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PORCUPINE-GRASS
Hesperostipa spartea
Family Poaceae - Grass Family
Division Anthophyta - Flowering Plants
Risk Status
Official status
Porcupine Grass is on British Columbia's Red List (CDC=G5 S2).

Image Credits: sketch in Vascular Plants of the Pacific Northwest, Hitchcock et al., 1971.

PORCUPINE-GRASS

Distinguishing features

Porcupine Grass is a tufted, smooth perennial usually 70-120 cm tall.

Distribution

Map
Red dots indicate specimen records or confirmed breeding sites.

British Columbia
Porcupine Grass is rare in southcentral British Columbia.

North America
It is found south to northwest and eastern Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico, east to Ontario and south through most of the central states to Pennsylvania.

Habitat

Prairies and grassy benchlands in the foothills and along rivers are suitable habitat for Porcupine Grass as are dry to mesic slopes and open forests in the steppe and montane zones.

Why is it endangered?

This species along with others of the grasslands communities are endangered for a number of reasons. Livestock grazing, range re-seeding and off-road recreation have modified much of the remaining "undeveloped" grassland areas. In addition, cultivation, agricultural and urban development, prescribed burning, forest encroachment, road and trail development, alien plant and animal species introductions, and hydro-electric power projects have caused outright, irreversible losses of native grassland species in general.

Because grasslands have been so influenced by human activities, a relatively large number of wildlife species associated with grasslands (including this plant species) are listed as threatened or endangered. Because of these combined influences and the relatively limited distribution of grasslands, "ancient" grasslands represent a much more endangered space in British Columbia than do "ancient" or old-growth forests.

Biology

Blooms from June to August.

Sources for more information

Related On-line Sites to Visit

Publications
The Vascular Plants of BC, MOF, pt. 4, 1990, p. 142
Vascular Plants of the Pacific Northwest, Hitchcock et al., 1971.

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