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Pedicularis furbishiae

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Orobanchaceae

Scientific name
  
Pedicularis furbishiae

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Lamiales

Genus
  
Pedicularis

Higher classification
  
Pedicularis

Pedicularis furbishiae Pedicularis furbishiae Furbish39s lousewort Go Botany

Similar
  
Pedicularis, Pedicularis dudleyi, Pedicularis attollens, Pedicularis lanceolata, Pedicularis canadensis

Pedicularis furbishiae (Furbish's lousewort) is a perennial herb found only on the shores of the upper Saint John River in Maine and New Brunswick. Furbish's lousewort was first recognized as a new species by Maine naturalist and botanical artist Kate Furbish (who named it Furbish's wood betony) in 1880. It is considered an endangered species in the United States and Canada, and is threatened by habitat destruction, as well as riverside development, forestry, littering and recreational use of the riverbank. It was formerly in the Scrophulariaceae family, the same family as snapdragon and figwort. It is now placed in the Orobanchaceae family.

Contents

Pedicularis furbishiae Pedicularis furbishiae Furbish39s lousewort Go Botany

Because it is endangered and endemic to the area, development projects have been restricted to preserve its habitat. For example, the Dickey-Lincoln dam, a $227 million hydroelectric project proposed on the upper Saint John River in 1974, was deauthorized by Congress in 1986 after years of study, because the dam would have flooded 88,000 acres (360 km2) of Maine forest and severely reduced the lousewort's habitat. Some criticized ending the dam project to protect the lousewort; Time magazine called the idea "downright silly" in 1977. While thought extinct at the time the dam was proposed, it was rediscovered in 1976 by C.D. Richards while doing surveys to determine the environmental impact of the dam. Since it was once thought to be extinct, it is considered a Lazarus taxon.

Pedicularis furbishiae Stock Images of Pedicularis furbishae Furbish39s Lousewort

Description

Pedicularis furbishiae httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Furbish's lousewort is not distinguished by large and showy flowers. The Nature Trust of New Brunswick says it "averages 75 cm in height. During its first few years of growth, it forms a basal rosette of deeply incised fern like leaves. Usually after three years the lousewort begins to flower, often from a single, slightly hairy and reddish tinged stem with a few branches near the top. Furbish's lousewort flowers are small, yellow and snap-dragon like. They are clustered in a short cylindrical head, and open sequentially from the lower to the upper-most between July and August."

Habitat

Pedicularis furbishiae Pedicularis furbishiae Furbish39s lousewort Go Botany

Furbish's lousewort grows on the bank of the Saint John River in three areas of New Brunswick and at 18 sites in Maine. It needs moist, unstable, semi-shaded, eroding banks subject to flooding, and ice-scouring. In this way, it is typical of an entire group of shoreline species (e.g. Sabatia kennedyana, Platanthera flava) that grow in wet meadows created by spring flooding and ice scour, combined with summer low water periods. Its range extends 225 km (140 mi) from "the town of Andover, New Brunswick ... upstream to a point 2.4 km (1.5 mi) past the confluence with the Big Black River in Aroostook County, Maine"

Pedicularis furbishiae Maine Natural Areas Program Rare Plant Fact Sheet for Pedicularis

Pedicularis furbishiae Maine Natural Areas Program Rare Plant Fact Sheet for Pedicularis

References

Pedicularis furbishiae Wikipedia