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Short's Goldenrod
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Short's Goldenrod
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Description
Rating
Title
Short's
Goldenrod
Alternative Title
Solidago
shortii
Creator
Barnes
,
Dr
.
Thomas
G
.;
Description
Short's
goldenrod
is
a
rhizomatous
perennial
generally
2
to
2
and
one-half
feet
tall
, with
alternately
arranged
narrow
leaves
about
2
to
4
inches
long
and
O.2
to
O.6
of an
inch
wide
. The
largest
leaves
occur
near
the
middle
of the
stem
.
Yellow
flowers
are
borne
between
mid-August
and
early
November
.
Pollination
has not been
investigated
, but
sweat
bees
(probably
Halictidae)
have been
observed
visiting
the
flowers
.
Lucy
Braun
(1941)
suggested
that
seed
dispersal
may
have been
via
mud
in the
hair
of
passing
bison
.
Although
goldenrods
are
normally
wind
dispersed
, there
is
no
evidence
that
Short's
goldenrod
is
expanding
its
range
by that
method
.
Flowering
is
from
mid-August
into
November
with
seed
release
starting
in
late
September
and
continuing
into
late
November
. The
plants
have a
creeping
rhizome
which
may
produce
from
one
to
six
stems
during
the
growing
season
.
RANGE
AND
POPULATION
LEVEL
: This
species
is
endemic
to
Kentucky
where
it
is
presently
known
from
five
populations
located
about
35
miles
northeast
of the
city
of
Lexington
near
the
junction
of
Robertson
,
Nicholas
, and
Fleming
Counties
.
One
population
is
found
within
Blue
Licks
Battlefield
State
Park
,
Robertson
County
;
another
population
is
just
outside
the
Park's
boundary
,
O.1
mile
into
Nicholas
County
. The
other
three
populations
-
one
each
in
Nicholas
,
Fleming
, and
Robertson
Counties
-
are
within
a
2-mile
radius
of the
Park
.
Populations
outside
of the
Park
are on
private
property
. The
species
was
scientifically
described
in
1842
from
collections
apparently
made
at
Rock
Island
,
adjacent
to
Falls
of the
Ohio
in
Jefferson
County
. This
site
was
later
inundated
by
dam
construction
. In
1939
numerous
populations
were
reportedly
growing
on
rocky
slopes
and in
pastures
in
Nicholas
and
Fleming
Counties
, but
today
only
three
are
known
. The
population
in the
Blue
Licks
Battlefield
State
Park
numbers
about
2,OOO
,
is
found
primarily
within
a
1.5-acre
area
, and
represents
about
5O
to
6O
percent
of
all
the
existing
plants
. The
majority
of the
remaining
plants
are
found
in the
other
population
also
located
in
Robertson
County
.
HABITAT
:
Short's
goldenrod
grows
in
cedar
glades
and
openings
in
oak
and
hickory
forests
, in
areas
adjacent
to the
Old
Buffalo
Trace
, and in
pastures
and
areas
adjacent
to
roads
.
Some
type
of
natural
disturbance
seems
to be
important
.
Bison-caused
disturbances
were
perhaps
important
in the
past
, and
it
is
suggested
by
Lucy
Braun
(1941)
that
bison
may
have been a
dispersal
vector
.
Fire
may
have been a
factor
in the
past
by
forming
woodland
openings
in
which
the
species
could
grow
.
REASONS
FOR
CURRENT
STATUS
: The
species'
highly
restricted
distribution
and
limited
numbers
increase
its
vulnerability
and
make
any
losses
potentially
more
serious
.
One
known
habitat
loss
occurred
in the
middle
197O's
when
a
major
segment
of the
Blue
Licks
Battlefield
State
Park
population
was
lost
during
the
construction
of a
new
campground
.
Current
threats
exist
in the
potentials
for
inadvertent
trampling
and
destruction
;
habitat
modification
or
loss
where
the
land
is
privately-owned
;
overcollecting
for
scientific
purposes
on these
same
lands
; and the
possibility
of
destructive
fires
.
Although
fire
may
have been
important
historically
in
maintaining
suitable
habitat
,
fire
in the
current
remnant
habitat
could
destroy
whole
populations
.
http://www.fws.gov/endangered/i/q/saq30.html
Subject
Flowering plants
Plants
Endangered species
Publisher
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Contributors
Dr
.
Thomas
Barnes/Universtiy
of
Kentucky
Date of Original
1980's
Type
Still Image
Format
JPG
Item ID
B1IMG0073.jpg
Source
NCTC Image Library
Language
English
Rights
Public Domain
Audience
General
File Size
106.158 kb
Height
414
Width
639
Color Space
RGB
Original Format
35 mm slide
Full Resolution File Size
8.00
x
10.00
inches
,
300
dpi
(High
,
print
quality)
Full resolution
Volume5\B1IMG0073.jpg
http://digitalmedia.fws.gov/FullRes/natdiglib/Volume5\B1IMG0073.jpg
Date created
2006-08-11
Date modified
2008-07-21
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