Endangered,
Threatened, Proposed and Candidate Species
pdf version
MAMMALS | BIRDS | REPTILES | AMPHIBIANS | FISHES |CLAMS | SNAILS | INSECTS | CRUSTACEANS | PLANTS
For
Section 7 Consultation purposes, please use the endangered species county
distribution lists.
Status: Threatened, listed
March 24, 2000
Critical Habitat designated on November 9, 2006 Habitat: Mix of evergreens and hardwoods, such as maple and birch;
interspersion of mature and young forest
Lead Region: 6
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities , Minnesota
Field Office
Range: California, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming
Gray bat (Myotis grisescens)
Status: Endangered, listed April 28, 1976
Habitat: caves
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Alabama , Arkansas , Florida , Georgia , Illinois , Indiana , Kansas , Kentucky , Missouri , Oklahoma , Tennessee , Virginia , West Virginia
first
listed March 11, 1967
Status: The gray wolf was delisted in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan and portions of North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. Specifically the part of North Dakota north and east of the Missouri River upstream as far as Lake Sakakawea and east of U.S. Highway 83 to the Canadian border; the part of South Dakota north and east of the Missouri River; the parts of Iowa, Illinois and Indiana that are north of Interstate 80; and the part of Ohio north of I-80 and west of the Maumee River at Toledo. The delisting took effect on March 12, 2007
Status: Endangered
The gray wolf remains listed as endangered in portions of Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio south of the delisted area (as described above) and all of Missouri. However, these states do not support wild populations of gray wolf.
Status: Endangered, first
listed March 11, 1967
Habitat: Summer habitat includes small to medium river and stream
corridors with well developed riparian woods; woodlots within 1
to 3 miles of small to medium rivers and streams; and upland forests.
Caves and mines as hibernacula.
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington, Indiana
Field Office
Range: Alabama , Arkansas , Connecticut , Georgia , Illinois , Indiana , Iowa , Kentucky , Maryland , Michigan , Mississippi , Missouri , New Jersey , New York , North Carolina , Ohio , Oklahoma , Pennsylvania , Tennessee , Vermont , Virginia , West Virginia
Indiana
Bat Critical Habitat
Designated
September 24, 1976
Critical habitat has been designated for hibernacula: Blackball
Mine in LaSalle County, Illinois; Big Wyandotte Cave in Crawford
County and Ray's Cave in Greene County, Indiana; Onyx Cave in Crawford
County, Cooper Hollow Sink Cave and Bear (Mud Sink) Cave in Franklin
County, Pilot Knob Mine in Iron County, Great Scott Cave in Washington
County, and Bat Cave in Shannon County, Missouri
Status: Endangered, listed
November 30, 1979
Habitat: Caves in limestone karst regions dominated by mature hardwood
forest
Lead Region: 2
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas and Missouri
Return
to Top
Bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)
Status: Delisted
As of August 9, 2007, the bald eagle is no longer protected under the federal Endangered Species Act and Section 7 consultation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is no longer necessary. However, the bald eagle remains protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act. Click here for guidelines that were prepared to help landowners, land managers and others meet the intent of that Act and avoid disturbing bald eagles.
Status: Endangered, first
listed March 11, 1967
Habitat: Breeds in jack pine
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range: Michigan, Wisconsin
Least tern - Interior population (Sterna antillarum)
Status: Endangered, listed
May 28, 1985
Habitat: Bare alluvial islands and dredged spoil islands
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas , Colorado , Illinois , Indiana , Iowa , Kansas , Kentucky , Louisiana , Mississippi , Missouri , Montana , Nebraska , New Mexico , North Dakota , Oklahoma , South Dakota , Tennessee , Texas
Piping plover (Charadrius melodus) - Great Lakes population
Status: Endangered, listed
December 11, 1985
Habitat: Beaches along shorelines of the Great Lakes
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Summer Range:Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin
Piping Plover Critical Habitat Great Lakes Population Breeding Habitat: Designated May 7, 2001 in Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin
Piping plover (Charadrius melodus) - Great Plains population
Status: Threatened, listed
December 11, 1985
Habitat: Bare alluvial and dredged spoil islands
Lead
Region: 6
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities, Minnesota
Field Office
Range in Region: Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota
Whooping
crane (Grus americana)
Status: non-essential, experimental population, listed
June 26, 2001
first
listed March 11, 1967
Habitat: wetlands and lake shorelines
Lead Region: 2
Region 3 Lead Office: Green Bay, Wisconsin
Field Office
Range in Region 3: Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,
Ohio, and Wisconsin are within the Nonessential, Experimental Population
area.
