldman 1995,
p. 41) and that while examining herbarium specimens from eastern Texas,
western Louisiana, and northward to central Missouri, he (Dr. Douglas
Goldman) observed several morphological and ecological characteristics,
which he believed were inconsistent with true C. tuberosus or C.
barbatus. These characteristics included corm (a modified underground
stem) shape and formation, average leaf width, leaf length verses
inflorescence (a branching stem with flowers) length, bud
characterization, anthesis (the period from flowering to fruiting),
floral fragrance, dorsal sepal description, lateral sepal description,
distal portion of labellum disc (portion of the lower petal that is
attached to the center of the flower), and stigma (where deposited
pollen germinates) characteristics (Table 1) (Goldman 1995, pp. 37-39).
In addition, although C. oklahomensis may occur in close geographic
proximity to C. tuberosus, they are temporally isolated, as C.
oklahomensis flowers at different times of the year than C. tuberosus
(Goldman 1995, p. 40). In Missouri, C. oklahomensis blooms from early
May to June, whereas C. tuberosus blooms from mid-June to early July
(Summers 1987 in Goldman 1995, p. 40). Goldman (1995, p. 40)
ascertained from herbarium label data that in eastern Texas and western
Louisiana, C. oklahomensis blooms from March to early May, whereas C.
tuberosus blooms from May to June. Calopogon oklahomensis was
subsequently described, by Goldman, as unique and distinct from all
other species of Calopogon, with a large geographic range, many
consistent morphological features, and temporal isolation from its
occasional associate, Calopogon tuberosus (Goldman 1995, p. 41).
In addition to timing of flower emergence and a suite of
morphological features differing from Calopogon tuberosus and C.
barbatus, C. oklahomensis has been shown to have unique genetic
characteristics. Genetic analysis has shown C. oklahomensis to be
hexaploid (having six sets of chromosomes), where all other taxa within
Calopogon are diploid (consisting of two sets of chromosomes),
suggesting that this species may be an alloploid (number of chromosomes
is doubled in the hybrid), possibly derived from ancient hybridization
between C. barbatus and C. tuberosus (Goldman 2000, p. 79). Recent
genetic analyses by Goldman et al. (2004a, p. 719), however, concluded
that if hybrid in origin, the cross is ancient, and it may be prudent
to conclude that the origin and affinities of C. oklahomensis remain
uncertain (Goldman et al. 2004a, p. 719). Trapnell et al. (2004, p.
314) conducted additional genetic testing for genetic variation among
the five species of the
[[Page 61309]]
terrestrial orchid genus Calopogon, with results indicating that C.
oklahomensis is the most genetically diverse species of the five
species tested.
The review of Calopogon oklahomensis is complete, and the name is
accepted by Govaerts (1999) and Govaerts (2003). Recognition of C.
oklahomensis as the fifth Calopogon species was affirmed in Flora of
North America (Goldman 2002, pp. 601-602), and reaffirmed by Brown
(2006, p. 21; 2008, p. 177), who describes the genus Calopogon as being
composed of five species: C. barbatus, C. multiflorus, C. pallidus, C.
tuberosus, and C. oklahomensis (Brown 2006, p. 21). Currently, Govaerts
et al. (2011, entire) and Kartesz (2011, in press) also recognize C.
oklahomensis as a distinct species.
For these reasons, we accept the characterization of Calopogon
oklahomensis as a distinct species of Calopogon, with a large
geographic range, many consistent morphological features, temporal
isolation in flower timing from other species in the genus Calopogon,
and genetic differentiation from all other Calopogon (Brown 2006, p.
22; Goldman 1995, p. 41; Goldman 2002, pp. 601-602), and, therefore, a
listable entity under the Act.
Calopogon oklahomensis is a terrestrial plant growing (6 to 14
inches (in) (15 to 36 centimeters (cm)) tall (Brown 2006, p. 22). It
has a forked corm, with the new corm at the base of the leaf and the
inflorescence rapidly growing distally at the time of anthesis (Goldman
1995, p. 39). It has one or two leaves, which are lanceolate, slender,
and 0.2 to 0.6 in (0.5 to 1.5 cm) wide by 3 to 14 in (7 to 35 cm) long
(Brown 2006, p. 22; Goldman 1995, p. 37). The leaf is almost always as
long as or longer than the inflorescence (Goldman 1995, p. 39). The
flower buds are deeply grooved longitudinally, waxy, and shiny with
elongated acuminate apices (narrowing to a point at the tip). The
flower has three to seven non-resupinate flowers (labellum is
uppermost) that are fragrant (smelling of citronella) and open
simultaneously, with the color being highly variable, from lilac blue
to bright magenta pink or, in the form albiflorus, white. All have a
golden crest on the lip (Brown 2006, p. 22; Goldman 1995, p. 39). The
labellum disk is pinkish with a basal region of short to long yellow
hairs, above which there is a triangular region of short, stout,
pinkish hairs, which extend to the labellum apex (terminal end of the
lower petal) (Goldman 1995, p. 39).
