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Sparse Milk-vetch
Astragalus sparsus

4.7 Endangered

name of participantsBased on: "The Red Book of Israeli Plants - Threatened Plants in Israel" by Prof. Avi Shmida, Dr. Gadi Pollack and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir
Update Time: Jan. 1, 2011, 7:39 a.m.

Astragalus sparsus grows in the Elat
Mountains and the Arava, on 18 recorded sites, and there are an estimated 30
sites. In the Elat Mountains it was recorded and collected several times
between 1955 and 1988 at three sites in Wadi Shlomo and Wadi Garof. It is
extinct from another site near the city. Following the rainy winter of 2010, 11
new sites were found in the lower Elat Mountains and around the city. In the Arava
it was observed at three sites in Wadi Shalhav and north of Elot (Mimi Ron).

Gravel and sandy streambeds in the extreme hot desert that
have an annual precipitation below 50 mm.

·        
Astragalus
sparsus
is limited in Israel to two regions and there has
been no change in the number of regions over tens of years in which it was
collected or reported. The number of sites increased greatly after the rainy
winter of 2010 in the Arava and in the southern Negev, compared to what was known
until then. The number of sites where the species is dormant in its seed bank is
greater than the number of sites where it was actually observed in a given season.
There is a lack of documented information regarding this over the years, and
the change trends in the number of sites over the years are not clear.

·        
A. sparsus grows mainly in a pattern of widely scattered individuals far apart.
There is no verified quantitative information on the number and size of
populations at each site.

·        
It is possible
that the climatic trend of drying and the decrease in the number and intensity
of floods in the wadis of Elat and the Arava (if indeed it is happening) will
affect the possibility of renewal from the seed bank and may lead to the
extinction of populations. All-terrain vehicular activity in the wadis harms
A. sparsus,
as it does other plants characteristic of streambeds.

·        
The sites in Wadi
Shlomo
are located
in the Massif Elat Nature Reserve.

·        
A. sparsus
appears in the Red species list of Egypt.

Long-term systematic monitoring of previously documented
sites in the Elat Mountains and Arava wadis should be conducted to study the
dynamics of individuals, populations and sites.   Care should be taken not
to damage vegetation in the wadi channels in these areas.  

Astragalus sparsus grows in the
eastern Saharo-Arabian region: Israel, Southern Jordan, and Sinai in Egypt,
Arabia, Qatar and Yemen.

Astragalus
sparsus

is a rare perennial herb characteristic of the wadis in the Arava and the Elat
Mountains, which appears irregularly, in sparse populations. It is a peripheral
species whose global distribution limit is in southern Israel.

 

ראה קדד לביד.

name of participantsBased on: "The Red Book of Israeli Plants - Threatened Plants in Israel" by Prof. Avi Shmida, Dr. Gadi Pollack and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir

Current Occupancy Map

Current occupancy map for observations per pixel
1000 squre meter pixel 5000 squre meter pixel 10000 squre meter pixel
number of observations 0 0 0
in total pixels 0 0 0

FamilyFabaceae
ClassificationOn the endangered species list
EcosystemDesert
ChorotypeEastern Saharo – Arab
Conservation SiteWadi Shlomo

Rarity
1
5
6
Vulnerability
0
3
4
Attractiveness
0
0
4
Endemism
0
0
4
Red number
1
4.7
10
Peripherality S
IUCN category DD EW EX LC CR EN VU NT
Threat Definition according to the red book Endangered
2 (2) districts
Disjunctiveness: 0
23.5% of protected sites

Other Species

Aaronson's Milk-vetch
Felt Milk-vetch
Schimper's Milk-vetch
Astragalus guttatus