Utah Species Field Guide | Utah Natural Heritage Program
Utah Species Field Guide Utah Species Field Guide
Goose Creek Milkvetch (Astragalus anserinus)

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Photo by Ben Gibbons; Ben GIbbons; Ava Brinkley; Ava Brinkley
Utah Division of Wildlife Resources; Sources: ESRI, USGS, NOAA; Photographer - Ben Gibbons; Sources: ESRI, USGS, NOAA

Goose Creek Milkvetch

Goose Creek Milkvetch (Astragalus anserinus)

Photo by Ben Gibbons; Ben GIbbons; Ava Brinkley; Ava Brinkley
Utah Division of Wildlife Resources; Sources: ESRI, USGS, NOAA; Photographer - Ben Gibbons; Sources: ESRI, USGS, NOAA

Astragalus anserinus

NatureServe conservation status

Global (G-rank): G2?
State (S-rank): S2

External links

Phenology

Flowers May to June

Species range

Locally endemic to a portion of the Goose Creek basin where the borders of Nevada, Idaho, and Utah join. Extreme northeastern Nevada in Elko County (with a disjunct occurrence 22 miles southwest in the Delano Mountains), Cassia County in Idaho, and extreme northwestern Utah in Box Elder County.

Threats or limiting factors

Primary threats include drought, introduced plant species, grazing, fire and post fire disking, and recreation. A variety of invasive plants occur within or close to populations of Goose Creek Milkvetch, these include desert madwort (Alyssum desertorum), crested wheatgrass (Agropyron cristatum), cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), flixweed (Descurainia sophia), leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula), and halogeton (Halogeton glomeratus). Goose Creek Milkvetch populations have been invaded by cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula), and crested wheatgrass (Agropyron cristatum). These three invasive plants represent a high magnitude and imminent threat to Goose Creek milkvetch (USFWS 2014). Crested wheatgrass was included in post-fire revegetation seed mixes used after the 2007 wildfires, in areas where Goose Creek Milkvetch occurs (USFWS 2014). Continued invasion of exotic species will result in population decline, and failure of populations to rebound from declines due to various factors. Fire and post-fire disking have also caused declines in numbers of Goose Creek Milkvetch plants (USFWS 2014, Lewinsohn 2015). Cattle grazing may also threaten long-term viability by altering habitat indirectly through soil compaction, trail formation, and increased erosion. Trampling and construction of access roads and water tank facilities also impacts habitat. Cattle grazing also depresses pollinators that may be assisting Goose Creek Milkvetch reproduction by destroying potential and existing nest sites and by removing food resources. The open, relatively barren slopes of the habitat (especially near pipeline corridors) are threatened off-road vehicles (USFWS 2014).

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Multicellular organisms that are autotrophic or make complex carbohydrates from basic constituents. Most use photosynthesis.

Flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed in an ovary

Multicellular organisms that develop from the fertilization of an egg by a sperm. Heterotrophic - obtain food by ingestion.

Have skulls and backbones.

Cold blooded, lay eggs on land

Have feathers and lay eggs

Invertebrates with an exoskeleton, jointed appendages, and segmented bodies

Animals having 3 pair of legs, 3 body sections, generally 1 or 2 pair of wings, 1 pair of antennae.

Soft bodied animals with an internal or external shell and a toothed tongue or radula. Have a mantle that lines and secretes the shell and a muscular foot that allows for movement.

Two hinged lateral shells and a wedged shaped "foot". Bivalves lack tentacles and a head.


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