Story Maps & Presentations
Click on a presentation below or scroll down to learn about the social and ecological history of the Santa Fe River and watershed.
It is a matter of debate whether the Santa Fe River was perennial throughout its length prior to the middle of the twentieth century. There is considerable evidence that the stream was fed by numerous springs through the historic plaza area, at Frenchy’s Park, Agua Fria, La Cieneguilla and in the Santa Fe Canyon above La Bajada. Spiegel and Baldwin (1963; the source for this section except as otherwise indicated) cite archaeological evidence that the four Native American pueblos that occurred along the river prior to founding of the City of Santa Fe in 1610 were located near perennial springs that better served their needs than the larger but more variable flow of the river. R.E. Twitchell, 1925 (cited in Spiegel and Baldwin) describes a tributary to the Santa Fe River called the Rio Chiquito, which had its source in a large spring in the Archbishop’s garden adjacent to the cathedral, and flowed down the present Water Street to a confluence with the Santa Fe River near the Santuario de Guadalupe. Twitchell gives numerous other examples of springs and marshes in the downtown area; several Santa Fe elders recall these wetlands being active well into the first half of the 20th century. All are now defunct, although several large buildings in the downtown area, including the PERA Building opposite the State Capitol, are forced regularly to pump groundwater out of their basements as a result of being constructed over “ghost springs”.
Descriptions of Santa Fe by 17th, 18th, and 19th-century European visitors refer to the Santa Fe River as a trout stream, and Santa Feans now in their forties and younger recall fishing in (and skating on!) the river. According to the hydrographic survey of 1914, the flow of the river at that time was diverted by at least 38 ditches to irrigate 1,267 acres at an average application rate of 4.5 acre-feet per acre, for a total of 5,701 acre-feet. The furthest upstream irrigated fields were in the area now occupied by the City’s McClure Reservoir; the furthest downstream were farms in La Bajada that are still under acequia-fed irrigation. This amount of irrigation argues that there was generally sufficient flow in the river throughout that long reach, to warrant the effort to divert it. At the same time, as early as 1716 it was reported that the flow of the Santa Fe River was insufficient to irrigate all of the cultivated acreage in every year.
Elder residents of Agua Fria speak of large cottonwoods and duck ponds in the riverbed that now carries only storm flows in its severely incised channel. Spiegel and Baldwin confirm these memories, noting “…partial ground-water barriers at Cieneguita (ed. note: now Frenchy’s Field) and Agua Fria at times cause the appearance of springs…” (p. 172). They further observe: “The early agricultural practices constituted an excellent form of artificial recharge of a part of the diverted water to the underlying aquifers because of ditch leakage and extensive water spreading. Despite the consumptive use by the irrigated fields, probably a larger proportion (possibly 30-50percent) of the streamflow reached the zone of saturation after irrigation began than did under natural conditions.”
All this suggests that flow in the Santa Fe River was probably interrupted from time to time between its spring-fed zones; but that under pre-development conditions the river had sufficient shallow groundwater to keep riparian vegetation alive and sufficient pools to serve as refugia for fish and obligate riparian wildlife, from the headwaters to La Bajada, even in the driest years. Below La Bajada, the evidence for springs and frequent flow is much sketchier than for the upstream section of the river.
The regular dewatering of the Santa Fe River seems to have begun in the late 1940s, when water demand in the City began to approach the supply available from the reservoirs above town. Five wells were installed near the Santa Fe River; they supplied 68% of the City’s drinking water in 1951, and from that point forward served as an important supplemental water source, and occasionally (until the Buckman well field was brought on line in 1972) the major source for the City (CDM&LWA, 1998). In addition to the City’s riverside wells, there has been a tremendous proliferation of domestic and other permitted wells within the Santa Fe watershed. A search of the State Engineer Office well record data base for wells in the Santa Fe watershed, performed on August 16, 2001, resulted in 3,566 wells. (This is probably an undercount, since only township, range and section was used to define the search, so that records with descriptions in terms of x,y coordinates were not accessed.)
Pindi and Agua Fria Schoolhouse Pueblos
By the twelfth century, the Agua Fria area of Santa Fe was home to two pueblo style settlements now known as the Pindi and the Agua Fria School house pueblos. These two pueblos were larger than any other settlement in the Santa Fe area. To learn more, check out the New Mexico Office of the State Historian for an article on the pueblos, Two 13th-Century Settlements in Santa Fe, New Mexico, by Jason S. Shapiro, Ph.D.
