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Mead’s Milkweed
Asclepias meadii
Status:  Threatened

 

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Description:  Mead’s milkweed is an inconspicuous member of the milkweed family.  Its stems, leaves and flowers are green.  The plants are normally about 20 inches tall, but can grow to nearly 40 inches.  The plants have up to six pairs of two- to three-inch long, teardrop-shaped leaves attached directly to the stem.  Each plant has from one to 26 flowers forming an umbel (a single inverted umbrella-shaped cluster).  The fruits are up to three inches long and release seeds from mid-September to mid-October.

Habitat and Habits:  Mead’s milkweed occurs in moist tall grass prairies with a fairly high species diversity.  Mead’s milkweed flowers in lat May to last June.  The flowers are fragrant and are pollinated by bumble and digger bees.  Plants may take five to eight years to reach flowering size.  This species can reproduce vegetatively, but this may only maintain an existing population.  Reproduction by seed is essential for colonizing new sites and increasing existing populations.  However, this does not take place frequently in most populations.  Many colonies are apparently too small (a typical size in Iowa is fewer than 20 plants) to attract pollinators, or the prairie remnant on which they occur may be too small to support a good population of pollinators.

Mead Milkweed- click on photo to view enlargement

Photographer:Bill Watson

Distribution:  Mead’s milkweed occurs in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri.  It formerly was also known in Indiana and Wisconsin.  In Iowa, Mead’s milkweed once occurred in at least five counties in the southern half of the state.  Currently, the species occurs on seven sites in six counties.

Conservation Efforts:  Like other prairie species, Mead’s milkweed is threatened because of the loss of prairie habitat.  Protections efforts have concentrated on working with landowners to insure that these few remaining populations are protected.

Reasons For Listing:  The conversion of prairie to other uses and overgrazing of pasture has nearly eliminated suitable habitat for this species.


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