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Botrychium simplex E. Hitchcock (little grapefern) - Colorado Natural ...

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Anderson, D.G. (2006, May 22). <strong>Botrychium</strong> <strong>simplex</strong> E. <strong>Hitchcock</strong> (<strong>little</strong> <strong>grapefern</strong>): a technical conservation<br />

assessment. [Online]. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region. Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/r2/<br />

projects/scp/assessments/botrychium<strong>simplex</strong>.pdf [date of access].<br />

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS<br />

The helpfulness and generosity of many experts, particularly Beth Burkhart, Reed Crook, Don Farrar, Cindy<br />

Johnson-Groh, Annette Miller, Peter Root, Dave Steinmann, Florence Wagner, Jennifer Whipple, and Jennifer<br />

Winther, are gratefully acknowledged. Their interest in the project, valuable insight, depth of experience, and time<br />

spent answering questions were extremely valuable and crucial to the project. Herbarium specimen label data were<br />

provided by Margaret Bolick (NEB); Aleisha Cordell (SJNM); Nan Lederer (COLO); Ron Hartman, Ernie Nelson,<br />

and Joy Handley (RM); Deborah Lewis (ISC); Steve Rolfsmeier (High Plains Herbarium); Sylvia Kelso (COCO);<br />

and Catherine Kleier. Jason McNees at NatureServe assisted with heritage data acquisition. Thanks also to Janet<br />

Coles, Greg Hayward, Greg Karow, Gary Patton, Jim Maxwell, Andy Kratz, Beth Burkhart, Steve Popovich, John<br />

Proctor, and Joy Bartlett for assisting with questions and project management. Beth Burkhart provided photographs<br />

by Katherine Zacharkevics and others with the Black Hills National Forest for this assessment. Mary Olivas, Jane<br />

Nusbaum, Carmen Morales, and Barbara Brayfield provided crucial financial oversight. Shannon Gilpin and Ryan<br />

Neeper assisted with literature acquisition. Thanks also to my family (Jen, Cleome, and Melia) for their support during<br />

the synthesis of this document, and to my mother for contributing the <strong>Botrychium</strong> <strong>simplex</strong> haiku.<br />

AUTHOR’S BIOGRAPHY<br />

David G. Anderson is a botanist with the <strong>Colorado</strong> <strong>Natural</strong> Heritage Program (CNHP). Mr. Anderson’s work at<br />

CNHP includes inventory and mapping of rare plants throughout <strong>Colorado</strong>, mapping weeds, maintaining and updating<br />

CNHP’s database, and writing reports on the rare plants of <strong>Colorado</strong>. He has worked with CNHP since 1999. Much of<br />

Mr. Anderson’s prior experience comes from five years of fieldwork studying the flora and ecosystem processes of the<br />

Alaskan and Canadian Arctic. Mr. Anderson also served in the Peace Corps as a science teacher in the Solomon Islands<br />

from 1996 to 1998. Mr. Anderson received his B.A. in Environmental, Populational, and Organismic Biology from the<br />

University of <strong>Colorado</strong>, Boulder (1991) and his M.S. in Botany from the University of Washington, Seattle (1996).<br />

COVER PHOTO CREDIT<br />

<strong>Botrychium</strong> <strong>simplex</strong> (<strong>little</strong> <strong>grapefern</strong>). (Left) photo of the first illustration of B. <strong>simplex</strong>, published with the<br />

description of the species (<strong>Hitchcock</strong> 1823). Photo by the author. (Right) photo by Katherine Zacharkevics, Black<br />

Hills National Forest Botanist, North Hills District of a plant collected at Dugout Gulch, Wyoming in 2005.<br />

One reluctant leaf,<br />

A moonwort sprouts in the fen<br />

Risking its secrets<br />

—Jean Anderson<br />

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