Cup Lake draba is a small alpine perennial plant in the Brassicaceae (mustard) family. The species has small yellow flowers and is characterized by a cushion growth form where all the foliage grows close to the ground in a short mound or mat. It is found above 8,200 feet in rocky subalpine coniferous forests. The distribution of Cup Lake draba is extremely limited with only two known populations in the Desolation Wilderness. Cup Lake draba has a State Rank of S1 (critically imperiled), a Global Rank of G2T1 (critically imperiled), and a CNPS Rare Plant Rank of 1B.1 (rare, threatened, or endangered in California and elsewhere; seriously endangered in California). Human activities that pose direct threats include recreational activities that might trample or uproot plants (e.g., camping, hiking, equestrian use, trail construction, snowmobiles). However, the known populations are located in remote, off-trail areas, and potentially of greater concern is the threat of climate change. Cup Lake draba is monitored by the USDA Forest Service.
A population is generally defined as occuring at least 1 km from another population, and a subpopulation is defined as a descrete occurence within 1 km of other subpopulations. According to this definition, Cup Lake Draba occurs in only two populations, at Saucer Lake and Cup Lake. However, because Cup Lake is outside of Tahoe Basin, it cannot be included in the threshold standard. The standard is to maintain a minimum of two Draba asterophora var. macrocarpa population sites.
Data provided by the U.S Forest Service.
No related projects or programs defined for this indicator.
No photos available.