The purple fringeless orchid (Platanthera peramoena A. Gray) is one of Kentucky’s 40+ native, terrestrial orchids. It is widespread in Kentucky, though uncommon. The species is found in moist forests, woodlands, meadows, and thickets, as well as in marshes and swamps. It grows from 1’-4’ tall, producing 2-5 spreading leaves along its stem. In early to mid-July the plant bears an inflorescence of multiple, showy, pink or purple flowers.
In 2016, I came across a single volunteer specimen of P. peramoena growing in moist woods on our 10 acres in SW McCracken county, Kentucky. At the time I am writing this, in early July of 2024, there are fifteen plants, twelve of which are flowering. In this post I am going to go through the processes that led to the (so far) successful expansion of this population of orchids.
We need everyone interested in plant conservation to rally together for the passage of the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act. With historic levels of funding and support from both sides of the aisle, this bipartisan bill is critical to protecting our nation’s plant life. This rally will feature leaders in plant conservation and give you an opportunity to take action to encourage your Members of Congress to vote YES on this historic bill. Bring your passion and excitement, because we need YOU to push Recovering America’s Wildlife Act over the finish line!
Special guest speakers from Atlanta and California Botanical Gardens, SE Plant Conservation Alliance, Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, NatureServe, Center for Plant Conservation, Garden Club of America, Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves, & National Wildlife Federation will share the latest information and why we need your help!
The rally will occur November 13th, 2023 from 2-3pm EST. This is a virtual rally hosted on Zoom. Be sure to register here: Meeting Registration – Zoom
By Michaela Rogers, Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources and Tammy Potter, Kentucky State Apiarist with Kentucky Department of Agriculture
Kentucky Department of Agriculture stakeholders with the Kentucky Pollinator Protection and Monarch Conservation group met on July 20th at the Louisville Zoo and Botanical Gardens. This group meets annually to discuss pollinator conservation topics and projects dedicated to improving pollinator habitat and public knowledge on the plight of pollinators in our state. Members include representatives from a variety of sectors: agriculture, education, transportation right of ways, state and local government, federal government, nonprofits, private and public nature preserves, garden clubs, beekeepers, private businesses, and interested members of the public.
This July, 65 attendees came together to learn about the Louisville Zoo’s pollinator work and hear updates from various stakeholders including the Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves, the Natural Resources Conservation Service, Kentucky Department of Agriculture, Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, Cave Hill Cemetery, and the Waterfront Botanical Gardens.
After a tour of the zoo’s gardens, led by Matthew Lahm of the Louisville Zoo, participants in this year’s meeting heard from several experts:
Tony Romano, Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves: Roadside Remnants and Pollinator Habitat
Katie Cody, Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves: Pollinators in the Forest
Michaela Rogers, Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources and Shelby Fulton, Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves: State Wildlife Action Plan Insect Update and Partner Engagement
Christy Wampler and Nathan Lind, United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service: USDA-NRCS Updates
Michael Higgs, Cave Hill Cemetery: Cave Hill is More than a Cemetery
Kat Rivers, Waterfront Botanical Gardens: Planning for Pollinators
Stakeholders made connections with others pursuing pollinator projects throughout Kentucky and learn about resources offered through various programs highlighted by presenters. Columbia Gas and Roundstone Native Seed Company have worked to convert natural gas rights-of-way to pollinator habitat, and the Transportation Cabinet and the Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves are working on similar projects.
This year, members of this group also learned about the Pollinator Protection Program Web App, which allows farmers and other chemical applicators to communicate via text or email with beekeepers when a label requires communication. This app assists with EPA compliancy and is free to farmers, applicators, landowners, beekeepers, etc.
This group meets annually and tries to find a new site each year. Last year, they met at James Audubon State Park. The Kentucky Pollinator Stakeholders group plans to meet again in Berea Kentucky in 2024, with a date and location to be announced later.
Michaela Rogers is an Environmental Scientist with the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. She serves as the Monarch and Pollinator Coordinator for the agency and manages implementation of the Kentucky Monarch Conservation Plan.