Return
to Top
[northern population - north of 40 north latitude; approximately
Indianapolis, Indiana]
Status: Threatened, listed
January 29, 1997
Habitat: Wooded and permanently wet areas such as oxbows, sloughs,
brushy ditches and floodplain woods
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range: Indiana, Michigan, Ohio
Eastern
massasauga (Sistrurus catenatus catenatus)
Status: Candidate
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Chicago Illinois Field Office
Range: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Canada (Ontario)
Lake Erie water snake (Nerodia
sipedon insularum)
Status: Threatened, listed
August 30, 1999
Habitat: Shorelines of islands in western Lake Erie
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range: Ohio
Return
to Top
AMPHIBIANS
Ozark
hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis bishopi)
Status: Candidate
Habitat: Streams of the Ozark plateau in southern Missouri and northern
Arkansas.
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas, Missouri
Status: Candidate
Lead Region: 6
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region 3: Missouri
Status: Candidate
Habitat: Streams in cave systems, occupying pools and riffles with
moderate stream flow and low to moderate stream depth. Restricted
to two karst (limestone regions characterized by sink holes, abrupt
ridges, caves and underground streams) areas, the Central Perryville
Karst and Mystery-Rimstone Karst in Perry County, southeast Missouri.
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
May 22, 1990
Habitat: Medium to large rivers in shallow riffles over gravel bottoms
Lead Region: 6
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
June 12, 1985
Habitat: Clear, medium-sized streams that run off hilly areas underlain
by chert and dolomite.
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Missouri
Niangua
Darter Critical Habitat designated
June 12, 1985
Missouri:Critical
habitat has been designated in Big Tavern Creek, Miller County;
Brush Creek, Cedar and St. Clair Counties; Niangua River, Dallas
County; and Pomme de Terre River, Greene County.
Status: Threatened, listed
November 1, 1984
Habitat: Caves in the Boone and Burlington limestone formations
of the Ozark Mountains
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma
Status: Endangered, listed
September 6, 1990
Habitat: Mississippi River downstream of its confluence with the
Missouri River; Ohio River below Dam #53; Missouri River
Lead Region: 6
Region 3 Lead Office: Columbia ES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, South Dakota, Tennessee
Status: Endangered, listed
October 28, 1975
Habitat: Stream riffles of moderate flow over sandy gravel bottom;
may be extinct
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range: Ohio
Status: Endangered, listed December 15, 1998
Habitat: Small prairie streams
Lead Region: 6
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota
Topeka
shiner Critical Habitat Designated
July 27, 2004
Return
to Top
CLAMS (Freshwater Mussels, Unionids)
Clubshell (Pleurobema clava)
Status: Endangered, listed
January 22, 1993
Habitat: Found in coarse sand and gravel areas of runs and riffles
within streams and small rivers
Lead Region: 5
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range: Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia
Status: Endangered, listed
September 28, 1989
Habitat: Medium to large rivers in mud, sand, or gravel
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington, Indiana
Field Office
Range in Region: Alabama, Indiana (extirpated), Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia
Curtis' pearlymussel (Epioblasma
florentina curtisi)
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Restricted to Little Black River in Ripley County, Missouri
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas, Missouri
Fanshell (Cyprogenia stegaria
(=c. irrorata))
Status: Endangered, listed
June 21, 1990
Habitat: Found in areas of packed sand and gravel at locations in
a good current
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington, Indiana
Field Office
Range: Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Large rivers in slow-flowing water
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Mississippi River and some of its larger northern tributaries
(i.e., St. Croix and Wisconsin Rivers) in gravel or sand
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin
Cities Field Office
Range: Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin
Status:
Candidate
Habitat: Rivers in stable runs, shoals, and riffles with gravely
bottoms and moderate currents
Lead Region: Region 4
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES Missouri
Field Office
Range: Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma
Status: Endangered, listed
June 22, 1993