Calopogon oklahomensis has a winged column with two soft pollinia
(a mass of pollen grains) (Goldman 2000, p. 3). The stigma is flat
against the column surface (Goldman 1995, p. 40), and the species
blooms April throughout May or June (Brown 2006, p. 22). Calopogon
oklahomensis flowers produce little or no nectar and offer no pollen
reward; they attract pollinators using showy yellow and pink lip hairs
that resemble a mass of pollen. When an insect lands on the labellum,
if it is heavy enough, the labellum swings down and the insect's
posterior comes into contact with the sticky pollinia located on the
end of the column (Trapnell et al. 2004, p. 308). The tiny, dustlike
seeds are wind dispersed (Trapnell et al. 2004, p. 308).
Table 1--Comparison of 11 Characters Used To Distinguish Calopogon oklahomensis From C. tuberosus and C.
barbatus, Obtained From Goldman's Personal Observations, Correll (1978), and Luer (1972, 1975) (Goldman 1995, p.
39)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Character Calopogon oklahomensis Calopogon tuberosus Calopogon barbatus
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corm................................. Forked................. Spherical.............. Spherical.
New corm forming distally at anthesis Yes.................... No..................... No.
Average leaf width (range) *......... 7 mm (0.28 inches) (5- (10 mm (0.39 inches) (4- 2 mm (0.08 inches) (1-4
15 mm (0.20-0.59 37 mm 0.16-1.46 mm (0.04-0.16
inches)). inches)). inches)).
Leaf length vs. inflorescence length. About equal............ Usually shorter........ Shorter.
Buds................................. Grooved longitudinally, Generally smooth, acute Smooth, acute or
acuminate, very waxy. or apiculate, waxy. apiculate, waxy.
Anthesis............................. Flowers open in rapid Flowers open in slow Flowers open in rapid
succession. succession. succession.
Floral fragrance..................... Yes.................... No..................... No.
Dorsal sepal *....................... Lanceolate, average 19 Oblong-elliptical, Oblong-elliptical,
mm x 6 mm (0.75 inches average 22 mm x 8 mm average 16 mm x 5 mm
x 0.24 inches), (0.87 inches x 0.31 (0.63 inches x 0.20
straight to reflexed inches), straight. inches), straight to
backwards. reflexed backwards.
Lateral sepals *..................... Acuminate, grooved Apiculate, smooth, Apiculate,
longitudinally, straight. longitudinally
recurved backwards. grooved, recurved
backwards.
Distal portion of labellum disc...... Same color as most of White, generally Same color as most of
flower, triangular circular region of flower, triangular,
region of short, pink short, white, yellow, region of short, pink
hairs. or orange hairs. hairs.
Stigma............................... Flat against column Most often Flat against column
surface. perpendicular to surface.
column surface.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Based on 60 herbarium specimens of Calopogon oklahomensis, 60 specimens of C. tuberosus, and 30 specimens of
C. barbatus, collected throughout the geographic range of each species.
Distribution and Population Status
Calopogon oklahomensis was originally thought to be restricted to
the prairies of the south-central States; however, herbarium specimens
(Goldman 1995, pp. 37, 40-41) indicate that it was previously much more
widespread (Brown 2006, p. 22). Goldman (1995, p. 41) based his
description of the species' range on collected specimens in six States
(Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas), and
hypothesized that overall, the historical range covered 17 States
(Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas,
Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin) (Goldman 2008a, pp. 2-3). Brown (2006,
p. 22) identifies the historical range of C. oklahomensis as occurring
in only 10 States (Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana,
Minnesota, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin) and does not list
this
[[Page 61310]]
species as occurring in Florida, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
Indiana, Tennessee, or Mississippi. NatureServe (2011) identifies the
historical range of the species in 14 States (Alabama, Arkansas,
Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi,
Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin); however, the
source of this information is also Goldman (2008a).
Goldman (2008a, pp. 2-3) states that there are 233 historical
occurrences from 17 States (Table 2). A thorough review of the
available information on the distribution of Calopogon oklahomensis,
however, indicates that there are 86 to 90 historical occurrences of C.
oklahomensis from 11 States (Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and
Wisconsin (Table 2). This 11-State historical range, which is based on
a review of actual occurrences rather than the generalized range
discussion presented above, is what we used in conducting our
assessment of the species' status.
