Botanist, explorer, conservationist, ecologist, mom and wife

Author: TaraLittlefield

Tara R. Littlefield grew up on the edge of the cedar creek glade complex in Hardin Co, and has been a natural heritage botanist with Kentucky State Nature Preserves Commission since 2006 and the Kentucky Rare Plant Program Manager since 2014. Recently she also began working for the Heritage Land Conservation Fund. She has a BS in Biochemistry from University of Louisville and a MS in Forest Ecology from the University of Kentucky. Her work involves rare species surveys (state and federally listed plants primarily), general floristic inventories, protection of natural areas, GIS analysis, conservation planning and rare plant/community management. She is also currently the president of the Kentucky Native Plant Society where she focuses on organizing the annual Kentucky Botanical Symposium, teaching native plant stewardship and plant identification workshops, education and outreach, and guided hikes. She is interested in plant distributions, seed collecting, cartography, learning new flora and fauna, exploring natural areas, paleo botany and the chemistry of plants. She lives in her family forest in Anderson County with her husband and two children.

Falls of Rough

New Year’s Day 2021

Ok. A simple goal of documenting my daily chores, life and work. We’ll see how long this lasts. Today was like many days. Cleaning, organizing and random walking around the farm, Littlefield Forest. The creek was flooded and I spent time with Estella and Henry throwing sticks and small logs into the creek and then chasing and cheering our propective frontrunner through the waterfalls and log jams.

Littlefield Berry Creek, a tributary to Benson Creek, Kentucky River Watershed

The afternoon was unusually warm so I cut wintercreeper off several trees, cut some privet and honesuckkle. Right before dark the whole family walked up to the pond and Henry and I collected some reindeer lichen for some landscaping and craft projects around the house.

A tale of Large Flowered Barbara’s buttons (Marshallia grandiflora)

Earlier this year, I was working on a project surveying for rare plants and natural communities in the Big South Fork of Kentucky.  Hidden in the biologically diverse region of the Cumberland Plateau, we share this region with Tennessee, where headwater streams flow north into Kentucky and create river scour communities along the Big South Fork of the Cumberland River. The Big South Fork is by far one of my favorite places on Earth.  The diversity of species, both plants and animals, even undescribed taxon, is astounding. And the river scour communities within this region contain more globally rare plants than anywhere else in Kentucky!   This species diversity is only compounded by the complexity of the riparian communities from emergent marshes, outcrops, grasslands, shrublands and woodlands that are maintained by the wild river scour. It’s one of the few places still left in Kentucky where pre-settlement natural conditions still exist, it’s as if you are seeing a landscape that was seen by Native Americans, a true wilderness.  And this is also one of our states largest intact forest blocks. It feels ancient, diverse and wise. 

Joining me on the Cumberland Plateau river scour botanical survey team this year were Kentucky Nature Preserves botanists Heidi Braunreiter and Devin Rodgers.  This past May 2019, one of our main target species was Barbara’s buttons (Marshallia grandiflora), an elusive rare plant tucked away behind large boulders and cobble on the river scour of the Big South Fork.   Marshallia is a genus in the aster family, and all the species within this genus occur in the southeastern United States.   Marshalllia grandiflora is endemic to the Appalachians and the Cumberland Plateau, and is currently being assessed for federal listing.  It is endangered in Kentucky and Pennsylvania, and threatened in Tennessee and West Virginia, and extinct in North Carolina.  The habitat consists of diverse prairioid grasslands that occur on the river scour of several wild rivers.  Associated plants of Marshallia consist of species you would find in a prairie such as big blue stem (Andropogon gerardii), Indian grass (Sorgastrum nutans), wild blue indigo (Baptisia australis), blazing stars (Liatris microcephala), sunflowers (Helianthus giganteus, H. hirsutus, H. decapetalus), tall coreopsis (Coreopsis tripteris), st. johns worts (Hypericum sp.), Obedient plant (Physostegia virginiana), goldenrods (Solidago sp.) and asters (Symphytrichum sp.). 

Large flowered Barbara’s buttons are very rare.  In Kentucky, at the northern edge of its range in the Cumberland Plateau, this plant is extremely endangered and declining.  When we were lucky enough to find a population, only a few single flowers or rosettes had survived.  Many questions remain unanswered about this plants life cycle on the Big South Fork of the Cumberland River. How does this perennial stay rooted in the floods?  How would seed produced ever have the chance to germinate?  I would imagine a deep tap root or an abundance of lateral roots to anchor this plant during the floods, and an ability to live a long life (maybe even thousands of years old), but we just don’t know.  And the mammal or bird dispersed seed taking root in the dry months of the summer, quickly sending its taproot to prevent it from being washed away in the next flood.  Could a plant’s root break off during a flood, travel downstream and re root in suitable habitat, essentially replanting itself through vegetative reproduction? This is strategy is employed by the Cumberland rosemary (Conradina verticillata), but it is unclear weather Marshallia is able to do this. But a shift in flooding patterns, and changing climate, bring uncertainty and could prevent a seedling from taking hold.    There are so many unknowns and confounding factors in the life cycle of this plant.

Life on the river scour can be harsh.  Brutal even. For both its inhabitants as well as surveyors like ourselves.  There are copperheads and rattlesnakes hiding within these prairies, with massive boulders and logjams slowing our travel. Bouldering and rock hopping is necessary to navigate the jumbled debris. With the rains come floods that roar through the gorge, scouring everything in its path.  It’s amazing to me that anything can survive that.  But it is this very disturbance that maintains these “prairies of the river,” for without the flooding and scour, shrubs and trees would take hold and the prairie grasses and forbs would disappear.  Couple this flooding with summer droughts to keep the trees and shrubs at bay, and the river prairies thrive.  Dam these rivers and everything disappears.


Little is known about how long these plants have been hiding out amongst the boulders of the river scour. Likely these disjunct populations from Pennsylvania to Tennessee were connected in the ancient Appalachian landscape. Probably they were more common, and may have evolved within a much more expansive upland ancient prairie habitat that has long ago vanished due to natural large scale climate change, as well as a more connected river scour habitat that is now nearly lost due to damming of rivers and degradation of plant communities from invasive plants, loss and alteration of disturbance regime, and a changing climate. There is even new research into the genetic differences among the extinct North Carolina populations with the rest of the population range, suggesting that there are two different species uniquely evolved in isolation.  So what is our role in conserving this unique species?  One can only speculate that this species is an ancient plant of a lost world, perhaps evolved in in the ancient upland grassland habitat, but now only found in sheltered ravines codependent on the floods of our protected wild rivers to maintain its habitat and ensure its further existence.

Other interesting rare plants that we encountered on the river scour this year include the globally rare Rockcastle aster (Eurybia saxicastellii), Balsam ragwort (Packera paupercula var. paupercula), Turk’s-cap lily (Lilium superbum), golden club (Orontium aquaticum), the federally threatened Cumberland rosemary (Conradina verticillata) and the boulder bar goldenrod (Solidago racemosa).  Included in the mix are intriguing mysteries of possible news species.   But there is one rare plant that we encountered on the river scour that has always intrigued me by its glacial relict past, as it seemed to tell the story of these lost worlds with more clarity, of large scale plant migrations over spatial time that us humans can only begin to comprehend, the sweet fern (Comptonia perergina). 

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