Habitat: Large streams and small rivers in firm sand of riffle areas;
also occurs in Lake Erie
Lead Region: 5
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg
Ohio Field Office
Range: Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Gravel bars with strong currents in large rivers
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Rock Island, Illinois
Field Office
Range: Alabama, Illinois, Indiana (extirpated), Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: The lower Mississippi and Ohio Rivers and their larger
tributaries
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range: Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia
Status: Endangered, listed
July 10, 1990
Habitat: Gravel riffles of medium to large rivers
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range: Ohio
Status: Candidate
Habitat: Large rivers
Lead Region: 3
Region
3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg
Ohio Field Office
Range: Indiana, Michgian, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania
Ring pink mussel (=golf stick pearly) (Obovaria retusa)
Status: Endangered, listed
September 29, 1989
Habitat: Large rivers in sand or gravel
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Rock Island, Illinois
Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana (extirpated)
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Medium to large rivers in sand and gravel
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington, Indiana
Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana
Status: Endangered, listed
October 9, 2001
Habitat: Medium-sized and large rivers with stable channels and
good water quality
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Sheepnose (Plethobasus cyphyus)
Status: Candidate
Habitat: Large rivers
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Rock Island
Illinois Field Office
Range
in Region 3: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio,
and Wisconsin
Status:
Candidate
Habitat: Large rivers
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities Field
Office
Range
in Region 3: Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, and Wisconsin
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Gravel riffles in medium to large rivers
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Rock Island, Illinois
Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana (extirpated)
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Firm sand or gravel riffles in small streams and medium
to large rivers
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg
Ohio Field Office
Range in Region: Ohio, Indiana
Status: Endangered, listed
June 14, 1976
Habitat: Large rivers in gravel
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington Indiana
Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana (extirpated)
Status: Endangered, listed
June 20, 1991
Habitat: Medium to large rivers in mud, sand, or gravel
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin
Cities Field Office
Range in Region: Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin
Return
to Top
Status: Endangered, listed
August 2, 1978
Habitat: North-facing algific talus slopes
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office:Rock
Island, Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Iowa
Status: Endangered, listed
August 14, 2002
Habitat: Tumbling Creek in Tumbling Creek cave in Taney County
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES,
Missouri Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Return
to Top
Status: Endangered, listed
July 13, 1989
Habitat: Many types of habitat, with a slight preference for grasslands
and open understory oak hickory forests. However, the beetles need
carrion the size of a dove or a chipmunk to reproduce. Carrion availability
may be the greatest factor determining where the species can survive.
Lead Region: 2
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range in Region: Michigan, Ohio
Status: Candidate
Habitat: High quality tallgrass and mixed grass prairie
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities Field
Office
Range in Region: Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota
Status: Endangered, listed
January 26, 1995
Habitat: Spring fed wetlands, wet meadows and marshes; calcareous
streams & associated wetlands overlying dolomite bedrock
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Chicago,
Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, Wisconsin
Status: Endangered, listed
March 7, 1994
Habitat: Cool riffles of clean, slightly alkaline streams; known
to occur in only 3 isolated locations
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Michigan
Status: Endangered, listed
December 14, 1992
Habitat: Pine barrens and oak savannas on sandy soils and containing
wild lupines (Lupinus perennis), the only known food plant
of larvae.
