September 23, 2006
Extension Phase:
February 28, 2007
Salter
Tree and Herb Farm
Joanna S.
Booth
PO Box
20066
Tallahassee FL 32316-0066
850:574-8367
Beginning
the hunt for pilosa, in an early conversation an acquaintance said,
"Oh,
good! I'm so glad the committee selected that one. It's such a sweet
little plant."
Phlox
pilosa would teach the full importance of those words.
Acknowledgements: A special thanks go to Jerry Mc
Clune, Jo Williams, Billy Boyd, Jeff Caster, Gil Nelson, Richard
Wunderlin, Brad Ellis, Dennis Hardin, V. T. Alderman, Allen Cherry, the
late Kathy Burks, William Scheftall, Jr., Nancy Desmond, Mrs. Deweece
Blair, Gary Henry, and the Florida Wildflower Advisory Council's
Executive Committee and Science Committee:
I. Research
Objective:
Develop
Sites
Develop Product Variety
Develop Color Variety
Develop
Site Diversity
Description:
"DOWNY PHLOX, PHLOX pilosa: A smaller downy
species with stamens completely hidden inside corolla tube. Found in dry
woods, sand hills, prairies. Wisconsin, s. Ontario, New York south
blooms May-June" (1)
"P. pilosa (8-30 inches) has mostly narrow
and sharp pointed leaves. The stem is often downy. The flowers are
redder than those of P. divaricata, and the tube of the corolla
is downy. April to July: in prairies and woodland from Connecticut to
Manitoba and southwest to Florida and Texas. A variable species, some
forms have ovate leaves. (2)
"Phlox pilosa ranges throughout the eastern half of
the US and consists of 9 subspecies variously recognized by taxonomists.
Check the PLANTS website for more information in this regard. Of these
PLANT reports two subspecies (sap. detonsa and ssp. pilosa from
Florida. We do not recognize these as distinct on the Plant Atlas.
However, this does complicate things a bit due to the probability of
multiple genotypes, even within Florida." (3) Downy Phlox is also known
as Prairie Phlox in some listings. (4)
Note: I was not able to find an authority on the
subspecies to identify the plant material collected from the multiple
sites in Madison county and Hernando county. This report does not
respond to the sub specie designation.
Range in Florida:
Phlox pilosa DOWNY PHLOX POLEMONIACEAE The
range area for P. pilosa includes most of the panhandle, and
central Florida. Site information includes data locations at herbariums
at University South Florida, University of Florida and Florida State
University, and. Florida Natural Areas Inventory websites.
Inventory of Locations Used in Propagation:
Origin of Material
Environmental Equities, Hudson Florida; native
material collected for propagation, sold as 1 gallon pots and rooted
linters; purchased 11/05. EE #1
Superior Trees, Lee, FL; 50, 1 gallon pots of P.
pilosa, not verified as native by Division of Plant Industry, Botany
Section; subsequently identified as a cultivar from Alabama. The
material was eliminated from production.
OBS#1 Alderman Property, Old Blue Springs Rd, Lee,
FL site: in December 05, eight plants were rescued. Later, 30 cuttings
taken and seeds were collected May 06. Observations and collections
will continue through August 07,
OBS#2 Cottondale Rd intersecting Old Blue Springs
Rd, Lee, FL site: cuttings taken and seeds collected May 06. Many of
these plants went into the production colony.
MAD #1 Hwy 53, two miles south of 1-10 Exit 258,
east ditch line: 25 cuttings taken January and February 2006.
MAD #2 Intersection of HWY 90 and Sullivan Still
Rd, 3.4 miles west of Madison: May 2006 Seeds collected in maintenance
area, cutting collections ongoing. The rooted cuttings were also added
to the production colony.
ASH #1 Ashville Hwy 221, 10 mi south of Quitman,
Georgia site. The site is less than 1 mile north of Florida / Georgia
border. Cuttings were collected April 06, seeds collected May 06.
Dr. Norcini with IFAS at Quincy, Florida
contributed 11 grams of dried plant material for germination.
FNAI listings: The Godfrey Herbarium listed sites
in Leon and Gadsden counties. No pilosa was found because either
it was not visible during the bloom period or disturbed from development
activities since location inventory was done, or was not accessible,
lacking Florida Department of Transportation approval.
Note: All sites on FDOT right of ways were
abandoned: after repeated requests to several persons. (See
Permits/Letters of Permission/Correspondence.)
Description of Sites Used for Production
Material
Control Plot:
6 rows, 10 plants each.
EE #1 Three plants and ten rooted cuttings were
transported to STHF Nov 2005 from Hudson, FL. Separation of crowns and
rooting of stems created eight plants and ten rooted cuttings to begin
propagation. Pilosa showed little transplant shock and no wilting
from cutting and rooting during the cold weather of November and
December 2005.
Description of a wet site:
OBS#1 Alderman Site is a north/south oriented,
rapidly eroding dirt road. During wet months sand washes four lanes wide
and fills ditches on both sides. The west bank is nearly a 90 degree
sheer slope with material falling into ditches. On the east side is the
beginning of large acreage of monoculture pines. After watching the site
for weeks during November 05 a lone pilosa bloom helped define
foliage characteristics and allowed further identification of the
species. Early in December, the Madison county road crew had erected
signage indicating road work and new ditching activity in the area.