Click here to view a PDF with historic photos of the Santa Fe Watershed
- Pre-500s –Pre-Puebloan Oshara people move through the landscape and build temporary camps on the high alpine passes
- Pre-1300s – Tano and other Puebloan ancestors build pit houses along the Santa Fe River.
- Pre-1500s (13th and 14th centuries) –Tewa, Keres, and Towa Pueblo people establish numerous villages and trade routes along the middle Rio Grande and its tributaries, including within and around the Santa Fe River Watershed (e.g., Pindi, Arroyo Hondo). Surrounding parts of the landscape serve as migration routes, farmland, hunting grounds, gathering places, and more, including an established access trail to Pecos Pueblo leading up what is now Canyon Road. Major trade partners include other Pueblos, Diné, Apache, Ute, and Comanche.
- 1598 – First Spanish capital La Provincia del Nuevo Mexico (near Okhay Owingeh Pueblo) is violently established at the northern end of the Camino Real, which passes through the Santa Fe Watershed. Sheep, horses, pigs, and cattle are introduced to the landscape for the first time.
- 1609 – Don Luis de Velasco Marques of New Spain appoints Pedro de Peralta as governor of the province of New Mexico as a result of Don Juan de Oñate’s violent rule.
- 1610 – Governor Peralta moves the Spanish capital to Santa Fe (named La Villa Real de la Santa Fe de San Francisco de Asis). Partial consideration of the site is due to the presence of a river, springs, and marshes. The Palace of the Governors is built. Water rights are established. The Spanish construct the Acequia Madre (irrigation canal) along with Acequia Cerro Gordo and Acequia de la Muralla, based on Moorish technology. Parts of all three are still in use today.
- 1640s – The village of Agua Fria is established near Pindi Pueblo, followed by La Cieneguilla, La Cienega, and what would later become La Bajada, all along El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro.
- 1680 – The pueblo revolt is led by Po’pay of Ohkay Owingeh and other Pueblo leaders. Pueblo people unite to drive the Spanish out of Santa Fe by cutting off the water supply to the Palace of the Governors, resulting in the retreat of the Spanish governor and colonists to northern Mexico.
- 1680-92 – A pueblo is established at the Palace of the Governors, in the place known in Tewa as O’ga P’ogeh Owingeh, or White Shell Water Place. The white shells themselves can refer to different varieties of traded shells for different pueblos, such as olivella and abalone.
- 1692 – Spanish reinvade and recolonize Northern New Mexico under leadership of Don Diego de Vargas, and upper watershed becomes part of the Juan de Gabaldon and Santiago Ramirez Land Grants.
- 1700s – A crystal clear river and grist mills are recorded.
- 1750s – Homes are built along Canyon Road that exist today.
- 1846 – Santa Fe is taken by U.S. troops during the Mexican War.
- 1847 – A sawmill is built to provide lumber for Ft. Marcy at the current site of the Randall Davey Audubon Center.
- 1848 – The Treaty of Guadalupe Hildalgo ends the war between the U.S. and Mexico and recognizes the personal and property rights of New Mexicans and Pueblo Indians brought under U.S. sovereignty. Santa Fe becomes part of U.S. territory. The treaty recognizes the importance of acequias as a century old practice and changes land management practice away from small scale burning and forest management.
- 1851 – The territory of New Mexico passes its first water laws.
- 1861 – New Mexico territorial legislature passes an act to investigate increasing water flow in the river.
- 1879 – Santa Fe Water and Improvement Company submits a certificate of incorporation to the County of Santa Fe. The commissioners of Santa Fe County grant to the Water and Improvement Company the “exclusive right and privilege of erecting dams and reservoirs, and impounding water on the River of Santa Fe.”
- 1880 – Santa Fe Water and Improvement Company is incorporated. Atchinson, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad reaches New Mexico but does not go into Santa Fe. The arrival of the railroad begins the de facto suppression of fire on the landscape due to overgrazing of the herbaceous understory. The population of Santa Fe is 6,635.
- 1881 – Santa Fe Water and Improvement Company fails, and Santa Fe City Water Works Corporation purchases assets. Old Stone Dam is constructed by a private company, storing 25 acre-feet and carrying water into town through a 10-inch pipe.
- 1881-83 – Protests over a private company purchasing public assets stops pipe laying work.