Table 2--A Comparison of Information on Historical and Extant Occurrences of Calopogon oklahomensis, Based on Goldman's (2008b, p. 3) Review of
Herbarium Specimens as Provided in the Petition and Information Available to the Service, Primarily From State Databases
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Estimated extant
Last observed Number of historical records Estimated extant populations
State (Goldman) historical records (based on State populations (based on State
(Goldman) databases) (Goldman) databases)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AL *................................................ 1887 5 0 0 0
AR.................................................. 1995 22 25 3 to 5 17
FL *................................................ 1882 1 0 0 0
GA *................................................ 1943 1 0 0 0
IA.................................................. 1941 8 3 to 6 0 0
IL.................................................. 2006? 42 7 1 2
IN *................................................ 1933 15 0 0 0
KS.................................................. 1980 1 1 0 0
LA.................................................. 1996 22 3 3 to 6 0
MN *................................................ 1884 5 0 0 0
MO.................................................. 1994 16 2 4 to 6 11
MS.................................................. 2006 4 1 2 to 3 3
OK.................................................. 2004 53 24 10? 6
SC *................................................ ? 1 0 0 0
TN.................................................. 1939 2 1 0 0
TX.................................................. 2004 27 12 to 13 1 to 3 1
WI.................................................. 1987 8 7? 1 1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total........................................... .................. 233 86 to 90 25 to 35 41
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The Service does not consider these States to be within the historical range for the species.
The historical range suggested by Goldman (2008a, p. 6) includes
the States of Florida and Georgia. Goldman (2008a, p. 6) describes one
historical herbarium specimen of Calopogon oklahomensis from Florida,
dated 1882 and labeled only as ``Florida'' for the locality. He
hypothesizes that it may have been collected from the western Florida
panhandle (Goldman 2008a, p. 6). This record is questionable because
Florida has no other information or records regarding historical or
extant occurrences of C. oklahomensis in the State (Brown 2011, pers.
comm.; Johnson 2011, pers. comm.; Knight 2009, pers. comm.; Halupa
2009, pers. comm.). Based on the lack of records, we believe this
species is not a component of the Florida flora and, therefore, do not
include Florida in the range for this species.
Goldman (2008a, p. 6) states that one specimen of Calopogon
oklahomensis was collected in southwestern Georgia by Robert Thorne in
1947. As in the case of Florida, because we have no other historical or
extant records of C. oklahomensis as occurring in Georgia (Pattavina
2009, pers. comm.), we do not include Georgia in the range of C.
oklahomensis.
There are no confirmed specimens from South Carolina for this
species (Holling 2011, pers. comm.; Pittman 2011, pers. comm.);
however, there is one specimen (probably over 200 years old) housed at
the herbarium at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, which is marked simply
as ``S.C.,'' but without information on collector, locality, or date
(Goldman 2010, pers. comm.). We do not include South Carolina in the
current or historical range of Calopogon oklahomensis because we have
no other information of C. oklahomensis as occurring in South Carolina
(Holling 2011, pers. comm.).
We do not have comprehensive survey information for Calopogon
oklahomensis. Therefore, we do not know the full extent of the species'
distribution or if the distribution has changed over time. The
following paragraphs outline the distribution and status information
that is available.
Goldman (2008a, p. 3) estimates 25 to 35 extant Calopogon
oklahomensis populations from 8 States (Arkansas, Illinois, Louisiana,
Missouri, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin) (Table 2). The
Service cannot confirm Goldman's information regarding extant
populations of C. oklahomensis in Louisiana. The Service has
information from Goldman's personal collection data (provided as
supplemental information to the petition (Goldman 2008b)) of three
specimens from Louisiana dated 1995 to 1996. More recent information,
however, is not available regarding the sites from where these
specimens originated.
Alabama has no extant occurrences of Calopogon oklahomensis
(Everson 2009, pers. comm.; Schotz 2011, pers. comm.). Goldman (2008a,
p. 5) asserts that this species was collected in Alabama a handful of
times in the late 1800s, near the town of Mount Vernon, but over a few
visits to this area in the last 10 years, the species has not been
found, even under favorable conditions.
[[Page 61311]]
Arkansas has 25 documented historical occurrences of Calopogon
oklahomensis, of these, 17 are extant populations (Witsell 2009, pers.
comm.).
