Endangered Species Program
The Endangered Species Bulletin Vol. XXVII, No. 3—July/August, 2002

In the work that we and our partners undertake to conserve and recover vulnerable species, awareness of the efforts we take for native plants is often overshadowed by the interest received by animal species. Too often overlooked is the fact that plants provide the foundation upon which animal life, including our own, depends. Plants are not only of aesthetic value, they provide us with food, many medicines, vital ecosystem services, and a variety of other products that are essential to our economy and well being. Fortunately, we have an important partner in the protection of our nation's imperiled flora, the Center for Plant Conservation. This edition of the Endangered Species Bulletin features some of the Center's progress in restoring these rare plant species.


In This Issue:

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Endangered Species Bulletin Cover
Page    Title
1-3 Cover and Table of Contents
4 Partners in Plant Conservation
5 The Center for Plant Conservation
8 A Safety Net for Hawaii's Rarest Plants
12 An Alpine Plant Comes Back
14 Reintroducing Pitcher's Thistle
16 Bringing Back a Fugitive
18 Battlefield Harbors a Rare Tennessee Plant
20 The Search for Coryphantha ramillosa
22 Cultivating Partnerships for the Yellow Larkspur
24 Collaborative Conservation of the Beach Clustervine
26 Private Property, Public Interest
28 We're Glad to Have Glades
29-32

Departments
Listing Actions
Box Score (Number of Listed Species)

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Last updated: January 15, 2008