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糖心TV
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Amy Martin
Editor, CC Magazine
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Plant Detective

Vermont State Botanist Grace Glynn 鈥14 surveys A false mermaid-weed habitat

Plant Detective

Vermont State Botanist Grace Glynn 鈥14 is on the hunt for rare and endangered plants. 

By Jenna Russell

F

or those who rarely search for anything beyond a misplaced set of keys or a cellphone, the life of a botanist might look impossibly poetic: combing through fields of wildflowers or perusing mossy riverbanks in search of elusive plants with names like handsome sedge and rough false pennyroyal.

The whimsical image fit when the state of Vermont announced last month that a plant thought to be locally extinct鈥攆alse mermaid-weed鈥攈ad been found through a chain of events that seemed stolen from a fairy tale.

It began with a sharp-eyed turtle biologist for the state, Molly Parren. She had been out surveying the habitat of wood turtles in rural Addison County on May 7 when she spotted some wild meadow garlic, which is extremely rare, beside a stream. Parren snapped a photo and sent it to her colleague, Grace Glynn 鈥14, Vermont鈥檚 state botanist.

But when Glynn opened the photo, another plant, visible in the foreground, seized her attention. She knew at once what it was: Floerkea proserpinacoides, or false mermaid-weed, an herb that had not been documented in Vermont for more than a century, and one that Glynn had sought in vain for years.

She called Parren right away. 鈥淵ou won鈥檛 believe what you just found!鈥 she told her. Then Glynn called her friend Matt Charpentier, a field botanist in Massachusetts who had helped her look for false mermaid-weed in Vermont in recent years while pursuing a similar search in Massachusetts.

鈥淪he said 鈥楢re you sitting down?鈥 and immediately I knew she鈥檇 found Floerkea,鈥 he said of the phone call. 鈥淚t was the right time of year.鈥

(An 鈥渆xcitable person鈥 by his own admission, Charpentier said he once became so fired up after hearing that an endangered plant had been located鈥擜merican chaffseed, rediscovered on Cape Cod in 2018鈥攖hat he backed into another car in a parking lot.)

鈥淭here was a lot of screaming,鈥 Glynn acknowledged of her own reaction when she noticed the Floerkea in the photo.

Seeds of false mermaid-weed
Seeds of false mermaid-weed. Photos courtesy Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department.

Unassuming and easily overlooked, false mermaid-weed appears in late April, flowers for about a month and retreats by early June. Its delicate features, including flowers just a centimeter wide, make it hard to see and identify.

Its name refers to its superficial resemblance to marsh mermaid-weed, an aquatic plant that can adapt to live on muddy shorelines.

The day after the false mermaid-weed was spotted, Glynn rushed to the rural site to confirm its presence in person. She found a dense carpet鈥斺渟o many plants, it was hard to imagine how they had been overlooked,鈥 she said.

And yet her disbelief was familiar. 鈥淚t happens a lot, people saying, 鈥榃e couldn鈥檛 have missed that,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淏ut we do, and we鈥檙e humbled over and over鈥擨 love that.鈥

Far from an anomaly, rediscoveries of plants thought to be extinct are a relatively regular feature of field botany. The bulk of a botanist鈥檚 work is looking for and documenting rare and endangered plants, and using that knowledge to try to protect them, said Glynn, who acquired her expertise as a botany major at 糖心TV and in the field naturalist program at the University of Vermont.

Lacking a staff to deploy, she also relies on field reports from far-flung botany enthusiasts who, like Parren, send in their own sightings.

Combing through the state鈥檚 forests, bogs and meadows, Glynn keeps dozens of lost-but-not-forgotten species in mind, drawn from a state list of some 600 such plants that is updated every few years. Each bears a rarity rating, from S3 and S2 (somewhat rare) to S1 (extremely rare) and SH. The H stands for historical, meaning that the plant was once found in Vermont but that it has not been seen in decades and may be gone.

It’s a little like sending your child off to college ... You’re happy because you want them to be independent, but it’s also a little sad.

鈥 Grace Glynn 鈥14

Botanists convene at regular meetings to ponder the status of each species.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like, 鈥楴ext up, red-root flatsedge鈥攚hat do you think? Are you seeing it?鈥欌 Glynn said. 鈥淪ome rare plants are doing well, expanding, so there is down-ranking鈥攎oving them from S1 to S2, for example.鈥

Among those doing well is Crepidomanes intricatum, or weft fern, a 鈥渨eird鈥 specimen that lives in caves and looks like 鈥渁 fluff, or a little Brillo pad,鈥 she said. Once ranked S1, it has moved to S3 and may drop off the list altogether, a milestone that can elicit mixed emotions.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a little like sending your child off to college,鈥 Glynn said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e happy because you want them to be independent, but it鈥檚 also a little sad.鈥

Tricky as it is to find elusive species, it is harder to pinpoint why they thrive or dwindle, and how such shifts might be related to a changing climate. Flooding is cited as one possible factor in the disappearance of false mermaid-weed from Vermont. And yet flooding in the state last summer may have helped it flourish by the stream where it was found, Glynn said, by depositing sediment and creating a more hospitable habitat.

To help preserve the species, she will send some Floerkea seeds to a seed bank in Massachusetts that houses more than 230,000 seeds of rare plants native to New England as a backup for an uncertain future.

She has also updated the status of the plant, scrolling through a drop-down menu on her computer screen and clicking once to switch Floerkea鈥檚 rating from SH鈥攁 plant once known, but lost鈥攖o S1, extremely rare, but undeniably present.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a glimmer of hope,鈥 Charpentier said of such occasions, 鈥渋n an otherwise grim world.鈥  

This article, 鈥淏y a Stream in Vermont, a Glimpse of a Plant Last Seen a Century Ago,鈥 was originally published June 14, 2024, in The New York Times. 漏 2024 The New York Times Company. All rights reserved. Used under license.

Vermont State Botanist Grace Glynn 鈥14 reads a plant manual
Grace Glynn ’14, Vermont’s state botanist, surveying false mermaid-weed. Photo courtesy Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department.


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