Madison County Bridge and Road Supervisor Jerry McClune was contacted
about the imminent destruction of some of the plants found at the
Alderman site. Mr. McClune requested that salvage and collection
activities be limited to the maintenance area of the road only. Some
plants were relocated to the Salter Tree and Herb Farm (STHF) for stock
plant production and for replanting in other suitable locations around
Madison, at Mr. McClune's request. Cuttings were taken off other plants
not near enough to be damaged by the ditching activity. Limited cutting
activity continued December 05 through June 06. In August 2006, all of
the area was disturbed by pine straw harvest with heavy equipment
churning up sand where pilosa was growing. Observations will
continue during the 2007 no cost time extension period to document
pilosa's rebound activity. The plants growing on the west side of
the road on the sheer bank and in the low pasture fence line were not
disturbed by this activity. Gathering will continue with permission from
Mr. Alderman.
Description of a dry site:
OBS #2 Phlox pilosa was reportedly seen in
the summer of 2005 growing along the intersection of Old Blue Springs
Road and Cottonwood at SE and SW quadrants. Only when the bloom cycle
began could the plants be identified. Unlike the Alderman site, this
area is very dry, sandy, and full sun. Without water present the plants
are spindly and brittle, often only one stem present with a bloom head.
Their dormant presence was not visible in early 2006. Cuttings and seeds
were collected May 2006. Fifty cuttings were put in rooting cells and
seeds were collected.
ASH #1 In the winter of 2005 precocious bloomers
showed color in January and the striking plants were easily visible
throughout the spring. The site contains over one-half mile of pilosa
growing along the west bank of a north-south oriented road.
Pilosa is present on both sides of the road but not nearly as
prevalent on the east side. It is thick along a ditch that is maintained
by county road crews on DOT right of way, and on the private landowner
side of the fence on the west bank, the land is mowed for hay and P.
pilosa is prevalent in the fence line. Pilosa was observed until
April and May 2006 when contacts with Georgia Department of
Transportation resulted in permission for collection. All plant material
was set directly in production plot to collect data on direct rooting,
not exposing the cutting material to high mist and rodent damage.
Approximately 60 stems were placed in the plot. Many stems dried quickly
and disappeared, some continued to bloom and dried. By September, new
growth was visible from plants that had disappeared after rooting.
Continued growth is being observed as the weather cools. Stems that were
buried horizontally, with several nodes below the soil line offered
resistance by June and then disappeared. No growth is visible as of
September from this experiment. Observation will continue through the
winter of 2006 to test the ability of a fallen stem, washed by soil,
rooting as a consequence.
MAD #1 Madison HWY 53 this location was noted in
the FNAI listings. A few cuttings were taken in January and February
2006 but it appears to be a weak colony and the high vehicle traffic
determined it to be a less desirable site. Cuttings did poorly the first
year. Stems were weak. Observations need to continue into the winter
months, until the plants are one-year-old.
MAD #2 Hwy 90 and Sullivan Still Rd, May 2006,
Pilosa plant material is rescued from maintenance area and eroding
banks and transplanted to production plot. Mature seed heads are
harvested. After six weeks, new growth allowed thirty more cuttings to
be harvested. Cuttings were added to production area and irrigated field
site.
DPI Botany Reports:
The Division of Plant Industries, Plant Inspection
Division of FDACS, Gainesville FL, confirmed the identification of EE,
OBS #1 and #2, and the ASH #1 plant samples. The Sullivan Still site
material was identified by Joanna Booth. Dr. Richard Weaver noted the
exceptional color quality of the Madison samples. ASH #1, OBS
#1, OBS #2 ( See addendum.)
Permits/Letters of Permission/Correspondence:
The following individuals offered permission and
support for collecting material for the grant. The letters are included
in the attachments.
Mr. V.T. Alderman, Old
Blue Springs Rd, Lee
DOF Twin Rivers State Park
Dennis Weaver
Jerry McClune, Madison
County, FL
Billy Boyd, HWY 221,
Ashville, FL/Quitman, GA GDOT
FDOT Correspondence with
Chason and Morarity (See addendum)
Note: Clarification and
cooperation is needed for wildflower propagation. Permits and plant
rescue response teams need to be structured and a coordinated venture
begun state-wide to save native vegetation subject to rapid development
in Florida today. If rescue activity is already in place, it is an
obscure resource to locate. The late Kathy Burks, when working at
Florida Native Areas Inventory advised me on proper procedures for
collecting in the wild and how to gain permission. I was not successful
with Florida agency authorizations but found landowners and county
officials more willing to assist collection activities.
Weather:
Seasonal variations do not appear to deter P.
pilosa's behavior. While 2005 brought severe storms and hurricanes
through Florida, the rainfall was above average in March and April which
produced a season of abundant blooms in north Florida. The fall and
early winter were dry in 2005. December rains brought out some early
blooms and foliage.
The early spring weather was much different in
2006. In January 2006 precipitation was 2.36 inches compared to an
average yield of 5.36 inches. February followed with 7.35 inches verses
an average of 4.63 and March was at drought conditions with 0.29 verses
6.47 for an average. April was down 2.5 inches and May was showing 4.04
precipitation from a 4.95 expected average. The season was erratic with
rainfall and very hot as well. Phlox pilosa in the wild did not
seem to mind the early drought and seems to be well adapted to wet/dry
conditions. The Ashville site showed good robust blooms in January and
February, before the peak arrived when pilosa bloomed heavy for
three more months.
Automatic watering schedule: The
test plot and production area are given a deep soaking two times a week
with overhead sprinklers unless it has rained.
Soil Considerations
for P. pilosa
STHF grant production inventory will be kept
available at the nursery in Madison for two additional years to give
marketing publicity time to circulate.
