Solidago capulinensis

{{Short description|Species of plant}}

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|image=Capulin Goldenrod.jpg

|status=

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|genus=Solidago

|species=capulinensis

|authority=Cockerell & D.M.Andrews

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Solidago capulinensis, known as the Capulin goldenrod is a rare plant endemic to Capulin Volcano National Monument and Las Animas County, Colorado and was first described and collected in 1936 by Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell and Darwin Maxson Andrews.{{NPS|url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/capulin-goldenrod.htm|title=Capulin Goldenrod}}

The species was cultivated as an ornamental from the 1930's until the 1970's, but not found in the wild since the initial collection. As botanists only knew the plant from a single collected specimen, it was not included in any subsequent account of the New Mexico or United States flora. Academic interest in the species came after it was rediscovered lining a walkway at the Pueblo Colorado Nature Center in Pueblo, Colorado,{{cite journal |last1=Nesom |first1=G. L. |last2=Lowrey |first2=T. K. |title=Solidago capulinensis (Asteraceae: Astereae) redivivus. |journal=Phytoneuron |date=2011 |volume=2011-24 |pages=1-22 |url=https://www.phytoneuron.net/PhytoN-Solidagocapulinensis.pdf |access-date=21 July 2022}} which prompted a new survey within Capulin Volcano National Monument. Capulin goldenrod was subsequently found growing throughout the monument and re-identified as a rare endemic plant. It is the only known rare vascular plant species in the monument.

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