|
Status:
Federal: None
State: None
California Native Plant Society: List
4, R-E-D Code 1-1-3 (see below)
1. Rare, but found in sufficient numbers and distributed widely
enough that the potential for extinction or extirpation is low at
this time.
1. Not endangered.
3. Endemic to California
Family: Sunflower (Asteraceae)
Habitat: Frequents wet or marshy
ground along streams and seeps, sometimes on serpentine soils.
General Distribution: Coastal
counties from Sonoma to San Mateo. In the Presidio, this species
is found on the bluffs near Fort Point.
Description: This
robust thistle stands up to six feet tall and the stems can reach
two inches in diameter. The stems and upper surfaces of the leaves
are thinly cobwebby, as are the leaf undersides. The rosy purple
flower heads are also densely cobwebby. Blooming time is June to
July. Superficially, this species resembles the common non-native
bull thistle.
Monitoring and Activities:
The population near Fort Point has been declining
in recent years. However, two distinct populations have been discovered
on the coastal bluffs in the past three years and are stable. Experimental
seeding of other sites also is under way.
Click to see graph of population changes.
|