lady slipper

Plant Science & Conservation

Garden Stories

The Guardians Between Plants and Extinction

Clint Stevens spends his weekends on a high-stakes scavenger hunt across Southern Illinois, gathering clues to save rare plants from disappearing.

Traversing steep prairie hillsides and swampy lowlands as a volunteer, his mission is, at once, straightforward and profound: find endangered plants, count them, and alert the land managers working to improve their habitat.

 

Clint Stevens

Stevens monitors American bluehearts (Buchnera americana) on a hillside prairie.

 

 

Clint Stevens with flags

Stevens uses flags to measure the size of a pasture heliotrope (Heliotropium tenellum) population, also recording how many plants are reproducing.

 

鈥淚t鈥檚 always exciting when you find the plant you came to see. You鈥檙e hoping it鈥檚 still there,鈥 Stevens said. 鈥淚 was surprised at just how much of a personal investment I鈥檝e taken. When a plant population is doing well, I feel like a proud parent.鈥

Plants of Concern鈥攁 community science program at the 91短视频鈥攖rains nature enthusiasts to monitor threatened plants across Northeastern, Northwestern, and Southern Illinois.

They are the unsung heroes of the conservation world: dedicated volunteers, in muddy boots and thorn-snagged pants, giving back to the landscapes they love.

鈥淚 think caring for the natural world brings out the best in people,鈥 said Stevens.

 

Swollen sedge

The swollen sedge (Carex intumescens). Source:

 

 

And that care leads to wins for elusive rare species. Take the swollen sedge (Carex intumescens). Once classified as endangered in Illinois, it grows in swampy, hard-to-reach places and is easy to overlook. After volunteers began reporting swollen sedge populations in new locations, it was downgraded on Illinois鈥 鈥攐ne of the few times a species鈥 status has changed because it鈥檚 doing well, not because it has vanished.

鈥淲e update the list every five years, and we couldn鈥檛 do it without the Plants of Concern data,鈥 said Jeremie Fant, conservation scientist at the Garden and member of the state鈥檚 Endangered Species Protection Board. 鈥淢ore data means more confidence, more informed decisions.鈥

Sometimes, volunteers help rediscover plants thought lost. Other times, like with the swollen sedge, they reveal that the species was more common than previously thought. It just needed someone to find it.

Plants of Concern volunteers monitoring rare plants at Orland Grassland

Plants of Concern volunteers monitoring rare plants at Orland Grassland.

 

 

 

鈥淣ot many people are out looking for rare plants in Illinois,鈥 said Chris Benda, coordinator of Plants of Concern in Southern Illinois. 鈥淏ut field surveys suggest there鈥檚 still so much to find in the state. We discover something notable almost every day.鈥

Stevens, an English professor, revisits the same rare plants each year, marking blooms with colorful flags. He tracks their numbers, notes signs of recovery or decline, and records possible threats like encroaching invasives or deer browse. Each data point feeds into the Illinois Natural Heritage Database and is shared with land stewards to guide management.

The need for more eyes spans the state, from the Shawnee National Forest to the Forest Preserves of Cook County, both key partners of Plants of Concern. In Cook County alone, more than 550 rare plant populations stretch across the forest preserves鈥攆ar more than staff can visit annually.

Volunteer with rare lady slipper orchid (Cypripedium reginae)

Volunteer finding the white lady's slipper orchid (Cypripedium candidum). Its relative, the pink lady鈥檚 slipper (Cypripedium acaule), was recently rediscovered in Illinois after 25 years thanks to Plants of Concern and partners.

 

Each plant monitored helps scientists understand not only what鈥檚 surviving, but why. With habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and climate change threatening native plants at accelerating rates, a single population can sound a warning or hold clues for broader recovery.

Even when a species is common elsewhere, plant populations living at the edge of their natural range, like in Southern Illinois, may carry unique adaptations that help the entire species survive.

That potential for discovery鈥攁nd loss鈥攎otivates Stevens to keep returning to the field.

鈥淵ou hear 鈥榥ature preserve鈥 and think it鈥檚 just a nice patch of land,鈥 Stevens said. 鈥淏ut there are plants that grow only here, and when they鈥檙e gone, they鈥檙e gone for good. I think I鈥檓 a good ambassador because I started out not knowing that. Now that I do, I want to help protect them for years to come.鈥

 

What does it take to save a species?

Meet the Plants of Concern volunteers who rescued the last dune willows at Illinois Beach, explore locally protected species with , and trace the roots of a program 20 years in the making.