subpopulation at Haystack Peak (007) was located. 

 However, neither the original Haystack Peak 

 population located in 1989, nor the Sunlight Basin 

 (006) population located in 1980, were relocated 

 during surveys in 1990. Also, Dana Field located 

 five new populations (O'Brien Creek (010), Belt 

 Creek (Oil), Big Hill Creek (012), Tenderfoot 

 Creek (013)) during a wetlands study, on the Lewis 

 and Clark National Forest. 



3. HISTORICAL SITES: Frank H. Rose collected a 

 Crepis sp. in 1948. Label data were vague, but 

 indicate that the collection was made between 

 Kings Hill and Neihart in Cascade County. The 

 specimen remained an unidentified Crepis until 

 1982 when John Pierce annotated it as an Agoseris , 

 Douglass Henderson, one of the authors describing 

 this new species, annotated it as A. 

 lackschewitzii in 1987. This is the first known 

 collection of A. lackschewitzii . Surveys in the 

 area during 1990 by Lewis and Clark National 

 Forest botanist, Dana Field, located a population 

 that probably represents this historic collection, 

 This site is also included within the species 

 range in Figure 2, p. 7. 



4. UNVERIFIED/UNDOCUMENTED REPORTS: None. 



5. AREAS SURVEYED BUT SPECIES NOT LOCATED: The 



following areas were unsuccessfully surveyed for 

 A. lackschewitzii . Actual areas covered were 

 smaller than the part-sections indicated. Land 

 ownership was U.S. Forest Service, except for two 

 sites that are private land, and are denoted with 

 double asterisks (**) . 



** T3N, RUE, Section 1 SEl/4 (USGS Crazy Peak 

 Quadrangle) 



— T3N, RUE, Section 2 NE1/4NE 1/4 (USGS Crazy 

 Peak Quadrangle) 



— T3N, RUE, Section 12 NEl/4 (USGS Crazy Peak 

 Quadrangle) 



** T3N, RUE, Section 35 SEl/4 (USGS Crazy Peak 

 Quadrangle) 



— T3N, RUE, Section 36 SWl/4 (USGS Crazy Peak 

 Quadrangle) 