Illinois has seven historical specimens, which perhaps were
originally misidentified as Calopogon pulchellus and C. tuberosus,
then, in 1999, determined to be C. oklahomensis by Goldman (Phillippe
2010, pers. comm.). Currently, Illinois has two extant populations of
C. oklahomensis (Phillippe et al. 2008, p. 11; Armstrong 2010, pers.
comm.; Kieninger 2010, pers. comm.; Catchpole 2010, pers. comm.).
There is one record of Calopogon oklahomensis collected in Lake
County, Indiana. It was originally (in 1912) identified in the Indiana
Natural Heritage Database as C. pulchellus, however, it was later (in
1999) determined to be C. oklahomensis by Goldman (Phillippe 2010,
pers. comm.). Indiana has records of the closely related congener, C.
puchellus, that were collected prior to C. oklahomensis being described
as a unique species (Deam 1940, p. 347; King 2009, pers. comm.). We
have no information of extant C. oklahomensis populations in Indiana.
There are no known extant populations of Calopogon oklahomensis in
Iowa. Our information indicates that only historical records exist, but
we do not know how many historical records exist. The species is
believed to be extirpated in the State (Pearson 2009, pers. comm.).
Kansas has one historical record of Calopogon oklahomensis from
Cherokee County, dated May 1980 (Freeman 2011, pers. comm.). This
specimen was annotated as C. oklahomensis by Goldman in 1999 (Freeman
2008, pers. comm.). This site and other prairie hay meadows in the
county have been searched for C. oklahomensis over the past 30 years,
with no populations of this species located (Freeman 2011, pers.
comm.).
Mississippi has three known extant populations of Calopogon
oklahomensis located at the Camp Shelby Joint Forces Training Center
(Camp Shelby), a National Guard installation operating under a special
use permit on U.S. Forest Service land. These three populations are
separated by more than 1 mile (1.6 kilometers (km)) each and occur in
three separate watersheds; therefore, they are considered separate
populations (Wiggers 2011b, pers. comm.). The Poplar Creek population
includes four separate colonies. One colony was last surveyed in 2004,
with an estimated population of 1 to 10 individuals (Wiggers 2011b,
pers. comm.; 2011c, pers. comm.). The second and third colonies were
last surveyed in 2006, with one population estimated at 11 to 50
individuals and the other population estimated at 101 to 1,000
individuals (Wiggers 2011b, pers. comm.; 2011c, pers. comm.). The
fourth Poplar Creek colony size is unknown (Wiggers 2011c, pers.
comm.). The minimum population size of all the Poplar Creek colonies is
estimated at 113 individuals (Wiggers 2011c, pers. comm.).
In Mississippi, the Clear Creek population includes two colonies,
one of which was last surveyed in 1999, with a population estimate of
11 to 50 individual plants, and the other colony last surveyed in 2004,
with a population estimate of 1 to 10 individuals (Wiggers 2011b, pers.
comm.; 2011c, pers. comm.). The minimum population size of all Clear
Creek colonies is 12 individuals (Wiggers 2011c, pers. comm.).
The Pearces Creek population in Mississippi consists of two
colonies of Calopogon oklahomensis, both with a population estimate of
1 to 10 individuals, with one colony last surveyed in 1999 and the
other last surveyed in 2004 (Wiggers 2011b, pers. comm.; 2011c, pers.
comm.). The minimum population size of both Pearces Creek colonies is
two individuals (Wiggers 2011c, pers. comm.). The total Camp Shelby
population estimate of C. oklahomensis is 127 individuals; however,
this is only a rough estimate, as current population counts are
unavailable (Wiggers 2011b, pers. comm.). Within Camp Shelby, there may
be other areas of C. oklahomensis located within an ``impact area'' (an
area containing unexploded ordnance), which has been protected from
active training, draining, and clearing since World War I (Wiggers
2011a, pers. comm.; Lyman 2011a, pers. comm.). Surveys have not been
conducted in this ``impact area'' due to its restricted access (Wiggers
2011b, pers. comm.).
In Missouri, prior to describing Calopogon oklahomensis as distinct
from C. tuberosus, C. oklahomensis was not tracked in the Missouri
Natural Heritage Database. Once C. tuberosus was split into the two
species, Missouri began tracking only the rarer and range-limited C.
tuberosus (Yatskievych 2009, pers. comm.; Kruse 2010, pers. comm.);
however, the Missouri Botanical Garden indicates that Missouri has at
least 11 sites with extant populations of C. oklahomensis (Yatskievych
2009, pers. comm.). At least 10 of the 11 extant sites occur on public
lands that are managed as native prairie, however, there are no current
studies in Missouri on population size, success of reproduction, or
other indicators of status (Yatskievych 2009, pers. comm.).