- 1882 – Santa Fe Water and Improvement Company buys back water assets and sells them to the Water and Improvement Company.
- 1890s – Benito Borrego and Thomas Catron win title to Santiago Ramirez Land Grant in court, a land area covering over 6,000 acres in the upper watershed.
- 1891 – Municipal Investment Co of Chicago buys all water assets from Water and Improvement Company.
- 1892 – Pecos River Forest Reserve is established (later combined with the Jemez Forest Reserve to form the Santa Fe National Forest).
- 1893 – Two-Mile Dam, named for distance to Santa Fe Plaza) is constructed, storing 587 acre-feet.
- 1894 – First hydroelectric plant constructed (Santa Fe Hydroelectric Plant) at Upper Canyon Road and Canyon Road. A small concrete reservoir, Talaya Reservoir, is also built on a hill 160 feet above the plant to provide a hydro static head (water pressure) to the plant. Water is brought to Talaya Reservoir by gravity from Two-Mile Reservoir through a 15-inch pipe.
- 1895 – On April 2, power distribution to the Santa Fe Hydroelectric Plant begins delivering about 100 kilowatts of electricity.
- 1900s – Railroad across forest preserves and Prisoner’s Road (State Route 22) is proposed. The Homestead Act is passed. Forest preserves are named “national forests”, and ranger districts are established.
- 1900 – Water and Improvement Company and its assets are sold to Charles F. Street of New York City. Santa Fe Water & Light Company is incorporated by Charles Street and others, and absorbs the assets of the Santa Fe Electric Company, the Santa Fe Gas and Electric Company, and the Water and Improvement Company.
- 1902 – Santa Fe Water & Light Company digs a ditch called the High Line into the hillside about 100 feet above Two-Mile Reservoir to tap the river, supplying water to Two-Mile, which then supplies Talaya Reservoir. The High Line extends upstream to the site of what will become Nichols Reservoir.
- 1904 – Old Stone Dam fills with sediment in a heavy flood event and never again stores surface water.
- 1910s – Agua Sarca Ranger Station is established and later changed to Granite Point Ranger Station. Ground phone lines are established. Pecos and Jemez Forest Preserves are changed to Santa Fe National Forest.
- 1910 – Due to catastrophic fires occurring in the west, the U.S. Forest Service “declares war” on forest fires and launches a continued campaign of fire prevention and control.
- 1912 – New Mexico becomes a state. The population of Santa Fe is 5,100.
- 1920s – Commercial grazing is prohibited. State Highway 22 is abandoned. Recreation plan for Santa Fe Canyon is proposed.
- 1926 – Construction of Granite Point Dam, renamed McClure Dam in 1946, is completed. Originally creating a reservoir capacity of 650 acre-feet, it is expanded in 1935 and 1946 to a capacity of 3,257 acre-feet. New Mexico Power Company is formed.
- 1930s – Pecos Wilderness is established. Pumping station at Santa Fe Lake is built by New Mexico Power Company. All cabin permits expire, and cabins are abandoned.
- 1930 – The population of Santa Fe is 20,325.
- 1932 – Upper Watershed closes to the public pursuant by an order from the Secretary of Agriculture due to overgrazing and erosion concerns.
- 1935 – The “10 a.m. rule” is adopted by the U.S. Forest Service, stating that all wildland fires are to be completely out by 10 o’clock on the morning following the initial report.
- 1940s – The hydroelectric plant is abandoned.
- 1943 – Constuction of Four Mile Dam and Reservoir, later named Nichols Dam and Reservoir, is completed, with a
capacity of 684 acre-feet. High Line and Talaya ditches are abandoned. - 1944 – Sustained Yield Act of 1944 is proclaimed changing the management of forests with the creation of sustained yield timber units in order to stabilize communities, the forest industry, and employment.
- 1946 – The merger between Santa Fe Water & Light and New Mexico Power forms Public Service Company of New Mexico (PNM), returning the control of water in Santa Fe to a New Mexico corporation. Sangre de Cristo Water Company, a subsidiary of PNM, is charged with managing Santa Fe’s water system, including the reservoirs and the treatment plant at the current site of the Water History Park.
- 1950 – The population of Santa Fe is 28,000.
- 1960s – Idea for a proposed route from Las Vegas over Elk Mountain to the watershed is abandoned.
- 1970s – Proposal for new Granite Point Dam by Army Corp of Engineers is set aside.
