U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIORBUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
California

 

Special Status Plants of the Alturas Field Office

This plant guide identifies the special status plants that are known to occur on public lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management, but they may only be suspected on land administered by the Alturas Field Office.  To view a photograph and more information on an individual plant, click on the plant's common name below. To see a complete list of all plants, regardless of if it is known or suspected, click here..

Photo Copyright 1992 Gary Larson USDA NRCS

Field Milk-Vetch

Astragalus agrestis
Troubled Milk-vetch; Photo Copyright Susan Cochrane and CNPS

Ash Valley Milk-Vetch

Astragalus anxius
Sukdorf's Milkvetch

Suksdorf's Milk-Vetch

Astragalus pulsiferae var. suksdorfii
Ash Creek Ivesia

Ash Creek Ivesia

Ivesia paniculata
Baker's Globe Mallow; Photo Copyright Charles Webber California Academy of Sciences

Baker's Globe Mallow

Iliamna bakeri
Inchhigh Lupine; Photo Copyright 2001 John Game

Lilliput Lupine

Lupinus uncialis
Little Ricegrass; Photo Copyright 1950 Hitchcock, A.S. (rev A. Chase)

Little Ricegrass

Oryzopsis exigua (Syn= Piptatherum exiguum)
Modoc County Knotweed; Photo Copyright 2000 Robert E. Preston, Ph.D.

Modoc County Knotweed

Polygonum polygaloides ssp. esotericum
Photo Copyright 1988 Dean Wm. Taylor

Profuse-Flowered Pogogyne

Pogogyne floribunda
Prostrate Buckwheat; Photo Copyright 2001 John Game

Prostrate Buckwheat

Eriogonum prociduum
Woolly Mock Goldenweed; Photo Copyright 2004 Dean Wm. Taylor

Woolly Stenotus

Stenotus lanuginosus
Boggs Lake Hedge Hyssop

Boggs Lake Hedge Hyssop

Gratiola heterosepala
Slender Orcutt Grass

Slender Orcutt Grass

Orcuttia tenuis
Ephemeral monkeyflower; Photo Copyright 2001 Steve Schoenig

Ephemeral Monkeyflower

Mimulus evanescens
No Picture available

Playa Phacelia

Phacelia inundata

Special status plants are those plants whose survival is of concern due to 1) their limited distribution, 2) low number of individuals and/or populations, and 3) potential threats to habitat.  The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) uses the term "special status plants" to include: http://www.blm.gov/publish/content/ca/en/prog/ssp/main_status.html1) Federal endangered, threatened,proposed and candidate species; 2) California State endangered, threatened, and rare species; and 3) BLM Sensitive plants. Sensitive plants are those species that do not occur on Federal or state lists, but which are designated by the BLM State Director for special management consideration.

It is BLM policy to manage for the conservation of special status plants and their associated habitats and to ensure that actions authorized, funded, or carried out do not contribute to the need to list any species as threatened or endangered.