P. pilosa seed
from the grant will be added to the STHF perennial wildflower mix and
packed for 2007 in the small packets for the public. Some seed from the
summer 2006 seed harvest will be direct sown into irrigated section of
the propagation area.
Market through web site:
Pilosa is listed on the STHF web site for sale as plants and seed
packets as of September 15, 2006. This listing will continue for 2007
and 2008 at the minimum. See
http://www.saltertreeandherbfarm.com
Links with STHF vendors
of the small seed packets are listed on the web.
Ongoing activities
include:
Seed
collecting, increasing strong condition of genetic pool; plant
production at STHF for distribution through seeds, cuttings and larger
plants in pots; and increasing production colony to meet projected
market response. Testing will continue on germination and soils. Data
collection and observation continue on sites to monitor behaviors to
external changes.
Attempts will continue
to link with other parties interested in promoting Florida wildflowers.
STHF plans to continue efforts to market P. pilosa through the
Wildflower Seed and Plant Growers Association.
Findings:
Phlox pilosa is
highly adaptable to cutting and surviving rooting and transplanting. It
can be very active in high erosion areas, even showing signs of vigor in
the post disturbed stage. It is susceptible to damage during the bloom
stage as the stem becomes brittle and is easily broken if last year's
growth. New growth is more resilient and sometimes vigorous and always
delectable it seems. Thankfully, the rooting stage can be as quick as
three weeks. Six months will often produce a blooming, seed bearing
plant if growing in the ground.
Wildlife control during
propagation is a challenge. Small mice seek out rooting pilosa
sprigs and will eat all at once. Rabbits and deer have a similar
behavior when pilosa is in the prime growth and bloom early in
the spring. Urban environments may actually be a more "hospitable
environment," regarding foraging.
Pilosa seems to
have the hardiness and vigor necessary to survive excessive handling for
industry production. It also has significant diversity of plant color
during the winter dormancy which will make it an "off season
attention-getter." It has a deep maroon foliage in winter and with the
contrast of light beige Bahia grass as a backdrop in native conditions,
pilosa is beautiful and attractive even while dormant. There
should certainly be a welcome spot for pilosa in gardens and
yards throughout Florida. Its aggressive behavior in response to
seasonal mowing and the effects of erosion, show it should do well as an
addition to the horticultural industry.
The cool months are the
ideal propagation time for P. pilosa.
As early as June 1, 2006, many objectives have had
a successful conclusion. A no cost extension will be requested to
complete the proposed target of 1/2 acre to secure production material and
create a stock colony until 2009. Seed stock will be sold to the public
and some banked for two additional years.
Pilosa
is drought and heat tolerant. It can grow in, and seems to prefer low
nutrient, sandy soils and will try to bloom repeatedly. It is a plant of
disturbed sites. As a pioneer plant it is adaptable to disturbance.
Welcome to the plant industry! And with it, polyurethane, pots, black
plastic and transportation.
Pilosa
will take wide ph ranges, will take competition or no competition, will
grow in poor soil (i.e. cracks in culverts), and is both wet and dry
tolerant. And while it is common for a pilosa plant to experience
top growth die-back, taking sometimes three to six months to reappear,
pilosa's characteristics make it ideal to introduce into urban
environmental stresses.
Conclusions:
The research objectives were to develop sites,
product variety, color variety and site diversity. All these objectives
have been met and described above. The limited exception concerns
developing site diversity. Soil differences with respect to organic
content appear more detrimental to pilosa than the shade
component, however, this aspect needs further observation to isolate
responses to shade vs. organic content in the soil. A Bahia lawn site
was substituted for the dense shade site, on road front footage for
public awareness and duplicating the conditions of a nearby native
colony. Over the next three years plants are expected to multiply three
fold.
Products were developed through an increase in
diversity and availability of venues and quantity of plant product. At
the beginning of the project there was no P. pilosa seed
available commercially and only five plants were found through the
native plant industry search. Now, STHF has joined Environmental
Equities in propagating P. pilosa plants. Seed is available for
sale and research and a production colony of 1320 plants are growing at
the STHF propagation sites. And small plants were distributed to private
individuals and government agencies in 2006. Distribution and
appreciation will continue for Phlox pilosa.
1) What
are the natural soil conditions that P. pilosa grows in?
2) Are
there any unusual elements present?
3) What
are methods to mimic natural soil conditions?
Six soil tests were done
for analysis and comparison. The application of testing protocol made it
difficult to get clear indications of the conditions of selected soil
samples. Testing protocol was developed primarily for creating
conditions for specific crops. Wildflowers are not currently listed as a
crop for analysis codes on IFAS Extension Soil tests. Attempts were made
to extrapolate information under these conditions. A standard soil
fertility test, ph test, and micro nutrient test were selected to gather
information on the condition of the soils where P. pilosa came
from and where it would be grown. IFAS Soil reports
1205A This is a sample
taken on the STHF of undisturbed native soil (in relation to 1205 B).
This site had two successive 25 year mono culture slash pine crops grown
on the land. It was left to native re-growth influences after the last
harvest in 2001.
1205B same as 1205A
except land has been cleared, bulldozed, raked and limed. This is the
current production colony site. Concrete is present in this site.
Additional tests will be conducted to determine if this site is an
anomaly with higher lime content. Questions also arise about whether
underlying limestone is present or too much lime was applied during the
land clearing and preparation stage. (See addendum.)
1205C This is a sample
from a nearby site of a Madison county native colony, OBS #1. Here
pilosa grows in a ditch line, on the pasture side of a road
dissecting it from the edge of a downhill mono culture pine crop. It is
a site of intense erosion where a shear road bank collapses onto the
dirt road and requires repeated county maintenance.