- 1975 – Water treatment facility is built on Upper Canyon Road.
- 1978 – Two-Mile Dam is declared unsafe due to weak spots that have developed.
- 1980 – The population of Santa Fe is 49,299.
- 1990s – U.S. Forest Service thinning efforts begin.
- 1990 – Acequia associations defend their rights in the Santa Fe River Stream System Adjudication. PNM takes the position that it owns all water rights in the stream system and opposes having to release any water to the acequias, which in turn asserts a right prior to that of PNM. A judge finds that acequias have senior water rights and orders Sangre de Cristo Water Company to release water into Acequia Madre and Acequia Cerro Gordo.
- 1992 – Two-Mile Reservoir is drained.
- 1994 – Two-Mile Dam is partially breached for safety, but not fully dismantled.
- 1995 – City of Santa Fe buys Sangre de Cristo Water Company from PNM shifting control of Santa Fe’s water from private to public hands. PNM retains 188 acres, including Two-Mile Dam and Old Stone Dam.
- 1997 – Adam Gabriel Armijo Park (6 acres, now named Cerro Gordo Park) is dedicated. During construction of the park the original Acequia Cerro Gordo is destroyed, and the current small acequia system is built in its place. The Santa Fe Watershed Association (SFWA) is founded.
- 2000 – PNM donates 188 acres in Santa Fe to The Nature Conservancy (TNC). The tract includes Old Stone Dam and Two-Mile Dam, and is opened to the public in 2002 as Santa Fe Canyon Preserve. The population of Santa Fe is 62,200.
- 2001 – Santa Fe Municipal Watershed Wildland-Urban Interface Fuels Reduction Project, a project to thin and burn approximately 6,400 acres in the watershed, is approved after completing an environmental impact statement in 2000.
- 2003 – Four functioning acequias remain in Santa Fe (from over 70): Acequia Madre, Acequia Cerro Gordo, Acequia de la Muralla, and Acequia del Llano.
- 2004 – SFWA and other partners conduct a paired basin study to monitor the effects of the initial forest treatments in the Upper Watershed with funding from an EPA 319 Clean Water Act grant.
- 2007 – The Santa Fe River is named America’s Most Endangered River by American Rivers due to lack of water flow, downstream gravel mining, and trash dumping. A Santa Fe Municipal Watershed Planning CFRP grant funds local fire history studies by the University of Arizona Tree Ring Lab and the development of a long-term fire history-based management plan for the Municipal Watershed led by Dr. Ellis Margolis.
- 2010 – The Santa Fe Municipal Watershed Plan – developed in collaboration with SFWA, TNC, and Audubon New Mexico – is adopted by City of Santa Fe and U.S. Forest Service. The plan includes a cost share agreement between City of Santa Fe and U.S. Forest Service to support ongoing forest treatments. SFWA begins the first My Water, My Watershed education field trips into the Upper Watershed.
- 2011 – The Buckman Direct Diversion (BDD) project is completed, opening the possibility of the Living River Ordinance. The BDD allotments and water rights from the San Juan-Chama Project help the City of Santa Fe reduce its dependence on mined groundwater and surface water from the Santa Fe watershed.
- 2012 – Santa Fe City Council votes unanimously to pass the Target Flow for a Living River Ordinance on February 29th. With advocacy from community members and SFWA, the city agrees to by-pass 1,000 acre-feet of water into the Santa Fe River on wet or normal years.
- 2013 – Santa Fe Municipal Watershed Plan is updated. Intake structure at Nichols Dam is rebuilt.
- 2015 – The U.S. Forest Service approves, through a Finding of No Significant Impact, prescribed burns in the Santa Fe Municipal Watershed Pecos Wilderness after completing an environmental assessment. City of Santa Fe and TNC begin multi-year Aztec Springs Project, thinning and burning on City and TNC lands. Intake structure at McClure Dam is rebuilt.
- 2015-16 – The Greater Santa Fe Fireshed Coalition forms; joint City and County Fireshed Coalition resolutions pass.
- 2018 – The Office of the State Engineer’s rating of Nichols and McClure dams drops from “Satisfactory” to “Poor” due to aging pipes underneath both dams.
- 2020 – A 2019 Pacheco prescribed burn allows firefighters to contain the Medio Fire, a wildfire caused by a lightning strike, before it spread southeast into the Santa Fe watershed.
