Posted on 02/02/2005 6:25:58 PM PST by NormsRevenge
Makes good salad.
So, that's what I picked on my way down to Tomales last April....
seems like they ought to try growing this in a greenhouse somewhere. Leaving the only specimens in the world in a drainage ditch doesn't seem very wise.
Members of the Marin Native Plant Society, Marin County Public Works Department, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, state Department of Fish and Game met Tuesday to discuss the fate of the plant and how to better protect it
our tax dollars at work, I am so proud.
if they were so concerned about the plant why did they not transplant it before now?
A little "Roundup" ought to put it out of its misery.
>sarcasm>
SM
Now we'll never find a cure for cancer!
Good thinking!
Probably because the rest of the drains in the county were choked with delphinium adami, delphinium ditcheria and delfinium marinus, other endangered species of larkspur.
With all due respect, larkspur is a fairly common wildflower. The only reason Baker's larkspur is taxonomically distinct from the others is because it has gone through several generations isolated from other colonies of larkspur, pollinated only by the neighboring plants.
In other words, Baker's larkspur has been breeding with its cousins for several generations and is, quite literally, inbred.
To raise such a species to endangered status is to make sport of the entire concept.
"The Baker's larkspur is one of two endangered plants wildlife officials want to protect by designating 4,400 acres"
"they cut into the hillside at the exact spot where most of the Baker's larkspur were growing. Within minutes, the population of 100 plants was reduced to five."
So the other five plants are scattered over the other 4,399 acres they want to designate ?
oops Ping
Somewhere in this is a message about how to deal with envirowhack-jobs......endangered....hmmmmm.....
Many years back, we had a client who was trying to build a hydroelectric project out West. One of the things standing in the way was the squawfish. The squawfish had been put on the endangered species list by the EPA. No dam could disrupt the habitat of the squawfish.
A couple of years ago, I read an announcement from the Interior Department that no more squawfish could be found - dead, apparently, from natural causes.
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