Rare riverside plant called Furbish's lousewort may be on brink of disappearing - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:56 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Rare riverside plant called Furbish's lousewort may be on brink of disappearing

One of New Brunswick's rare species of plants could soon disappear.

Researchers fail to find new lousewort populations in recent search along St. John River

Furbish's lousewort is found along the banks of the river in northwestern New Brunswick and in northern Maine. (Atlantic Canada Conservation Data Centre)

One of New Brunswick's rare species of plants could soon disappear.

Furbish's lousewort is a plant that can only be found growing on the shores of the upper St. John River in New Brunswick and in northern Maine.

Researchers have searched along the St. Francis Riverand downthe St. John River to Grand Falls, about 65 kilometres southeast of Edmundston, but couldn't find any new populations of the plant in New Brunswick.

And only a handful of plants are left in certain areas.

"It's disturbing," said Sean Blaney,executive director and senior scientist at Atlantic Canada Conservation Data Centre.

It's a plant that is known to be very restricted to particular habitats and to particular places on the St. John River.-Sean Blaney, Atlantic Canada Conservation Data Centre

"It's a very special piece of New Brunswick's natural heritage that is very much at risk of being lost to the province."

Blaney isn't entirely sure why the plant is disappearing but said ice jamming and flooding in recent years are likely to blame.

"The flooding seems to have become more severe than it might've been in the past and sites are being scraped away and eroded away and are not being replaced," he said.

Furbish's lousewort is one of the most unique plants growing in New Brunswick and isn't closely related to anything else in eastern North America.

The plant can typically be found as early as May with a few stemless, fern-like leaves that appear as a bouquet protruding from the ground, according to the provincialEnergy and Resource Development website.

The plants are legally protected under New Brunswick's Species At Risk Act and cannot be harmed.

How to spot a Furbish'slousewort

Toward the middle of summer, mature plants produce one or more flowering stems. These stems have fern-like leaves and are topped by acluster of up to 25 small, yellow-to-brownish individual flowers, which bloom only a few at a time, according to the website description.

The plant wasdeclared to be endangered in 1980, a status most recently confirmed in 2011.

The federal government's species at risk registry points to theclearing of trees, recreational activities, invasive species, and "changes to river dynamics" as possible reasons for the plant's problems over the years.

About 10 years ago, Blaney said, there were more than 1,000 Furbish's lousewort populations. Over the past two years, that number has dropped to just under 200.

The Furbish's lousewort has been officially in trouble since 1980, when it was declared endangered. (Atlantic Canada Conservation Data Centre)

Although the results were upsetting, Blaney wasn't surprised researchers weren't able to find the plant.

"It's a plant that is known to be very restricted to particular habitats and to particular places on the St. John River," he said.

To save the species, researchers have considered removing plants still in danger of disappearing with erosion and placing them insafer sites.

They will also collect seeds from the plant and storethem at the Canadian Forestry Service Seed Bank, so the plant can recolonize in the future.

"That way the New Brunswick genes are preserved."

With files from Information Morning Fredericton