After working for six years with coal companies to establish pollinator habitat on former surface mine sites and working in the queen bee season in the winters, Tammy Horn Potter became Kentucky’s State Apiarist in 2014. She collects honey bee samples for the USDA Honey Bee Health Survey and has worked extensively to improve genetic diversity of queen bees with the Kentucky Queen Bee Breeders Association. She has also worked to improve honey label information with the Kentucky State Beekeepers Association. She is particularly proud of the Kentucky Department of Agriculture Pollinator Protection Plan both for its diversity of stakeholders and for the department’s creation of an app, which coordinates spray information between applicators and beekeepers.
Peter Arnold, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Arnold Classic Farms
David N. Bellangue, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
Jenna Beville, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
Forrest Brown, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
Dillon P. Golding, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Hoot Owl Hollow Farm, Woodlawn, VA
Joseph D. House, Indiana Army National Guard
J. Leighton Reid, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
Jonathan O. C. Kubesch, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Arnold Classic Farms, Country Home Farms, Pembroke, VA, Kentucky Native Plant Society
The majority of turf and pasture species in Kentucky are cool-season species from the Old World. In suburban yards, these species might include Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis), orchard grass (Dactylis glomerata), and tall fescue (Schedonorus arundinaceus). These grasses rose to prominence because they tolerate the mowing, fertilization, and usage regimes of most pastures and yards. Weekend games and parties in the backyard are hard on the soil surface, and thick sods can reduce soil erosion.
Cool-season lawns have limitations. In many yards, the amount of foot traffic doesn’t justify maintaining a thick green lawn. Fertilizer, gas, and mower repair might be money better spent on other activities around the house. Additionally, intensively managed lawns can add pollutants into the wider environment. Finally, while all grasses produce wind-pollinated flowers, these flowers do not necessarily support the pollinators in decline across eastern North America.
More people are eager to convert lawns and pastures to native species, primarily wildflowers, grasses, and small woody plants. These native plantings can replace traditional garden beds, take up dedicated areas, or even replace the entire backyard lawn. Native plantings reintroduce native species back into suburban areas. These native plantings provide a great introduction to our natural heritage for young children as well as a proving ground for restoration of natural plant communities at larger scales.
How do we convert cool-season lawn and pasture into native plantings? Cool-season grasses tolerate a fair deal of abuse, which can make them challenging to kill. A stepwise planning and planting process can help with killing lawns as well as planting native species. A fair deal of technical and popular literature is available to help guide interested homeowners and landowners to make the switch, but here’s a quick guide to help frame your conversion.
Step 1. Assess the site and set your goals for the planting
Site assessment should precede any action. Without an idea of the resources, site condition, or a plan, a native planting is less likely to succeed in meeting your goals. This assessment should consist of a soil test and a composition assessment. Soil testing should be in accordance with guidelines from the University of Kentucky soil testing lab. The routine soil test can determine basic soil fertility, and the organic matter test can decide whether additional amendments, such as compost or straw or wood mulch, are required.
If such amendments are added, please consider the Carbon to Nitrogen (C:N) ratio. Carbon will tie up nitrogen making it unavailable to the plants, meaning additional nitrogen will be necessary to ensure proper microbial breakdown of amendments and proper growth for the plants. Plant species need to be selected based on soil acidity.
Most American lawns are a mixture of cool-season grasses, introduced legumes, and native as well as non-native broadleaf forbs. Getting an idea of the yard composition can be as simple as walking the yard and at 100 points determining the plants nearest to a boot tip. This step point method is quick and effective. This assessment does not need to be overly formal: grass, clover, and broadleaf weeds. This initial composition can determine the efficacy of different conversion strategies.
Homeowners Associations and other regulatory bodies may not like how these stands look, especially considering that most native plants are not subject to regular, short mowing. Be as pragmatic as possible, not fanciful. Evaluate your situation and act in the most effective way to meet your goals. These organizations could be persuaded to be more supportive of these actions if the yard can advance conservation, environmentalism, and biodiversity protection. After confirming approval, native plantings should be planned appropriately.