Oklahoma has 24 historical populations of Calopogon oklahomensis
from 15 counties, with 6 sites having extant populations, 5 of which
occur on private land (Hoagland et al. 2004, entire; Buthod 2010, pers.
comm.). The site of the sixth C. oklahomensis population in Oklahoma is
owned by the State of Oklahoma and used by the Department of
Corrections as the Jess Dunn Prison.
Tennessee acknowledges a single occurrence of Calopogon
oklahomensis in the Tennessee Natural Heritage Program Geographic
Information System (GIS) database. It was last observed in 1937, with
no details available in the record regarding location or abundance
(Call 2009, pers. comm.). To our knowledge, the species has not been
recorded in Tennessee for more than 20 years, and is possibly
extirpated from the State (Call 2009, pers. comm.).
Texas has historical records of 12 to 13 specimens of C.
oklahomensis from 12 counties, including information from the
University of Texas herbarium database, which lists only 5 specimens
collected from 1927 to 1965 (Poole 2008, pers. comm.). It is believed
that some of the sites from where the specimens were collected may no
longer be extant (Poole 2008, pers. comm.; Best 2009, pers. comm.). The
most recent specimen from Brazos County, Texas, was last observed by
Goldman in 2004 (Goldman 2008a, p. 9). Although this species is not
tracked in Texas, we assume presence of C. oklahomensis at the Brazos
County site because it was last observed in 2004, although no further
surveys have taken place since then. We acknowledge that there may be
other extant sites of C. oklahomensis in Texas, but because this
species is not tracked in Texas, we have no information other than what
is stated above.
In Wisconsin, records indicate that Calopogon oklahomensis was
historically known from seven sites in five counties between 1872 and
2005 (Anderson 2010a, pers. comm.; Anderson 2010b, pers. comm.).
Currently, Greene Prairie at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
Arboretum supports perhaps the only extant population of C.
oklahomensis in Wisconsin (Anderson 2010a, pers. comm.). The plants at
Greene Prairie originated from a site in Sauk County near Sauk City,
but the exact location is unknown. Wisconsin's historical collections
do not contain specific site information other than they originated
[[Page 61312]]
from Dane, Grant, Monroe, Sauk, and Waukesha Counties (Anderson 2010a,
pers. comm.; Anderson 2010b, pers. comm.). Although the Arboretum
population is not naturally occurring, it is considered a self-
sustaining introduction and relocation, which is valuable for
biodiversity conservation (O'Connor 2011, pers. comm.).
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resource's Rare Features
Database contains no records for this species (Delphey 2009, pers.
comm.).
Based on the information described above regarding locations of
extant populations, we believe the current range of Calopogon
oklahomensis includes the seven States of Arkansas, Illinois,
Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin.
The State Natural Heritage programs and NatureServe (NatureServe
2010c, p. 3) rank Calopogon oklahomensis as S1 in Illinois,
Mississippi, and Texas. The S1 designation indicates the species is
considered critically imperiled because of extreme rarity (5 or fewer
occurrences or less than 1,000 individuals) or because of extreme
vulnerability to extinction due to some natural or human-made factor.
The Arkansas and Oklahoma State Natural Heritage Programs rank C.
oklahomensis populations in Arkansas and Oklahoma as S2, meaning the
species is considered imperiled because of rarity (6 to 20 occurrences
of less than 3,000 individuals) or because of vulnerability to
extinction due to some natural or man-made factor (NatureServe 2010c,
p. 3). In Wisconsin, the State Natural Heritage program ranks C.
oklahomensis as SH, meaning the species is possibly extirpated in that
State (NatureServe 2010c. p. 3). These State heritage program rankings
are not legal designations and do not confer State regulatory
protection to this species.
This species is either not State ranked or is under review in the
States of Iowa, Minnesota, and Missouri (NatureServe 2010c). In
Missouri, the species is not tracked by the State; however, status
surveys for Calopogon oklahomensis are being conducted in 2011
(Yatskievych 2009, pers. comm.; 2011, pers. comm.).
Based on the available information, as summarized above, we believe
the historical range of Calopogon oklahomensis includes 11 States
(Arkansas, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin), and the current range
includes 7 States (Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, Mississippi,
Texas, and Wisconsin).
