Menu
header photo

Kinnikinnick Native Plant Society

Focusing on native plants and conservation in North Idaho

Mission

  • to foster an understanding and appreciation of native flora and its habitats in the panhandle area of North Idaho
  • to advocate the conservation of this rich natural heritage for future generations
  • to encourage the responsible use of native plants in landscaping and restoration
  • to educate youth and the general public in the value of the native flora and their habitats

About our logo:  Marilyn McIntyre, naturalist and artist, has created our colorful logo depicting the flower, leaves, and the fruit of the kinnikinnick plant.

530;298;53cd17b589837b9813bf65a1753b633842574a65530;298;4dcc182b10e16d9e1266b954436ade3478b07b8a530;298;eefc1e9d4c9e5e6f5e314855532a598d6f782bdd530;298;c42b55d94bb00f5614dc99a0092d2a7c88f9e309530;298;d0cb93f26195047338c401785f05c68ff65cd52e530;298;bc79b7f1d1dca60553964c9ed36f6f99f97e1249

Current Newsletter:

 May/June 2022

 

*********

Link to KNPS Cabin article from the 8-31-2021 Daily Bee

***********

KNPS Presentations

The Kinnikinnick Native Plant Society has monthly presentations. 

The meetings are held on the 3rd Saturday of each month, January through June and September through November.

Currently all meetings will be held on ZOOM and in person.
 See the meeting listing for signup information.

**************

Floristic Quality Assessment of Terrestrial Landscapes

KNPS’s program on Saturday, May 21st, will be presented via Zoom both in-person in the large meeting room B at the East Bonner County Library’s main branch (1407 Cedar Street, Sandpoint) and on Zoom. Registration (see below) is only required for Zoom attendance. Our guest speaker will be Dr. Gerould, Director of Research at the Conservation Research Institute. The program is co-sponsored by the East Bonner County Library District and Sandpoint Parks & Recreation. The Zoom presentation will also be recorded for later viewing on our YouTube Channel.

For those attending in person at the library, coffee/tea and treats will be available beginning at 9:30 a.m. with announcements and program starting at 10:00 a.m.

About the program: In the evaluation of landscapes, a critical question is the contemporary ecological health of the vegetation it supports. There are some landscapes that bear sufficient remnants of soil, vegetation, and associated organisms that any significant change in their stewardship or ecological character would render them irreplaceably destroyed. The doctrinal advice in the National Environmental Act of 1969 asks Americans to evaluate the degree to which any impact is “irreversible or irretrievable.” Floristic Quality Assessment (FQA) is a tool that enables us to accommodate that directive. One of the principal aspects of the FQA is the assignment, by trained botanists, of a Coefficient of Conservatism to each vascular plant, so that each species is given an equal franchise at informing us about the integrity of its habitat. FQA also enables us to monitor and evaluate attempts to rehabilitate partly managed systems and the progress of landscape restoration, as well as to predict whether a landscape would be irreplaceably destroyed by development.

About the speaker: Dr. Gerould Wilhelm is a foremost botanist, research taxonomist, and educator. After an undergraduate degree in Marine Biology at Florida State University, and a stint as a conscript in the Army, he joined the staff of the Morton Arboretum, in Lisle, Illinois, in 1974.  He received his Ph.D. in Botany in 1984 at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. He co-authored the definitive flora Plants of the Chicago Region, and recently completed the Flora of the Chicago Region, a Floristic and Ecological Synthesis, with wildlife biologist Laura Rericha. He currently is working on the lichens of the 53-county Southern Lake Michigan Region. He is noted for his development of the Floristic Quality Assessment (FQA) methodology, which has become widely adapted for use in at least 34 states and provinces.

COVID-19 protocols for in-person attendance: Please attend only if you are fully vaccinated and feeling well. Masks are optional.

Registration (required only for Zoom attendance):

When the live program will begin: May 21, 2022 at 10:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

To register, go to this link or paste it into your web browser: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAofuyurT4iG9BiCfru2qhk65Vi80_LfW5t

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about how to join Zoom on April 21st.

If you have questions about this or other KNPS programs, please contact Preston Andrews, Program Coordinator, at programs@nativeplantsociety.org.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

alt

Landscaping with Native Plants in the Idaho Panhandle, a publication by the Kinnikinnick Native Plant Society, is available at area retailers for $19.95 (see link below). First published in 2011, it is the resource for any home garden or large landscape project where the many benefits of native plants are desired. In addition to detailed material about the listed plants, there is extensive information included to accomplish successful results.  This book has been made possible with grant support, largely from the Inland Northwest Community Foundation.

Books can be purchased here

Addendum now available (free) online Here

********

Stay Tuned for KNPS Fundraisers

 

*********

 

Click below to...

DONATE, JOIN KNPS or to

RENEW your membership

(all transactions are secure)