Keyword: purple flowers
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ESA001-00181
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
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ESA001-00182
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ESA001-00183
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ESA001-00184
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). The insect is an alfalfa plant bug (Adelphocoris lineolatus). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
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ESA001-00185
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ESA001-00177
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ESA001-00178
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ESA001-00179
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii). These plants were raised by a botanist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ESA001-00180
The federally endangered blowout penstemon (Penstemon haydenii) and the botonist who brought the plant back from just 600 individual plants to more than 20,000 today.
Photo
ANI082-00028
A western diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox) in the foothills of the Wichita Mountains in Oklahoma. Studies are showing that rattlesnakes that have the genetic tendency to migrate are being killed in ever-increasing numbers on our nation’s roads, leaving those snakes with non-migrating tendencies behind to breed.