The Carter's small-flowered flax was discovered in the early 20th century in the Miami area, with a small range right at the very tip of Florida, where it grows in pine rockland habitat. This delicate-looking plant is an annual herb that produces distinctive, half-inch-wide flowers with five yellow-orange petals. When the flowers bloom, the petals shed by midday.
The primary threats to this species include improper fire management and nonnative species invasion --- though the biggest threat of all is development of its prime habitat, both urban and agricultural. The plant has declined to only nine known occurrences.
Luckily for the Carter's small-flowered flax, it's one of the numerous species that has benefitted from our 2011 agreement with the Fish and Wildlife Service pushing the agency forward on Endangered Species Act decisions for 757 plants and animals. Following that settlement, this plant was federally protected in 2014.
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KEY DOCUMENTS
2010 review of candidates for listing; annual notice of finding
2014 federal Endangered Species Act listing
2013 proposed critical habitat designation
2014 critical habitat designation (proposed rule; revision and reopening of comment period)
ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT PROFILE
MEDIA
Press releases
Search our newsroom for the Carter's small-flowered flax
RELATED ISSUES
Florida brickell-bush
Historic Victory for 757 Species
Protecting Native Plants
Sea-level Rise
Climate Law Institute
The Endangered Species Act
Contact: Jacki Lopez