1205D STHF site with
shade. In 1972 this area was planted as a field grown native specie
production site. Unsold species were left to naturalize. It has high
organic matter and dense shade and dry sandy soil.
406C Asheville native
colony, Hwy 122 N, .8 miles north of the Florida-Georgia border. Because
it was on the Georgia side of the border, a request for analysis was
sent to Brooks Co., GA.
406D STHF shade grove
(same as 1205 D) This sample was included for micro nutrient content
analysis.
Observations: The ph
level of 6.0 at the Asheville site and the 5.7 level at Old Blue
Springs, Madison site suggest a slightly acidic preference. However,
the 1205B sample has a ph of 7.6 and plants have grown to the diameter
of 10 - 12 inches. This suggests that pilosa is not dependent on
a narrow ph range.
Pilosa
specifically rejected the 1205D (406C) site. While a wide range of soil
acidity did not seem to slow pilosa down, plants dried immediately after
a June transplant of rooted cuttings to 1205D. Cold weather transplants
will be attempted for November 2006. No activity has been noted since
June 06. It appears pilosa does not like humus. Observations will
continue into the cooler season to see if rebound occurs in a high
organic matter, dense shade site.
In the native sites
where P. pilosa grows, water is a big issue in the sandy soil.
Pilosa's ability to adapt to wet-dry soil conditions shows it will
continue its bloom and seed setting stages, specially if it is disturbed
through browsing or mowing or ditching activity.
Soil temperature was not
considered at the outset of the research period. Data collection needs
to show the effects of landscape fabric on the pilosa plantings.
Bloom and growth behavior with and without landscape fabric also needs
to be monitored. It is expected that there are elevated temperatures of
the root ball in black plastic pots and soil temperature changes near
and under woven plastic fabric.
Wildlife in the Neighborhood
Mice are devastating to
rooted liner production. New cuttings in March 06 were denuded over
night. Established cuttings were cropped also, but showed new growth
emerging in ten days to two weeks. Patience and removal from the lush
mist house condition was required. A theory that pilosa will
disappear for periods requires patience to wait for rebound growth. Some
rebounding occurs within two weeks but no material is being discarded in
hopes that root activity of the perennial will provide new growth as the
seasons change.
Deer continue to graze on
phlox. Nothing has deterred them for long. Commercial sludge did not
work, pinwheels did not work for long, and dried blood loses effect
quickly. No form of human scent left at the perimeter of the production
sites had any deterrence. In July 2006, swifter sheets that had
collected the family hound dog's hair seem effective. Plans to construct
motion detector spray system are being considered.
Rabbits and turkey show
signs of being present in the production areas. The turkeys scratch and
nip wildflowers and the pellets left behind indicate both deer and
rabbits are grazing on P. pilosa.
An in-kind-donation from
STHF will be a purchase of 600 feet of chicken wire to form a tent over
new pilosa transplants until the plants are established. This
will be tried as a benign deterrent and preferable to running electric
wire. (See addendum.)
Note: Urban areas will not succumb to wildlife
foraging as much as rural acreage. The Ashville site is fenced on both
sides of the highway. OBS # 1 and 2 have large open areas with live
stock and monoculture pines but have not exhibited heavy forage damage.
Pests are now labeled "wildlife" and are falling under the general
philosophy of cooperating with nature, to get plants established.
Fertilizer
On March 1, 2006 a general all
purpose flower and garden fertilizer, Scott's 10-10-10 time release
plant food was broadcast on the production plot. A second application
was applied June 1 2006. In the control plot, rows EE1,1-10 and OBS1,
1-10 received fertilizer only. Under the
control plot conditions, no response or benefit in growth appeared in
plants treated with 3 mo time release 10-10-10 fertilizer. Also, topical
applications at bud state produced no significant difference in quantity
of bloom or seed set.
Note: After a soil testing consultation was done
with William Schaftall, Jr., of the Leon County Extension Service,
questions came up over the relevance of a fertilizer program. The
control plot data show pilosa does not respond to added
commercial dense nutrients. With a low
nutrient need, a low fertilization program would avoid micro nutrient
build-up which may impair performance and get soil out of balance.
Consideration continues for environmentally benign approaches and a
further concern to establish a more "native" site for the control plot.
More information is needed on fire maintained landscape and the release
of nutrients from the burning. Pilosa won't have need for much
organic material with low nutrient needs and environmental conditions
that select for more complete (full) decomposition. Failure to perform
should not be due to lack of organic material. If pilosa grows in
sand, under pines, it gets acid from pine needles but leeching reduces
the chance for nutrient build-up. Increasing organic matter in sand does
not appear to be a requirement but may enhance conditions for pilosa
in the horticultural environment.
Production Methods: Creating Product Variety
Seeds:
Harvesting: Seeds are
collected when the capsule is turning from green to beige. Stems are
left in a dry airy place and moved to a muslin bag to finish the drying
process. Capsules of pilosa are capable of projecting seed 4-6
feet and cure at differing rates. Keeping the stem material contained in
cloth or paper bags is the only way to minimize lost seed.
Germination: The seed
sample collected June 06, from ASH #1 was processed at Tallahassee Seed
Testing Company, August 31 06. A 92 percent TZ report was issued. The TZ
test only shows live tissue present. Abnormal or dormant seed are not
defined. As of September 15, 2006 the full germination test of the
pilosa sample had not reached fifty percent. The lab was advised to
continue with the process and complete data will be made available.
