By CARLEE STEPPE
The latest rare plant search in Georgia is aimed at rediscovering one of the state’s rarest wildflowers – pineland scurfpea (Orbexilum virgatum).
Last documented in the 1930s in the sandhills of southeast Georgia, this slender knee-high plant features purple, pea-like blooms and narrow, hairy leaves.
Its preferred home? Sun-soaked longleaf pine-wiregrass habitats, especially those that sport sand ridges and have been treated recently with prescribed fire.
Pineland scurfpea is a species of high conservation concern in Georgia’s 2025 State Wildlife Action Plan. But there’s a catch: We don’t know if it still exists in the wild here. This is where you come in.
- Best time to search: May through June, during peak flowering.
- Where to look: open pine flatwoods and savannas in southeast Georgia sandhills.
- What to look for: hairy stems, tiny purple flowers and leaves dotted with dark glands.
- Tip: Focus on recently burned areas – these habitats offer the best conditions for the plant.
If you think you’ve seen pineland scurfpea (also called slender leather-root and, in Florida, pineland leatherroot) or would like help planning a search, email carlee.steppe@dnr.ga.gov. You can also send GPS locations and clear images to gabiodata@dnr.ga.gov or upload observations to iNaturalist.
Carlee Steppe is a botanist with DNR’s Wildlife Conservation Section.
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