Habitat
Calopogon oklahomensis inhabits a variety of habitats, including
moist to seasonally dry-mesic prairies; tallgrass and coastal prairies;
prairie-haymeadows; upland prairies; savannas; open woodlands (e.g.,
post oak-blackjack oak woodlands); hillside seepage bogs; edges of
bogs; and occasionally pine plantations, acidic wet barrens, or claypan
savannas (Goldman 1995, p. 40; Brown 2006, p. 22). The species is not
found in the wetter habitats preferred by most of the other species in
the genus (Goldman 1995, p. 40; Brown 2006, p. 22; Goldman 2008, p. 2).
It is also found in prairie remnants such as those beside railroads, as
well as other mowed meadows, savannas (e.g., longleaf pine (Pinus
palustris) savannas), and wetland savanna borders (NatureServe 2010b,
p. 10). The upland prairies often contain ``pimple mounds'' (naturally
occurring low, flattened, circular to oval, domelike, mounds composed
of loose, sandy loam or loamy sand lying either on a more or less flat
or slightly, but noticeably depressed, clayey B horizon (subsoil
layer)). In Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma, the species occupies
moist to seasonally dry-mesic prairies and high-quality hay meadow
associated with pimple mounds (Goldman 2008a, p. 8).
Biology
Calopogon oklahomensis occurs sporadically at known locations, with
the number of flowering plants varying dramatically from year to year.
The number of flowering plants may depend on management practices; for
example, abundance of C. oklahomensis increases significantly after a
fire has occurred (Goldman 2008a, p. 10). Calopogon oklahomensis
appears to thrive under relatively frequent fires (every 1 to 3 years),
particularly dormant-season burns; late-season haymeadow mowing, where
most or all of the above-ground vegetation is removed once every 1 to 2
years, with no thatch left behind; and light grazing (Osborne 2010,
pers. comm.). The species also appears to respond favorably to summer
haying (late June or July) on prairie remnants managed as hayfields
(Osborne 2010, pers. comm.).
Goldman (2008a, pp. 4-5) describes the genus Calopogon as having
two growing points, which means that the plant has two chances for
reproductive success in a given year. He has observed that if both
growing points initiate, they do so at different times, one earlier in
the season and one slightly later. When dormant, Calopogon corms can
survive some drying, but if drought or other disturbance strikes while
they are forming new leaves or flowering, they can be severely damaged
or killed. The second growing point, by initiating up to a few months
later when environmental conditions may have improved, seems to be an
adaptation to survive springtime drought or other disturbance such as
fires or grazing (Goldman 2008a, p. 5). Most other vascular plants
survive such disturbance by resprouting from multiple tiny, dormant
buds, or forming new buds. Therefore, Calopogon may be more vulnerable
to local extirpation because of the limitation of having only two
growing points (Goldman 2008a, p. 5).
Summary of Information Pertaining to the Five Factors
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533) and implementing regulations
(50 CFR part 424) set forth procedures for adding species to, removing
species from, or reclassifying species on the Federal Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Under section 4(a)(1) of
the Act, a species may be determined to be endangered or threatened
based on any of the following five factors:
(A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range;
(B) Overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or
educational purposes;
(C) Disease or predation;
(D) The inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; or
(E) Other natural or manmade factors affecting its continued
existence.
In making this finding, information pertaining to Calopogon
oklahomensis in relation to the five factors provided in section
4(a)(1) of the Act is discussed below. In considering what factors
might constitute threats, we must look beyond the mere exposure of the
species to the factor to determine whether the species responds to the
factor in a way that causes actual impacts to the species. If there is
exposure to a factor, but no response, or only a positive response,
that factor is not a threat. If there is exposure and the species
responds negatively, the factor may be a threat and we then attempt to
determine how significant a threat it is. If the threat is significant,
it may drive or contribute to the risk of extinction of the species
such that the species warrants listing as threatened or endangered as
those terms are defined by the Act. This does not necessarily require
empirical proof of a threat. The combination of exposure and some
[[Page 61313]]
corroborating evidence of how the species is likely impacted could
suffice. The mere identification of factors that could impact a species
negatively is not sufficient to compel a finding that listing is
appropriate; we require evidence that these factors are operative
threats that act on the species to the point that the species meets the
definition of threatened or endangered under the Act.
In making our 12-month finding on the petition to list Calopogon
oklahomensis, we considered and evaluated the best available scientific
and commercial information.
