A member of the family Fabaceae (“pea”), this species is also referred to as “riverbank lupine.” Lupines, as with most members of the pea family, are adept at fixing nitrogen from the atmosphere into ammonia via “rhizobium-root nodule symbiosis.” Their root nodules host nitrogen fixing bacteria, fertilizing the soil for other plants. This adaption allows lupines to grow in poor soils as well as being pioneers in changing soil quality to support other plant species.
This is a species at risk. To find its current at-risk designation and listing info, visit the BC Species and Ecosystems Explorer. For direction on finding additional species recovery information, visit the Species and Ecological Communities Profiles Overview webpage.
Resources
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BC Species and Ecosystems Explorer
Provincial site providing current information for BC’s plants, animals and...
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Streambank lupine Species Profile
Species profile of the streambank lupine created by the SCCP...
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Streambank Lupine Brochure
Outreach brochure on the Streambank Lupine created by Streambank Lupine...
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