![]() The Service expects the continued management of the paintbrush’s habitat will contribute to the recovery of a number of other species protected by the Endangered Species Act, including Taylor’s checkerspot butterfly and three subspecies of Mazama pocket gopher in Washington, the endangered Willamette daisy, and the threatened Kincaid’s lupine and Nelson’s checker-mallow in Oregon.Īdditionally, golden paintbrush habitat supports the Fender’s blue butterfly, which the Service proposed to downlist from endangered to threatened on June 22 due to the species’ recovery in the Willamette Valley. Ongoing maintenance of the plant’s prairie and grasslands habitats helped support the paintbrush’s return to its native range in Oregon. It’s a good day for the paintbrush, but more needs to be done to save Puget and Willamette prairies and the many endangered species that depend on them.”īy the late 1990s the paintbrush had been eliminated from the Willamette Valley due to habitat loss caused by fire suppression, invasive species, development and recreational picking. “But without the Endangered Species Act, this fragile flower would have been pushed into extinction years ago by unchecked agricultural and residential development. Soil Indian paintbrush appreciates moist but well-draining soil. Golden paintbrush adds splashes of bright yellow to the prairies of the Pacific Northwest when it flowers in late spring. These plants can have unpredictable foliage coloring, and shady conditions will further hinder bloom development. ![]() “The upland prairies and grasslands of the Pacific Northwest support many species that, like the golden paintbrush, are uniquely beautiful,” said Quinn Read, Oregon policy director at the Center for Biological Diversity. Light Because Indian paintbrush is naturally found in wide open areas, this wildflower needs full sun to thrive. And in British Columbia, there are three known sites, each located on a separate island. In Oregon the paintbrush has returned to 26 sites within the Willamette Valley. In Washington it lives at 19 sites: five in the South Puget Sound prairie landscape six in the San Juan Islands seven on Whidbey Island, and one near Dungeness Bay in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Now, thanks in part to replanting efforts, at least 48 sites of golden paintbrush have been documented - more than 560,000 plants. The plant, which can grow up to a foot high, was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 1997, with only 10 known populations in Washington and British Columbia. ![]() Historically found from southwestern British Columbia to the Willamette Valley in Oregon, the golden paintbrush is a short-lived perennial herb with bright yellow flowers and covered in soft, sticky hairs. ![]() Fish and Wildlife Service proposed today to remove a flowering plant called the golden paintbrush, in the Pacific Northwest, from the endangered species list due to its recovery. ![]()
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