The Facts About Endangered Plants
Posted By American Meadows Content Team on Sep 27, 2012 ยท Revised on Oct 28, 2025
Posted By American Meadows Content Team on Sep 27, 2012 ยท Revised on Oct 28, 2025
When it comes to wildflowers, there is probably more well-meant misinformation on this subject than any other. But the facts are quite simple. Since itโs such an important subject, itโs good to know the rules for your area. And this short article will help you learn the facts.
The basis for all the interest in this area is simply a sincere concern for our continentโs floral bio-diversity. That means protecting the rich system of species that were on our land before any settlement, in other words the plants that were put in place by nature, not humans.
Before European settlement, North American native peoples knew the native plants well, and used them extensivelyโnot just as a food source, but to make everything from clothing to medicines. But since the native human population was not dense and quite scattered, most native plants were changed little by pre-European settlement farming and communities.
But of course, with European settlers, everything changed. As the Pilgrims and other early settlers arrived, they found our entire East Coast a wonderland of ancient primeval forest: Great tall trees with a wonderland of never-before seen wildflowers and ferns covering the shady ground. This pristine botanical paradise extended from Maine to Florida, and grew right down to the beach.
Surely this โNew Worldโ was stunning to the new arrivals, so used to the exhausted, almost-treeless fields of Europe. But wonderment quickly turned to determination. After all, early American colonists knew they had to farm to survive. Suddenly, these magnificent trees became the enemy.
So down came the forests, all up and down the Eastern seaboard. As colonies became more and more established, more and more of the original forests were taken down. The great trees became buildings and shipsโ masts. The soils were plowed and quickly planted with European crops. As the colonists moved inland, it was always a race against time: Get the trees down in time to plant the seed in time to harvest the crops before starvation set in.
The same thing happened in later years when the next generations moved further west. When Easterners looking for farmland reached the open="open" prairies, they considered it heaven. After all, deep rich soil and no trees to take down! It was a pioneer farmerโs dream. So one of the most ancient and largest prairie environments on earth, like the Great Eastern forest before it, quickly fell before the plow. Pioneers broke the fertile earth and planted the prairie so completely, that only small remnants of the original environment survive today. This has given rise to the Prairie Restoration Movement, a major ongoing effort of our time.
As population centers spread all the way to the Pacific, roughly the same thing happened. Major environmental changes appeared quickly across the landscape. So though it may be fashionable to worry about new condominiums and interstate highways destroying our natural environment today, thatโs simply not the issue. There was only one thing that changed everything on most all of our continent: farming.
In the east, it led to the destruction of the great majority of our precious woodland wildflower habitats. This is why some woodland species that were once common in the eastโthe famous ones being lady slippers, trilliums, arbutus, and othersโare rare in many regions today.
Of course, as our nation developed, concerned citizens became more and more interested in protecting the species being reduced. Ever since settlement, parks have been created, preserves set aside, and in recent years, our government has become very active in protecting our remaining bio-diversity. This concern led the passage of the now-famous Endangered Species Act.
The drama inherent in the word โendangeredโ seems to have caught the fancy of the public. Awareness is fine, but mis-information is not. Anyone interested in plants needs to understand that a plant that is officially endangered in one area may be very common and unprotected in another. The terms are specific, but they are great fodder for โbotanical gossip.โ You may hear a certain wildflower is โprotected.โ Others are mentioned in hushed tones as โrare plants.โ Usually, the person using the language has very little knowledge of the facts. Terms like โendangeredโ and โprotectedโ are used very loosely and often incorrectly, when they have very definite meanings.
One of the most famous wildflowers for being protected and/or endangered is the beautiful wild orchid called Moccasin Flower or Pink Ladyโs Slipper, Cypripedium acaule. Listen at garden clubs and other plant gatherings, and youโll always hear how itโs โrareโ, or โendangered.โ Actually it is native to 16 states and officially listed in only four. Itโs officially endangered in only two: Illinois and Tennessee. Georgia lists it as โunusual.โ New York lists it as โExploitably Vulnerableโ. But the other 12 states donโt list it at all! Even wildflowers like this one are often quite common in many places, so donโt believe everything you hear.
Itโs simple. The Endangered Species Act required="required" each state to create its own list of plants (and animals) that need protection within its (state) borders. The lists are updated regularly. Species are added when considered dangerously threatened, and some have actually been re-listed as their populations have increased due to protection. Each state is responsible to keeping its list current. Here are the definitions of terms:
Here is the official information from the listing by the State of Georgia. The following abbreviations are used to indicate the status of state-protected plants and animals or those proposed for state-protection in Georgia.
| E | Listed as endangered. A species which is in danger of extinction throughout all or part of its range. |
| T | Listed as threatened. A species which is likely to become an endangered species in the foreseeable future throughout all or parts of its range. |
| R | Listed as rare. A species which may not be endangered or threatened but which should be protected because of its scarcity. |
| U | Listed as unusual (and thus deserving of special consideration). Plants subject to commercial exploitation would have this status. |
As always, government regulations tend to become complicated, as these have. The basic intended meanings of Endangered and Threatened are clear. But in governmentโs aim to always be encyclopedic, a strange thing has happened. In fact, there is one factor here that is almost always mis-interpreted.
In context, these terms may not mean what you think they mean. Take a look in Georgiaโs definitions and youโll see the phrase โthroughout all or part of its range.โ Thatโs a key phrase, and hereโs why: Take the popular wildflower, Butterfly Milkweed, Asclepias tuberosa. This much-loved, orange-flowered species has a huge native range that extends over every state east of the Mississippi except Florida and New York. Obviously, it is quite common. But at the edges of its range, as its populations thin out, it naturally becomes less common. Look at Vermontโs Endangered/Threatened List, and youโll find it listed as โThreatened!โ Why? Because this kind of listing means only that its presence in that state is threatened; the species, in fact, is far from being threatened at all. So when you see a species listed by your state, look a little closer to see if itโs a โlocalโ threat just to that state, or a real threat that may be leading to extinction.
Whatโs on the lists? Most of the state lists are filled with quite rare sedges, grasses, obscure mosses, and other plants youโve probably never heard of. In among them, though, are some you may recognize.
Check your stateโs list. Itโs easy. The USDA has a very simple way to look up each state list. Simply click on the link below, put in a check mark by your state, and hit โDisplay Resultsโ, and there it is.
Click here to view the official Protected Plant List for your state