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CNPS originally developed the Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants of California with the guidance of botanist and evolutionary biologist G. Ledyard Stebbins. [2] The 1st Edition was printed in 1974. The last print version, the 6th Edition, was published in 2001. The 8th Edition, released in 2010 with ongoing updates, is the current database ...
CNPS maintains the online Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants, or Inventory, which catalogs the California Rare Plant Ranks (known as "CNPS Lists" prior to 2010). The Inventory and its ranking system remain the most widely adopted source of information about California’s special rare plants today and is used on a daily basis by scientists ...
All forms of life and a map of known occurrences with data about such occurrences. Also taxonomy and links to other databases Georgia Biodiversity Database [14] Georgia (country) biodiversity website X X X X X X X X Checklists covering ca. 11,000 of plants and animals recorded for Georgia (Central and Western Caucasus) HerpNET [15]
It is an IUCN Red List Critically Endangered species, and a California Native Plant Society Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants listed Seriously endangered species. [1] [9] The entire native (world) population of the tree was reduced down to thirty to forty individual trees by the 2003 Cedar Fire. [10]
CNPS—California Native Plant Society website provides CalScape Database, an extensive database of California native plants searchable by region, as well as other useful resources. CalFlora Database — extensive searchable database of California native plants. Jepson Manual 'Flora Interchange' — extensive database of California native plants
The plant has no effective method to disperse its seeds; other species have seeds that can catch a ride on the wind, on an animal’s fur or in a bird’s stomach.
Calochortus striatus, known by the common name alkali mariposa lily, is a species of mariposa lily native to California and into Nevada. [5] [6] It is a vulnerable species on the California Native Plant Society Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants. [7]
Chlorogalum pomeridianum var. minus — endemic to the inner north and outer south Pacific Coast Ranges of California, and the San Francisco Bay Area. This variety has a less fibrous bulb than the others. On the CNPS Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants of California. [4]