Seed will
be sold to the public in small seed packets. A small amount of seed will
be donated by STHF for research, as long as seeds remain in the STHF
seed bank.
OBS#1
December 05 Seed capsules were collected during the rescue operation.
Original
material: Dried plant material was provided by IFAS Quincy and was
planted December 05. No sprouts were visible by March 06, nothing
visible by June 06. No seeds were visible in the material planted but
all material was sown.
Sites:
Seeds collected from OBS #1 and #2 and MAD #2. TZ results are in, and
waiting for germination results. On site germ testing was conducted for
eight days. Phlox will usually sprout in the fall and winter
temperatures in 10 days to two weeks in a mist house. Inside, with
temperatures at 73-75 degrees Fahrenheit, the sand filled container had
seed sprouting on the eighth day. The Sullivan Still Rd sample began
spouting on the ninth day with no sign of sprouting of EE, OBS or ASH
samples between wet towels. Doc # 6.
In August 2006,
correspondence with Dr. Wunderlin led to contacting an expert on
POLEMONIACEAE, Carolyn Ferguson, curator at the Kansas State University
Herbarium. Ms. Ferguson was unable to provide information on subspecies
identification. The question of the probability of P. divaricata
and pilosa crossing was discussed, as well. There are no studies
that she is aware of that have tested the percentage of seeds showing
cross pollinating from these two species. STHF will plan on separating
pilosa and divaricata to reduce the potential of cross
pollination as much as possible.
Ferguson e-mail on
cross-pollination.
Cuttings:
In the mist house, a cutting with three to four
nodes was placed with two nodes below soil and two nodes above soil in a
potting soil mix. No rooting hormone is needed with pilosa. In
general, pilosa has a rapid rooting behavior. It roots in two to
three weeks in dormant condition, during the winter months in a mist
house or greenhouse environment. Misting occurs three times a day for
ten minutes each session. It is slower to root in spring and summer when
it is active with seed production but is still showing rooting attempts
during the summer heat and bloom cycle. When the temperature rose in
March, mice attacked the cuttings in the rooting trays and would
continue to eat the new growth as pilosa attempted to rebound.
Rooting during the cold months in the mist house was much more
successful with near 100 percent success for cuttings taken then.
Cuttings will be contained in screen or mesh in 2006 / 07 season to
combat mice.
Transplants and rescued plants:
Half of the transplants will have immediate die
back, meaning a quick drying of top material. The other half will be
vigorous with little shock and can show buds and immerging sprouts on
the stem and at the soil line within one month from being moved. Plants
that have experienced shock may begin sprouting after three months. (See
addendum: Transplants and rescue.)
Direct placement of cuttings into soil:
Since pilosa roots so easily, a section of
the production plot was designated for direct placement of cutting
material. Eights stems were grouped in twos and threes and were buried
three to four inches deep. Rooting stimulator was applied weekly for
three weeks.
Note: Still collecting data. Companion plants are
allowed to co-mingle with pilosa plants to cover the ground.
Moisture is higher with more foliage around some pilosa plants.
Mist house inventory is at 105 cuttings rooting as
of Sept 15, 2006.
Mulch: Half of the test plot plants received pine
straw mulch. At this point, observation shows that mulching does not
seem to aid pilosa in the plant establishment period. Pilosa
seems to show vigorous growth behavior with and without mulch
depending on the season. (See Behaviors, below.)
Site development
A
Control Plot was started
with the first sixty plants. Six rows of ten plants; three rows of
Hernando county material and three rows Madison county material.
Original plants purchased and rooted cuttings done 11/05-1/06 from
Environmental Equities and rescued plants from Old Blue Springs Rd,
12/05. Plant designation is EE1, 1-10; EE2, 1-10, EE3, 1-10, OBS1 1-10,
OBS2 1-10; and OBS3 1-10.
Row EE1 and OBS1 were fertilized in March and June.
½ rows EE1, EE2 and ½ of rows OBS1 and OBS2
received pine straw mulch.
Full sun site: The
test plot and adjacent production plot were selected in full sun since
pilosa was observed in full sun conditions at five out of six
collection sites.
Full sun 2nd site:
Beginning to plant 600 linear feet of irrigated seed harvest site as of
September 15, 2006.
Part shade site:
(1205D) This site was planted with ASH #1 material. Observations will
continue during no cost extension phase. To demonstrate site diversity
the part shade and full shade areas were planted into areas with and
without added irrigation. May transplants resulted in die-back of all
material. Stems offered resistance at six weeks, but no rebound growth
occurred as of September 15, 2006. No further plantings will be added to
this site unless reemergence of planted material occurs and not until
11/07 when the production colony should be well developed.
Note: Data collection will continue through
extension period. See soil analysis interpretation for 1205D.
Note: Develop new site
exploring co-cropping with Bahia. A new control plot,
naturalized site will be established because of watering and soil
influences in the horticultural setting.
Seed Harvest and Plant
Production
Current: September 15, 2006 The control plot had generous seed capsule
development ready for harvest June 06. Plants produced seeds and
cuttings by the end of six months from start of propagation on November
05. Individual plants in the control plot have been monitored for
reaction to cuttings and seed pod harvest. The production plot is next
to the control plot and was planted in April 2006. These plants had
limited rebound and sporadic blooming with minimal seed set. By
September 15, 2006, seventy percent of the plants were showing initial
regrowth from the period of die-back after transplant.
Fall/Winter 06 Plants are ready to be
sold and distributed to three customers. No new growers have been
identified by September 06. Seed stock will be sold to the public, some
banked for one to three years, and some planted in irrigated rows at the
STHF. Stock plant production at STHF will continue through August 2007.
