'Pale Blue-Eyed Grass' Makes Species Study List
Portland, OR August 18, 2009 5:25 p.m.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced Tuesday that it will review the health of 28 plants and animals. That could lead to federal protection.
The review includes a rare Northwest flower called the “pale blue-eyed grass” -- found only in the Cascade Mountains.
Andrea Raven is a Portland conservation botanist who studied the flower for more than ten years. She says development and cattle ranching keep it from thriving.
Andrea Raven: “While we found that cattle didn’t directly kill very many plants in our study, what we did find was that cattle within a month period of grazing, with a fairly modest number of cows, would remove over three-quarters of the flowers and the fruits.”
The pale blue-eyed grass is already listed as threatened by the state of Washington, and the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management consider it a “species of concern.”
Inclusion on the endangered species list would protect it further.
The pale blue-eyed grass is a rare iris. It was part of a petition from the environmental group, Wild Earth Guardians, involving hundreds of species.
Federal biologists announced plans Tuesday to study only a fraction of those.
© 2009 OPB
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