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Plant Profile

Ciliate-leaf Tickseed (Coreopsis integrifolia)

The Chipola River Tickseed is found in low woodlands and floodplains. These plants grow in sporadic clusters along the Chipola River banks and can often be found mingling with Marsh Ferns, Poison Ivy, and Saw Palmettos.

Photo Credit: Kelly Coles
  • Global Rank: G1 - Critically Imperiled
  • Legal Status: N/A
  • Family: Asteraceae
  • State: FL, GA, SC
  • Nature Serve ID: 159754
  • Lifeform: Forb/herb
  • Date Inducted in National Collection: 11/27/2023
Description:

Where is Ciliate-leaf Tickseed (Coreopsis integrifolia) located in the wild?

States & Provinces:

Ciliate-leaf Tickseed can be found in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina

Which CPC Partners conserve Ciliate-leaf Tickseed (Coreopsis integrifolia)?

CPC's Plant Sponsorship Program provides long term stewardship of rare plants in our National Collection. We are so grateful for all our donors who have made the Plant Sponsorship Program so successful. We are in the process of acknowledging all our wonderful plant sponsorship donors on our website. This is a work in progress and will be updated regularly.

Conservation Actions

William Morton
  • 11/17/2023

Chipola River, Dye-Flower, Fringe-leaf Tickseed: a Coreopsis with Many Aliases Worth the Wait

Chipola River Tickseed (Coreopsis integrifolia) is a state and globally critically imperiled wildflower that primarily grows in limestone soils along floodplains. In Florida, this species mainly occurs along the Chipola River, and reaching several subpopulations often requires a kayak or canoe. In October 2023, Atlanta Botanical Garden (ABG) staff, Kelly Coles (Gulf Coast Manager) and Ashton Holliday-Goulart (Gulf Coast Field Technician) took on this feat and kayaked sections of the Chipola River and Holmes Creek.

 

Hanna Rosner-Katz (Florida Natural Areas Inventory (FNAI)) led ABG staff during the first site assessment to confirm health of extant populations at the Upper Chipola River Management Area. The team paddled approximately five miles to access multiple subpopulations of two elemental occurrences (EO) of C.integrifolia. Many of the plants were flowering or budding but were not yet ready to be bagged for seed collection. 

 

Another population at Holmes Creek was estimated by FNAI to be approximately 17,000+ individuals, with one subpopulation harboring 15,000. However, the majority of plants here had not yet bloomed. Therefore, ABG staff only bagged 30 plants for future seed collection. Coles and Holliday-Goulart paddled to several other smaller pockets of C. integrifolia along the stream, and at the second subpopulation, an estimated plant count of 1,500 were observed. Again, most of these were still in bud so only 21 plants in this area were bagged.

 

Coles will return a third time to this population to collect bagged seeds and potentially bag more individuals for seed collection.

 

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Nomenclature
Taxon Coreopsis integrifolia
Authority Poir.
Family Asteraceae
CPC Number 8134
ITIS 37137
USDA COIN4
Duration Perennial
Common Names
Associated Scientific Names Coreopsis integrifolia
Distribution
State Rank
State State Rank
Florida S1
Georgia S1S2
South Carolina S1
Ecological Relationships

Photos

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