- 2021 – The New Mexico Environment Department and City of Santa Fe draft a Source Water Protection Plan. The population of Santa Fe is 88,193.
- 2022 – The Hermit’s Peak /Calf Canyon Fire, caused by two escaped prescribed fires, burns over 341,000 acres, reigniting discussion and policy surrounding prescribed burning complexity.
- 2023 – U.S. Forest Service implements new prescribed burn policies/procedures. U.S. Forest Service approves, through a Finding of No Significant Impact, the Santa Fe Mountains Landscape Resiliency Project to treat about 38,680 acres, after completing an environmental assessment in 2022. Scoping began in 2019.
- 2024 – Nichols Dam Restoration Project begins.
Compiled by Ted Brown
Tiger Salamander – Ambystoma tigrinum
Boreal Chorus Treefrog – Pseudacris maculata
Canyon Treefrog – Hyla arenicolor
Bullfrog – Rana catesbeiana
Northern Leopard Frog – Rana pipiens
Plains Spadefoot – Spea bombifrons
New Mexico Spadefoot – Spea multiplicata
Woodhouse’s Toad – Bufo woodhousii
Red-spotted Toad – Bufo punctatus
Box Turtle – Terrapene ornata
Lesser Earless Lizard – Holbrookia maculata
Round-tailed Horned Lizard – Phrynosoma modestum
Short-horned Lizard – Phrynosoma hernandesi
Collared Lizard – Crotaphytus collaris
Fence or Plateau Lizard – Sceloporus tristichus
Little Striped Whiptail – Aspidoscelis inornata
Plateau Striped Whiptail – Aspidoscelis velox
Many-lined Skink – Eumeces multivirgatus
Western Diamond-backed Rattlesnake – Crotalus atrox
Prairie Rattlesnake – Crotalus viridis
Western Hog-nosed Snake – Heterodon nasicus
Bullsnake – Pituophis catenifer
Great Plains Rat Snake – Elaphe emoryi
Wandering Garter Snake – Thamnophis elegans
Glossy Snake – Arizona elegans
Night Snake – Hypsiglena torquata
Milk Snake – Lampropeltis triangulum
Coachwhip – Masticophis flagellum
Mountain Patch-nosed Snake – Salvadora grahamiae
Smooth Green Snake – Opheodrys vernalis
Compiled by Roger Peterson, Viola Fisher, Bill Isaacs, Ann Parks, Kent Williamson, and Mark Wood
Box-elder | Acer negundo | native |
Tree-of-heaven | Ailanthus altissima | cultivated* |
alder | Alnus tenuifolia | native |
serviceberry | Amelanchier alnifolia | reintroduced |
Oregon grape | Berberis repens | native to NM |
mountain-mahogany | Cercocarpus montanus | reintroduced |
chamisa | Chrysothamnus nauseosus | native |
clematis | Clematis ligusticifolia | native |
red-osier dogwood | Cornus stolonifera | reintroduced |
hawthorn | Crataegus sp. | probably introduced |
Russian olive | Elaeagnus angustifolia | introduced* |
Apache plume | Fallugia paradoxa | native |
New Mexico olive | Forestiera neomexicana | reintroduced |
broom snakeweed | Gutierrezia sarothrae | native |
waxflower | Jamesia americana | native |
one-seed juniper | Juniperus monosperma | native |
Rocky Mountain juniper | Juniperus scopulorum | native |
honeysuckle | Lonicera involucrata | reintroduced |
honeysuckle | Lonicera Xbella | cultivated |
honeysuckle | Lonicera morrowi | cultivated |
wolfberry | Lycium pallidum | native |
apple | Malus sylvestris | cultivated |
cholla | Opuntia imbricata | native |
prickly pear | Opuntia phaeacantha | native |
woodbine | Parthenocissus inserta | native |
Mock orange | Philadelphus microphyllus | native |
piñon | Pinus edulis | native |
Ponderosa pine | Pinus ponderosa | native |
lance-leaf cottonwood | Populus Xacuminata | native |
white poplar | Populus alba | cultivated |
narrow-leaf cottonwood | Populus angustifolia | native |
Rio Grande cottonwood | Populus wislizenii | native |
Lombardy poplar | Populus nigra var. italica | cultivated |
apricot | Prunus armeniaca | cultivated |
plum | Prunus sp. | cultivated |
wild plum | Prunus americana | native |
choke cherry | Prunus virginiana | reintroduced |
pear | Pyrus communis | cultivated |
Gambel’s oak | Quercus gambelii | native |
buckthorn, cascara | Rhamnus cathartica | cultivated |
