Restoration and Transplant History Sample Clauses

Restoration and Transplant History. No known habitat reclamation or plant restoration efforts for these species have been performed to date. Oil shale reclamation studies were implemented in the Piceance Basin in the late 1970s and early 1980s (Call and XxXxxx 1982, 1985; Xxxxxxx and Xxxx 1981; Xxxxxx et al. 1979), but these studies did not occur within either species’ distributional range. There has been one documented transplant effort for Xxxxxx’x beardtongue to date. In June 2011, Red Butte Garden biologists transplanted 15 plants from the Seep Ridge Road expansion right-of-way to adjacent, occupied habitats near Seep Ridge Road. An additional 16 plants were moved to facilities at Red Butte Garden in black plastic 1-gallon pots filled with soil from their original location (personal communication, Xxxx Xxxxxx, Red Butte Garden, with J. Xxxx Xxxxxxxx, SWCA, December 30, 2013). The plants that were transplanted to adjacent habitat did not survive, possibly due to the mid-summer timing of transplantation or drought conditions, but the reasons the in situ transplants were not effective are not known. Nine of the 15 ex situ transplants to Red Butte Garden have survived for two growing seasons and three xxxxxxx in a large raised bed containing approximately 50:50 Utelite (expanded shale aggregate from the Frontier Formation, northern Utah) and potting soil (personal communication, Xxxx Xxxxxx, Red Butte Garden, with J. Xxxx Xxxxxxxx, SWCA, February 11, 2014). Immediate transplantation into well-draining soil is recommended based on these results (personal communication, Xxxx Xxxxxx, Red Butte Garden, with J. Xxxx Xxxxxxxx, SWCA, December 30, 2013). Anecdotal evidence from existing populations suggests that Xxxxxx’x beardtongue has limited tolerance for soil disturbance, but there is insufficient documentation to determine if the species has potential for transplantation. No transplantation of White River beardtongue has been documented to date. However, anecdotal evidence suggests that White River beardtongue may be more tolerant to transplantation than Xxxxxx’x beardtongue, because healthy, reproductive plants have been observed in both historically and recently disturbed habitats (i.e., old road cuts, roadside berms, washes, scree slides; SWCA unpublished monitoring data 2009–2013). These observations indicate that the species may have ahas high tolerance for soil/substrate disturbance, and it appears that seeds readily establish on disturbed soils, but it is not known if seedlings or adult ...
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Related to Restoration and Transplant History

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