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The Fritillaria Story
The story behind
the flower on the Jacksonville Woodlands Association shirt.
FRITILLARIA
GENTNERI
Gentner's Fritillaria
Liliaceae
(Lily) Family
The
Fritillaria gentneri, one of the rarest native plants in the world,
is found only in isolated populations in Southern Oregon. The largest
concentration of this rare and showy red bell is found in the woodlands
immediately surrounding Historic Jacksonville, Oregon.
Growing mostly
in dry, open fir and oak woodlands, the FG grows to a height of
20 to 50 inches with two to 13 large dark red (maroon) bells that
are mottled with pale yellow. The sturdy stems range from glaucous
green to purple.
In
1944, Dr. Louis Gentner, an entomologist and assistant superintendent
of the Southern Oregon Branch Experiment Station in Medford, reported
what appeared to him an undescribed species of Fritillaria. The
previous year one of his daughters, Laura, had collected for her
garden a plant that she had assumed was the fairly common Fritillaria
recurva or red bell. But when her plant flowered it was noticeably
different. By this time, however, she had forgotten where she had
originally collected it. The family made numerous trips to locate
the plant in the wild, but had no luck. The following spring another
daughter, Katherine, recognized the rare lily in a flower arrangement
in the home of a friend who then led them to the hillside where
the plant was growing. In the late 1940s Dr. Helen Gilkey, Oregon
State University Botany Department Curator, studied this "new" fritillary
and determined that the flower was indeed a distinct species. In
1951 Dr. Gilkey officially described this plant, new to Western
science, and named it in honor of the Gentner family who had discovered
it.
The U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service listed the fritillaria Gentneri on the federal
Endangered Species List in December, 1999.
The Jacksonville
Woodlands Association is working with the City of Jacksonville,
the Bureau of Land Management, Southern Oregon Land Conservancy,
and Trust for Public Land to protect fritillary habitat by purchasing
and receiving donations of land. The City of Jacksonville also provides
habitat protection in its pioneer cemetery and other natural open
species surrounding Jacksonville.
For more
information on the Fritillary gentneri (see the links below ) or
to purchase a t-shirt or a sports polo please contact: Larry Smith
at 541-899-7402 or E-mail at the address below.
Links Directory
FRITILLARIA
GENTNERI Links
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