golden currant | Ribes aureum | native |
wax currant | Ribes cereum | native |
New Mexico locust | Robinia neomexicana | native to NM |
black locust | Robinia pseudoacacia | introduced |
multiflora rose | Rosa multiflora | cultivated |
wild rose | Rosa woodsii | native |
weeping willow | Salix babylonica | cultivated |
coyote willow | Salix exigua | native |
bluestem willow | Salix irrorata | native |
Pacific willow | Salix lucida subsp. lasiandra | native |
black willow | Salix nigra (var. vallicola?) | var. vallicola native NM |
snowberry | Symphoricarpos oreophilus? | reintroduced |
lilac | Syringa vulgaris | planted |
tamarisk, salt cedar | Tamarix chinensis | cultivated* |
American elm | Ulmus americana | introduced |
Siberian elm | Ulmus pumila | introduced* |
arrowwood | Viburnum acerifolium | cultivated |
crested wheatgrass | Agropyron cristatum | introduced |
creeping bentgrass | Agrostis stolonifera | native |
six-weeks grama | Bouteloua barbata | native |
side-oats grama | Bouteloua curtipendula | native |
blue grama | Bouteloua gracilis | native |
mat grama | Bouteloua simplex | native |
smooth brome | Bromus inermis | introduced* |
Japanese brome | Bromus japonicus | introduced* |
cheatgrass | Bromus tectorum | introduced* |
poverty brome | Bromus sterilis [2d NM record] | introduced |
dry-land sedge | Carex douglasii | native |
streamside sedge | Carex nebraskensis | native |
orchard-grass | Dactylis glomerata | introduced* |
spikerush | Eleocharis palustris | native |
Canada wildrye | Elymus canadensis | native |
wheatgrass | Elymus lanceolatus (E. dasystachys) | native |
squirreltail | Elymus longifolius (Sitanion hystrix) | native |
false quackgrass | Elymus pseudorepens | native |
western wheatgrass | Elymus smithii | native |
slim wheatgrass | Elymus trachycaulus | native |
stinkgrass | Eragrostis cilianensis | introduced |
tall fescue | Festuca arundinacea | introduced |
Idaho fescue | Festuca idahoensis | native |
foxtail barley | Hordeum jubatum | introduced |
wire rush | Juncus balticus | native |
toad rush | Juncus bufonius | native |
rice grass | Oryzopsis hymenoides | native |
littleseed rice grass | Oryzopsis micrantha | native |
timothy | Phleum pratense | introduced |
Canada bluegrass | Poa compressa | introduced* |
muttongrass | Poa fendleri | native |
bluegrass | Poa interior | native |
Kentucky bluegrass | Poa pratensis | probably introduced* |
three-square; bulrush | Scirpus pungens | native |
sand dropseed | Sporobolus cryptandrus | native |
sleepy-grass | Stipa robusta | native |
wheat | Triticum aestivale | introduced |
Forbs | ||
wild onion | Allium cernuum | native |
alyssum | Alyssum minus | introduced |
pigweed | Amaranthus hybridus | introduced |
western ragweed | Ambrosia psilostachya | native |
yellow columbine | Aquilegia chrysantha | native |
poison milkweed | Asclepias subverticillata | native |
asparagus | Asparagus officinale | introduced |
Western lined aster | Aster lanceolatus | native |
Ragleaf bahia | Bahia dissecta | native |
Yellow sundrops | Calylophus serrulatus | native |
False flax | Camelina microcarpa | introduced |
Whitetop | Cardaria draba | introduced* |
Paintbrush | Castilleja integra | native |
Lamb’s quarters | Chenopodium album | introduced |
Blue mustard | Chorispora tenella | introduced |
Field bindweed | Convolvulus arvensis | introduced* |
Horseweed | Conyza canadensis | native |
Golden smoke | Corydalis aurea | native |
Cosmos | Cosmos parviflorus | native |
Doveweed | Croton texensis | native |
Buffalo-gourd | Cucurbita foetidissima | native |
Hound’s tongue | Cynoglossum officinale | cultivated* |
Tansy-mustard | Descurainia pinnata | native |
Flixweed | Descurainia sophia | introduced |
Dragonhead | Dracocephalum parviflora | native |
Willow-herb | Epilobium ciliatum | native |
Helleborine | Epipactis helleborine | introduced |