Factor A. The Present or Threatened Destruction, Modification, or
Curtailment of Its Habitat or Range
Some habitats of Calopogon oklahomensis, such as tallgrass prairie,
remnant prairie, prairie-haymeadow, and mowed meadow, have historically
suffered destruction across their entire range through development,
plowing, lowering of the water table, fire suppression, construction,
and conversion to nonnative grasses. Appropriate management for these
habitats (typically burning or haying) to prevent the encroachment of
woody vegetation and nonnative species is crucial for the continued
existence of prairie-dependent species within these habitats, including
C. oklahomensis. Because these habitats are the preferred habitat of C.
oklahomensis, and because proper management of prairie habitat on
public land cannot be ensured, and is even less ensured on private
land, it is reasonable to conclude that overall habitat of C.
oklahomensis has been modified and destroyed in the past, and could
foreseeably continue into the future. However, this threat does not
rise to the level where listing C. oklahomensis as threatened or
endangered is warranted, as discussed below.
There are 41 extant sites supporting populations of Calopogon
oklahomensis within the 7-State range (Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi,
Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin) of the species (Table 3).
Many of the remaining populations of C. oklahomensis occur within high-
quality habitat, which is protected from further modification and
destruction by various measures, as further described below. In
Arkansas, 9 of the 17 extant occurrences of C. oklahomensis occur in
high-quality, unplowed tallgrass prairie remnants (Leone 2011, pers.
comm.; Witsell 2010, pers. comm.; Osborne 2010, pers. comm.), which are
currently protected and managed on 9 State Natural Areas in five
counties. The Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission (ANHC) is charged
with the responsibility of protecting the best of the last remaining
vestiges of the State's natural communities through its System of
Natural Areas. Natural Areas are lands specifically managed to
preserve, and sometimes restore, rare natural communities. These nine
State Natural Areas have specific ``conservation visions'' that guide
site management in maintaining native prairie communities (ANHC 2010,
pp. 10-88). In addition, ANHC rules and regulations prohibit the
collection or removal of plants (including fruits, nuts, or edible
plant parts), animals, fungi, rocks, minerals, fossils, archaeological
artifacts, soil, downed wood, or any other natural material, alive or
dead (ANHC 2010, p. 1). Although these ``conservation visions'' do not
specifically address management for C. oklahomensis, they include
appropriate management for the continued existence of C. oklahomensis
at these sites, through burning or haying to prevent the encroachment
of woody vegetation and nonnative species.
Of the 9 extant Calopogon oklahomensis populations within Arkansas
State Natural Areas, C. oklahomensis was last observed in 2002 at Baker
Prairie with 75 to 100 plants in bloom, in Searles Prairie in 2003 with
at least 35 plants in bloom, Chesney Prairie in 2003 had several
hundred C. oklahomensis plants in bloom, and Cherokee Prairie had
several hundred to at least 1,000 plants in 2003 (Arkansas Natural
Heritage Commission (ANHC) 2011). In 2008, three other C. oklahomensis
populations surveyed at three different Natural Areas (Downs Prairie,
Konecny Prairie, and Roth Prairie) had 5, 12, and more than 50 blooming
plants, respectively (ANHC 2011). The H.E. Flanagan Prairie, surveyed
in 2007, had hundreds of C. oklahomensis blooms, and the Railroad
Prairie was surveyed in 2009, with 3 C. oklahomensis plants found (ANHC
2011).
One Calopogon oklahomensis population in Arkansas occurs on the
Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center (Fort Chaffee). Management
specifically for C. oklahomensis does not occur at Fort Chaffee;
however, Fort Chaffee has the largest known population of the federally
endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) and is
implementing a ``Conservation Plan for the American Burying Beetle''
(CPABB 2010) (Leone 2011, pers. comm.). The goal of the Conservation
Plan is to maintain existing populations of the American burying
beetle, with sustainable habitat. American burying beetles require
large tracts of open oak woodland and prairie, some of which are also
occupied by C. oklahomensis at Fort Chaffee. The Conservation Plan
outlines a strategy that limits long-term and short-term habitat loss,
fragmentation, and degradation to the greatest extent possible (CPABB
2010, p. 31). Another strategy in the Conservation Plan uses fire as a
management tool and evaluates the effects that fire has on the habitat
(CPABB 2010, p. 36). Such fire management is also beneficial to C.
oklahomensis habitat (Goldman 2008a, p. 10).
Because the Conservation Plan manages for American burying beetle
habitat, including prairie, its implementation also will benefit
Calopogon oklahomensis, which occurs in that prairie habitat. Although
the Conservation Plan does not specifically address C. oklahomensis,
this plan includes appropriate management tools to manage for the
continued existence of C. oklahomensis at this site.