Rooted cuttings will be salable in three months in the winter season,
with six month old plants ready for sale in 1 gallon pots, likely
blooming in the March-May 2007 time frame. Harvesting has continued to
accumulate seed as the pilosa continued to bloom from repeated
cuttings and seed harvest. Harvest ended late August in the control
plot. Seeds will be offered for further research. Direct seeding data
will be collected and retail sale of some seed will be added to the STHF
small seed packet distributions.
Spring 07 (Ongoing production notes
will be added to summary at end of the extension phase.)
Production Plot data - Production Source
Development
Site 1 map/test site
Site 2 stock plant
production site
600 ft of prime site with
drip irrigation/ground cover was donated by STHF to pilosa production
Shade site/partial shade
site: monitor non response of transplants in April 07; watch for growth
and seed production.
In general, EE plants out
performed OBS plants in growth, flowering but not color diversity. OBS
shows more variety of markings
Summary: P. pilosa is not rare in
north Florida but very rare commercially. Initial rooting and seed
collection experience indicates a good probability for the plant to
endure high volume propagation. Plants enjoy being pruned and are
vigorous in moist areas. They adapt well to dry conditions. Phlox
pilosa is reported by several observers to try to bloom year round.
My first view of pilosa blooming in Madison county was on a cold
December day. It was blooming in Hernando county in November 2005. The
control site and production site contain nearly 200 plants in various
stages of growth. December 2005 through March 2006, 60 plants were
established in the control plot. By May 2006 an additional 60 plants
were added to the STHF production plot. The additional 80 plants are in
the direct-to-soil stem-rooting experiment. Some material has
experienced die-back and will be left undisturbed to observe rebounding.
The production time table was adversely affected by heavy foraging from
wildlife. It is not conclusive that weather affected the production of
pilosa since it exhibits a high adaptability to drought and flood
conditions.
Many native colonies of P. pilosa undergo
mowing by county and state road crews. This effects seed and cutting
collection but also insures that there will be another bloom period
likely in six to eight weeks. Many colonies are present on Hwy 90
between Madison and Monticello. If policy changes occur with FDOT
supporting collection activities, increased production can occur.
Current procedures for newcomers to the plant
gathering process can seem daunting at best. Florida Department of
Transportation requires months in advance permission requests, with
specific locations required. So, it is difficult to explore any DOT
right of way for species to be propagated. With the maintenance and
development activity that proliferates Florida roadways, it seems
unlikely that these areas will remain viable areas to collect
propagation material of native species even those inventoried. As of
November 2006, FL DOT has allowed permitted collection activity on
selected roads regarding a subsequent research project.
Behaviors:
There are two distinct
seasons to pilosa's rebound behavior. In the spring, when forage
is scarce and when dense nutrients are absent, mice, rabbits, turkey and
deer decimate pilosa as though it is exceptional forage. After
this early cropping, pilosa rebounds with vigor, to display
mid-season blooms. These blooms experience less browsing because of
alternate forage sources and allow the essential seed setting session
for reproduction purposes. After mid-season seed collecting activity,
pilosa attempts to continue to reproduce seed, by blooming again,
though the plant seems to expire under the expectations to set seed
during the intense heat of summer. By August, it appears exhausted and
dies back. These plants are observed to rebound with vigor as soon as
summer's intense heat subsides. Pilosa appears to be able to
bloom all year long. The Asheville site was discovered in January 2006
by a few early blooms and blooms continued through early May. Seed had
set by early June and it was mowed soon after seed collecting occurred.
Around Madison, the sites have continued to show scattered blooming
until mid-August. Often blooms appear in late November and December.
Pilosa
appears to be a fierce competitor
where competition is a major factor with food, seeds production and root
disturbance. With Bahia in the grassland community pilosa has a
different but equally effective presence in plant structure and
behavior. Pilosa behaves like a pioneer species in that it is
adapted to low competition disturbed sites; when an area is scraped, or
through root disturbance, new plants are stimulated at the nodes and
activity begins in earnest regardless of nutrients. Because pilosa also
flourishes in high competition STHF will consider co-cropping it with
Bahia.
Pilosa
also shows versatility in that it is adapted to dry/wet conditions. It
will tolerate extremes in climate patterns with temperature and
moisture.
Mulching
behavior shows equally wide range of application. Pine mulch seemed to
hold pilosa back in the winter, where bare sand plants seemed
robust. Later, in the summer, the mulched area showed more lush growth
than the bare sand plants.
Site and Production Summary:
The location of sites for continued collection and
production are established and available for short term. The production
stock colony is established and will provide material for ongoing
production needs. A varied genetic pool from six sites, including
central Florida, insures good color variety. Not enough seed was
produced in the control plot to document germ percent by site.
Ongoing deterrents for wildlife management are
being explored. Trials with human hair and dog have been tested through
the summer of 2006. Observations will be continuing on deterrent
activity. (See addendum.)
Other questions to ask?
Why is P. pilosa
not wide spread? If it is artificially maintained, can it withstand
competition with grasses? Is it a plant for restoration? Is it adaptable
to fire? Does it prefer a winter or summer burn if at all? How does soil
temperature of plants in plastic pots and landscape fabric affect growth
patterns? Is competition a major factor in the behavior of pilosa?
Are there other factors besides soil that contribute to competitive
behavior in P. pilosa?