Horsetail, scouring rush | Equisetum arvense | native |
Horsetail | Equisetum hyemalis var. affine | native |
Fleabane daisy | Erigeron divergens | native |
Trailing fleabane | Erigeron flagellaris | native |
wild buckwheat | Eriogonum jamesii | native |
filaree, alfilaria | Erodium cicutarium | introduced |
spurge | Euphorbia dentata | native |
Indian-blanket | Gaillardia pulchella | native |
butterfly weed | Gaura coccinea | native |
Gaura parviflora | native | |
geranium | Geranium caespitosum | native |
gumweed | Grindelia aphanactis | native |
day-lily | Hemerocallis sp. | cultivated |
golden aster | Heterotheca (Chrysopsis) villosa | native |
pingue, bitterweed | Hymenoxys richardsonii | native |
scarlet gilia | Ipomopsis aggregata | native |
wild morning glory | Ipomoea hederacea | native |
wild iris | Iris missouriensis | native |
greenmolly, starwort | Kochia scoparia | introduced* |
prickly lettuce | Lactuca serriola | introduced |
stickseed | Lappula redowskii | native |
wild sweetpea | Lathyrus eucosmos | native |
sweetpea | Lathyrus latifolius | cultivated |
butter-and-eggs | Linaria dalmatica | introduced* |
blue flax | Linum lewisii | native |
puccoon, gromwell | Lithospermum incisum | native |
lupine | Lupinus argenteus var. argophyllus | native to NM |
lupine | Lupinus sp? | native to NM |
blue aster | Machaeranthera canescens | native |
goldenweed | Machaeranthera pinnatifida | native |
cheeseweed | Malva neglecta | introduced |
hollyhock | Malva sp. | cultivated |
horehound | Marrubium vulgare | introduced* |
black medic | Medicago lupulina | introduced* |
alfalfa | Medicago sativa | introduced* |
white sweet-clover | Melilotus alba | introduced* |
yellow sweet-clover | Melilotus officinalis | introduced* |
rough menodora | Menodora scabra | native |
spearmint | Mentha spicata | introduced |
four-o’clock | Mirabilis linearis | native |
prairie evening primrose | Oenothera albicaulis | native |
cut<-leaf evening primrose | Oenothera coronopifolia | native |
Hooker’s eve. primrose | Oenothera hookeri | native |
scarlet bugler | Penstemon barbatus | native |
Rocky Mtn. penstemon | Penstemon strictus | native to NM |
phlox | Phlox sp. | cultivated |
canyon phlox | Phlox nana | native |
mistletoe | Phoradendron juniperinum | native; on juniper |
ground-cherry | Physalis hederaefolia/subulata | native |
common plantain | Plantago major | introduced |
knotweed | Polygonum aviculare | native |
purslane | Portulaca oleracea | introduced |
short-rayed coneflower | Ratibida tagetes | native |
Prairie coneflower | Ratibida columnifera | native |
watercress | Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum | introduced |
cone flower | Rudbeckia laciniata | native |
dock | Rumex crispus | native |
Rocky Mountain sage | Salvia reflexa | native |
threadleaf | Schkuhria multiflora | native |
false salsify | Schorzonera laciniata | introduced |
butterweed | Senecio | native |
tumble-mustard | Sisymbrium altissimum | introduced |
sow-thistle | Sonchus asper | introduced* |
globe mallow | Sphaeralcea fendleri | native |
dandelion | Taraxacum officinale | introduced* |
Navajo tea | Thelesperma megapotamicum | native |
add Thermopsis, ck Agropyrons | ||
salsify; goatsbeard | Tragopogon dubius | introduced* |
salsify, goatsbeard | Tragopogon porrifolius | introduced |
goathead, puncture vine | Tribulus terrestris | introduced |
Alsike clover | Trifolium hybridum | introduced |
white clover | Trifolium repens | introduced |
cat-tail | Typha sp. | native |
mullein | Verbascum thapsus | introduced* |
verbena | Verbena bipinnatifida | native |
verbena | Verbena bracteata | native |
verbena | Verbena macdougali | native |
speedwell | Veronica americana | native |
cow-pen daisy | Verbesina encelioides | native |
cocklebur | Xanthium strumarium | native |
banana yucca | Yucca baccata | native |
soapweed yucca | Yucca glauca | native |