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Green
Bay, Wisconsin Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin
Status: Endangered, listed
June 25, 1991
Habitat: Fens, wetlands characterized by calcareous soils which
are fed by carbonate-rich water from seeps and springs
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana, Michigan, Ohio
Return
to Top
cave
crayfish, no common name (Cambarus aculabrum)
Status: Endangered, listed
April 27, 1993
Habitat: Caves
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region 3: Missouri
Status: Endangered, listed
September 3, 1998
Habitat: Cave streams
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office:Rock Island, Illinois
Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois
Return
to Top
Status: Threatened, listed
July 14, 1989
Habitat: Cool limestone sinkholes in mature hardwood forest
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Michigan
Status: Threatened, listed
November 14, 1988
Habitat: Disturbed alluvial soils (Mississippi and Illinois River
alluvial floodplain)
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Rock Island,
Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
September 28, 1988
Habitat: Partially shaded sandy-gravelly soils on lakeshores
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Michigan, Wisconsin
Status: Threatened, listed
September 28, 1989
Habitat: Mesic to wet prairies and meadows
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Chicago,
Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin
Fassett's locoweed (Oxytropis
campestris var. chartacea)
Status: Threatened, listed
September 28, 1988
Habitat: Open sandy lakeshores
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Green Bay, Wisconsin
Field Office
Range in Region: Wisconsin
Status: Threatened, listed
June 16, 1987
Habitat: Moist soils in exposed sandstone glades
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
July 18, 1988
Habitat: Sandy flats along Great Lakes shores
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Michigan
Lakeside daisy (Hymenoxys
herbacea (=H. acaulis var. glabra))
Status: Threatened, listed
June 23, 1988
Habitat: Dry rocky prairies; limestone rock surfaces including
outcrops and quarries
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Michigan, Ohio
Status: Endangered, listed
May 1, 1991
Habitat: Prairie remnants on thin soil over limestone (Des Plaine
River floodplain)
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Chicago
Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois
Leedy's roseroot (Sedum integrifolium
ssp. leedyi)
Status: Threatened, listed
April 22, 1992
Habitat: Cool, wet groundwater-fed limestone cliffs
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities,
Minnesota Field Office
Range in Region: driftless area of southeastern Minnesota
Status: Threatened, listed
September 1, 1988
Habitat: Prairies and rhyolite glades in Missouri
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Chicago,
Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin
Status: Endangered, listed
June 21, 1990
Habitat: Soils saturated with cold flowing spring water; found
along seepages, streams and lakeshores
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Michigan
Status: Endangered, listed
March 26, 1986
Habitat: North facing slopes & floodplains in deciduous forests
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities,
Minnesota Field Office
Range in Region: Minnesota
Status: Threatened, first
listed as Endangered on January 8, 1987
Habitat: Open glades in shallow limestone soils
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
May 27, 1978
Habitat: Cool, moist, shaded cliff faces or talus slopes in wooded
ravines, near water seeps
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Green Bay, Wisconsin
Field Office
Range: Iowa, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin
Habitat: Stablized dunes and blowout areas
Status: Threatened, listed
July 18, 1988
Habitat: Stabilized dunes and blowout areas
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: East
Lansing, Michigan Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin
Pondberry (Lindera melissifolia)
Status: Endangered, listed
July 31, 1986
Habitat: Bottomland hardwood forest, poorly drained depressions,
and margins of limestone sinks
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
June 9, 1987
Habitat: Dry to mesic prairies with gravelly soils
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin
Cities, Minnesota Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin
Status: Threatened, listed
June 5, 1990
Habitat: Wet floodplain forests, shrubby swamps
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Rock Island,
Illinois Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois
Status: Endangered, listed
June 5, 1987
Habitat: Disturbed bottomland meadows; disturbed sites that have
shade during part of each day
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana, Missouri, Ohio
Status: Candidate
Habitat: Steep, rocky wooded slopes and talus areas, occurs along
cliff tops and bases and cliff ledges. Found adjacent to rivers
or streams and on south to west facing slopes. The Indiana population
is found within the Shawnee Hills section of the Interior Low
Plateau Physiographic Province.
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington
Indiana Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana
Status: Endangered, listed
September 5, 1985
Habitat: Cedar glades and openings in oak and hickory forests
Lead Region: 4
Region 3 Lead Office: Bloomington,
Indiana Field Office
Range in Region: Indiana
Status: Threatened, listed
September 9, 1982
habitat: Dry woodland; upland sites in mixed forest (second or
third growth stage)
Lead Region: 5
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range in Region: Illinois, Michigan, Ohio
Status: Threatened, listed
June 3, 1998
Habitat: Sinkhole ponds
Lead Region: 5
Region 3 Lead Office: ColumbiaES, Missouri
Field Office
Range in Region: Missouri
Status: Threatened, listed
June 15, 1990
Habitat: Stream banks and floodplains
Lead Region: 5
Region 3 Lead Office: Reynoldsburg,
Ohio Field Office
Range in Region: Ohio
Status: Threatened, listed
September 28, 1989
Habitat: Wet prairies & sedge meadows
Lead Region: 3
Region 3 Lead Office: Twin Cities,
Minnesota Field Office
Range in Region: Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri
Return
to Top
Home