II. Development
Objectives:
Increase
Market Diversity/Availability
Increase
Market Quantity
1. Create market with
growers
Notice to Growers/Wildflower Seed and Plant Growers
Association
Listed in Association of Florida Native Nurseries
member inventory
Listed in the Plant List Feb – May
2. Create retail market for pilosa
O'Toole's Herb Farm, Madison: OTHF currently buys 1
gallon wildflower plants from STHF. They have expressed interest in
retailing pilosa when plants are ready.
Small seed packet sales: STHF has a seed dealer's
license to sell small packets of seeds directly to the public.
STHF plant orders:
Anthony Tulino, private landowner,
central Florida
Department of Forestry, Richard E.
Weaver, Jr., Botanist, collector
Jeff Caster, Florida
Department of Transportation, landscape architect, wildflower education
project
STHF grant production inventory will
be kept available at the nursery in Madison for two additional years to
give marketing publicity time to circulate.
P. pilosa seed from the grant will be added to the STHF perennial wildflower mix and packed
for 2007 in the small packets for the public. Some seed from the summer
2006 seed harvest will be direct sown into irrigated section of the
propagation area.
Market through web site: Pilosa is listed on the STHF web site
for sale as plants and seed packets as of September 15, 2006. This
listing will continue for 2007 and 2008 at the minimum. See
http://www.saltertreeandherbfarm.com
Links with
STHF vendors of the small seed packets are listed on the web.
Ongoing
activities include:
Seed collecting, increasing strong condition of genetic pool; plant
production at STHF for distribution through seeds, cuttings and larger
plants in pots; and increasing production colony to meet projected
market response. Testing will continue on germination and soils. Data
collection and observation continue on sites to monitor behaviors to
external changes.
Attempts will continue to link with other parties interested in
promoting Florida wildflowers. STHF plans to continue efforts to market
P. pilosa through the Wildflower Seed and Plant
Growers Association.
Findings:
Phlox pilosa is highly adaptable to cutting and surviving
rooting and transplanting. It can be very active in high erosion areas,
even showing signs of vigor in the post disturbed stage. It is
susceptible to damage during the bloom stage as the stem becomes brittle
and is easily broken if last year's growth. New growth is more resilient
and sometimes vigorous and always delectable it seems. Thankfully, the
rooting stage can be as quick as three weeks. Six months will often
produce a blooming, seed bearing plant if growing in the ground.
Wildlife control during propagation is a challenge. Small mice seek out
rooting pilosa sprigs and will eat all at once. Rabbits and deer
have a similar behavior when pilosa is in the prime growth and
bloom early in the spring. Urban environments may actually be a more
"hospitable environment," regarding foraging.
Pilosa seems to have the hardiness and vigor necessary to survive
excessive handling for industry production. It also has significant
diversity of plant color during the winter dormancy which will make it
an "off season attention-getter." It has a deep maroon foliage in winter
and with the contrast of light beige Bahia grass as a backdrop in native
conditions, pilosa is beautiful and attractive even while
dormant. There should certainly be a welcome spot for pilosa in
gardens and yards throughout Florida. Its aggressive behavior in
response to seasonal mowing and the effects of erosion, show it should
do well as an addition to the horticultural industry.
The cool months are the ideal propagation time for P. pilosa.
As early as June 1, 2006, many
objectives have had a successful conclusion. A no cost extension will be
requested to complete the proposed target of ¼ acre to secure production
material and create a stock colony until 2009. Seed stock will be sold
to the public and some banked for two additional years.
Pilosa
is drought and heat tolerant. It can grow in, and seems to prefer low
nutrient, sandy soils and will try to bloom repeatedly. It is a plant of
disturbed sites. As a pioneer plant it is adaptable to disturbance.
Welcome to the plant industry! And with it, polyurethane, pots, black
plastic and transportation.
Pilosa
will take wide ph ranges, will take competition or no competition, will
grow in poor soil (i.e. cracks in culverts), and is both wet and dry
tolerant. And while it is common for a pilosa plant to experience
top growth die-back, taking sometimes three to six months to reappear,
pilosa's characteristics make it ideal to introduce into urban
environmental stresses.
Conclusions:
The research objectives were to
develop sites, product variety, color variety and site diversity. All
these objectives have been met and described above. The limited
exception concerns developing site diversity. Soil differences with
respect to organic content appear more detrimental to pilosa than
the shade component, however, this aspect needs further observation to
isolate responses to shade vs. organic content in the soil. A Bahia lawn
site was substituted for the dense shade site, on road front footage for
public awareness and duplicating the conditions of a nearby native
colony. Over the next three years plants are expected to multiply three
fold.
Products were developed through an
increase in diversity and availability of venues and quantity of plant
product. At the beginning of the project there was no P. pilosa
seed available commercially and only five plants were found through the
native plant industry search. Now, STHF has joined Environmental
Equities in propagating P. pilosa plants. Seed is available for
sale and research and a production colony of 1320 plants are growing at
the STHF propagation sites. And small plants were distributed to private
individuals and government agencies in 2006. Distribution and
appreciation will continue for Phlox pilosa.
Footnotes:
1. A Field Guide to
Wildflowers of Northeastern and North-central North America by Roger
Tory Peterson and Margaret McKenny, 1968, Houghton Mifflin Company,
Boston, p 226.
2. Wildflowers of the
United Stated, by Harold William Rickett, The New York Botanical
Garden, McGraw-Hill Book Company, p 412.
3. Dr. Richard Wunderlin
e-mail, Tues, Oct 25, 2005
4. 1. POLLINATION BIOLOGY
OF FOUR SOUTHWESTERN SPECIES OF PHLOX (POLEMONIACEAD): INSECT VISITATION
IN RELATION TO COROLLA TUBE LENGTH; Suzanne C. Strakosh* and Carolyn J.