Arkansas has seven additional Calopogon oklahomensis populations
that occur on private land (Table 3), of which four are managed as
hayfield, two are managed for prairie, and one is mowed (Leone 2011,
pers. comm.). These seven populations are not currently protected from
conversion to other uses, and habitat destruction or modification may
be a threat to these C. oklahomensis populations.
[[Page 61314]]
Table 3--Extant Calopogon oklahomensis Population Information by State
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current habitat
State Est. extant Site/location NA = Land ownership management plan and Protection status Threats
pops. Natural Area future plans
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AR................... 1 Cherokee Prairie NA. AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission. is to restore and
protect biological
diversity representative
of tallgrass prairies of
the western Arkansas
Valley by maintaining
natural ecosystem
processes.
AR................... 1 Chesney Prairie NA.. AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission. is to restore and
protect biological
diversity representative
of Northwest Arkansas
prairies by maintaining
natural ecosystem
processes.
AR................... 1 Downs Prairie NA.... AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes.................. Factor B (poaching
Commission. is to maintain at one State
representative Natural Area).
communities and species
related to the landform,
hydrology, fire, and
other ecosystem
processes of the Grand
Prairie.
AR................... 1 H. E. Flanagan AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Prairie NA. Commission. is to restore and
protect the biological
diversity representative
of tallgrass prairies of
the western Arkansas
Valley by maintaining
natural ecosystem
processes.
AR................... 1 Konecny Prairie NA.. AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission. is to maintain the
integrity of this
remnant of tallgrass
prairie community
representative of the
vegetation and biota of
the Grand Prairie.
AR................... 1 Railroad Prairie NA. AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission. is to maintain a
representative transect
of communities and
species related to the
landform, hydrology,
fire and other ecosystem
processes of the Grand
Prairie of eastern
Arkansas.
AR................... 1 Roth Prairie NA..... AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission. is to work in
conjunction with
Arkansas State
University to maintain
the viability and
associated biological
diversity of a remnant
tallgrass prairie in the
Grand Prairie of eastern
Arkansas.
AR................... 1 Searles Prairie NA.. AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission. is to protect the
biological diversity
characteristic of a
tallgrass prairie
remnant on the
Springfield Plateau of
the Ozark Mountains.
AR................... 1 Baker Prairie NA.... AR Natural Heritage The conservation vision Yes. ...................
Commission and The is to maintain a mosaic
Nature Conservancy of prairie communities
(TNC). and associated
ecological diversity
buffered from the
stresses of nearby
development. C.
oklahomensis falls on a
tract owned by TNC.
AR................... 1 Ft. Chaffee Military Department of This site has an Yes. ...................
Base. Defense. Integrated Natural
Resource Management Plan
and an American burying
beetle (ABB)
Conservation Plan. The
goal of the ABB plan is
to maintain existing
populations with
sustainable habitat.
ABBs require large
tracts of open oak
woodland and prairie.
AR................... 1 Gray................ Private............. Managed as prairie....... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
AR................... 1 Crossett Airport.... Private............. Mowed.................... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
[[Page 61315]]
AR................... 1 Burt Prairie........ Private............. Managed as hayfield...... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
AR................... 1 McFarren............ Private............. Managed as hayfield...... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
AR................... 1 Stump............... Private............. Managed as hayfield...... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
AR................... 1 Halijan............. Private............. Managed as hayfield...... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
AR................... 1 Weber Prairie....... Private............. Managed as hayfield...... No................... Factor A (No land
protection
status).
IL................... 1 Hitt's Siding .................... Managed by the Nature Yes.................. Factor C
Prairie Nature Preserves with regular (predation).
Preserve. burns, and control of
exotic species (woody
and herbaceous).
IL................... 1 Braidwood Nature .................... Managed by the Forest Yes. ...................
Preserve. Preserve District of
Will County with regular
burns, and control of
exotic species (woody
and herbaceous).
MO................... 8 .................... 2 to 3 sites owned Managed by MO Department Yes. ...................
by TNC. of Conservation for
prairie habitat.
MO................... 2 Coyne Prairie....... MO Prairie Managed for prairie Yes. ...................
Foundation. habitat.
MO................... 1 .................... Private............. No management plan in No................... Factor A (No land
effect. protection status;
lack of
management).
MS................... 3 Camp Shelby Joint U.S. Forest Service/ No known management plan Yes. ...................
Forces Training Dept. of Defense in effect, however
Center. with special use portions of these
permit. populations receive
incidental protection
because they are located
within a 165 foot buffer
for the federally
endangered Isoetes
louisianensis (Louisiana
quillwort).
OK................... 5 .................... Private............. No known management plans No................... Factor A (No land
in effect. pro