Ferguson, The Southwestern Naturalist 50 (3): 291-301 September 2005
4.2. Natural hybridization
between an outcrossing and a selfing Phlox (Polemoniaceae): the maternal
species of F1 hybrids Carolyn J. Ferguson, Donald A. Levin, and Robert
K. Jansen;Plant Systematics and Evolution 218: 158 (1999)
4.3 A CHLOROPLAST DNA
PHYLOGENY OF EASTERN PHLOX (POLEMONIACEAE): IMPLICATIONS OF CONGRUENCE
AND INCONGRUENCE WITH THE ITS PHYLOGENY Carolyn J Ferguson , and Robert
K. Jansen
4.4 Relationships of
Eastern North American Phlox (Polemoniaceae) based on ITS Sequence
Data; Carolyn J Ferguson, Franziska Kramer, and Robert K. Jansen;
Sytemic Botany (1999), 24(4): pp. 616-631.
4.5 Pollinator Importance
and Temporal Variation in a Population of Phlox divaricata L. (Polemoniaceae);
Shelly Wiggam and Carolyn J. Ferguson: Am. Midl. Nat. 154: 42-54
4.6 POLEMONIACEAE
PHLOLOGNEY AND CLASSIFICATION: IMPLICATIONS OF SEQUENCE DATA FROM THE
CHLOROPLAST GENE NDHF1; L. Alan Prather, Carolyn J. Jerguson, and Robert
K. Jansen: American Journal of Botany 87(9): 1300-1308. 2000.
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Final Report Addendum
Research and Development Grant
Phlox pilosa
February 28, 2006
Salter
Tree and Herb Farm
Joanna S.
Booth
PO Box
20066
Tallahassee FL 32316-0066
850:574-8367
It was
necessary to request a time extension for meeting the pilosa planting
goals due to:
Wildlife foraging during
the winter and spring of 2005/06 impacted production.
Lack of permission to
collect on state road right of ways eliminated most known collection
sites
Adjusting from a dry
woodland species to an open area species required modification of site
diversity plans.
Additional information:
DPI Botany Reports: In January 2007, Kansas
State University Herbarium Curator, Carolyn Ferguson, Polemoniaceae
expert, concurred that all original colony specimens were correctly
identified as Phlox pilosa ssp. pilosa. KSU research reports on Phlox
pollination, natural hybridization, DNA based relationships and
evolutionary patterns were offered for inclusion in research
documentation. 4.1-5
Soil Considerations: A second soil sample
was taken at the STHF propagation site. The test results showed a lower
lime result, however the propagation site in general has an elevated
presence of lime. The low soil ph does not seem to impair the growth
behavior of P pilosa. (Doc 4 a)
Wildlife in the Neighborhood: The STHF
donated 600 feet of irrigated footage with landscape fabric between rows
to aid seed production and collection of Phlox pilosa. One inch
poultry wire was draped over the rows to discourage wildlife foraging
during the "rooting in" period after transplanting crown divisions. In a
few months the plants will be able to withstand foraging, however, seed
harvest may require continued use of poultry wire.
Seed Production
/ Collection in the wild
produced a germination report falling below acceptable commercial
levels. Because the total quantity of seed was so small it was not
feasible to market the 05/06 seed crop. It remains banked and available
to research or further germination testing. It is feasible that
pilosa seed production for the 06/07 harvest will be much greater
and will be available to the public.
Permits/Letters of Permission/Correspondence:
Transplants and rescued plants: A special thanks
and recognition for support is extended to Mrs. Deweece Blair. Mrs. Blair's property borders the Ashville
site. In November 2006, she gave STHF permission to harvest crown
divisions of the plants established in a hayfield and in a fence line.
This generous support of the project allowed for the production goals to
be met.
Inventory of P. pilosa plants:
Control plot: 30 plants of central Florida stock
and 30 plants of Madison stock
Propagation colony 60 plants of Madison mixed
sites Asheville, Sullivan Stills and Old Blue Springs Rd
100 plants Asheville in cutting rows
600 Ashville plants in irrigated rows
500 plants seeded into 5, 250 sq feet of bahia lawn
1320 plants established for propagation
For Retail
150 rooted liners on hand
Feb 2007
30 1 year old plants in
pots
Production Behaviors:
Tip end rootings should be considered the same
price structure as a seedling.
Crown divisions should reflect the price structure
of a 2 yr old plant
After 1 year in the ground, plant size and seed
production double and then triple the second and third year.
Pinching early bloom buds will cause an increase in
the May/June seed harvest.
Pilosa can be encouraged to bloom again from
pinching seed capsules before they ripen.
Repeated mowing results in repeated bloom stages
and pilosa will do well incorporated into highway beautification
projects
Old Blue Springs Road site, Lee, FL: After a 14
month observation of this colony and the first pilosa blooms
found, the disturbance has been great. In December 2006 the late
bloomers (or is it early bloomers?) were prolific and a thought came
that pilosa had benefited from the repeated cuttings, road work
and pine straw harvest. However, one January day, a drive to the site
was a shock. A cattle pasture and fence line was gone and a fresh turned
field for planting replaced the pilosa. At the same time, road
maintenance, had removed the bench of sand that kept filling up the
ditch. This bench also was anchor to the other big patch of pilosa.
While this seems a great loss - we will see. Phlox
pilosa has been impressive in its ability to withstand disturbance
and adapt to new circumstances. And thirty plants from this group were
started in the propagation colony at STHF. A rescue was the answer here.
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