Goals for native plants depend on what you expect from your site. Producing native blooms for pollinators might favor a semi-natural wildflower bed, whereas a meadow mix might be more appropriate for wildlife. A native lawn may not be a possibility right away, but native areas with walking paths or native beds might be a great way to move toward a wilder yard.
A general plant community is a great way to frame a native bed or area in the yard, and here are a few questions to help you get started:
Will this plant community be grassy, flowery, or woody?
Are there any priority species for your area?
Will the area be a series of managed beds, or a semi-natural meadow with walking paths?
Are trees and woody plants part of the native planting?
Is shade a factor of the area?
Will you need to consider how much light is needed for desired native plants?
Increasing the diversity of species in the planting can improve plant growth and competition against weeds, as well as reduce pest pressure. Native plants come with different management requirements than cool-season grasses and limitations. These species grow from March to November and then go dormant, leaving brown stubble. Native turfs are being evaluated in the eastern USA, but low-growing western natives are not necessarily native to Kentucky nor do these species compete well with weeds when water isn’t limited.
If you’re seeking to create a landscape similar to what existed pre-settlement, consider using regional plant and seed suppliers, and ask Kentucky Native Plant Society officers about what might work in your geography. Consider building a plant community that might resist extreme climatic events.
Join us April 2nd at 11am EDT as we pull winter-creeper from populations of running buffalo clover at Ashland, The Henry Clay Estate in Lexington following the iNaturalist tutorial hike. To learn more about running buffalo clover, click here. You do not need to partake in the iNaturalist tutorial hike to help pull winter creeper, but you are welcome to! Bring a knee pad and gardening gloves if you have them. We will meet next to the Gingko Cafe. If you wish to join in, please email Heidi Braunreiter, heidi.braunreiter@ky.gov.
By Tara Littlefield, Botanist and Plant Conservation Manager
The Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves and partners have been working on a project to protect, connect, and restore populations of the state endangered wood lily (Lilium phildelphicum), and its Pine Barrens and woodland habitat over the past decade in Kentucky. The wood lily, while globally secure and wide ranging, is state endangered in Kentucky despite once being more common. This charismatic plant of the Cumberland Plateau grassland and woodlands (barrens) has declined by over 90% in the past 40 years due to habitat loss, lack of fire, mowing, and herbivory. The wood lily, along with numerous other plants it grows with, make up critical pollinator habitat for species such as the monarch butterfly and native bees. We are working with partners to bring this plant and its habitat back from the brink of extinction by coordinating and implementing monitoring, management and restoration efforts. I am excited to announce that the wood lily has finally come full circle as a plant conservation alliance project from monitoring, collaboration, seed collection, site preparation and management, to now translocation back in managed pine barrens habitat in the Cumberland plateau!
A catalyst for the creation of the Kentucky Plant Conservation Alliance
The conservation efforts for the wood lily represents a shift in plant conservation direction in our state that has happened over the past decade. Funding and targeted conservation efforts have traditionally been focused on globally rare plants, plants that are listed under the Endangered Species Act and have specific federal funding tied to their recover efforts. Since I have worked at Kentucky Nature Preserves in 2005, the lack of staff and funding has always limited the number of projects and species we could reasonably work on outside of our federally listed plant program and state nature preserves site monitoring and management programs. Our efforts for federally listed plants were successful ,and we managed with limited monitoring on our state nature preserves and associated rare species that occurred on these lands. In addition to this work, we had identified so many other plant conservation needs for state listed species across the state that were falling through the cracks due to lack of staff, funding, time outreach and education. Our rare plant records were becoming historic, and the state listed rare plants that we were able to visit on private and public lands were rapidly declining or becoming extirpated since they were originally discovered in the 70s-90s due to various threats. The wood lily is one example of a species that was falling through the cracks.
How do you tackle issue of lack of staff, time and funding to accomplish larger missions beyond the feasible efforts of just a few dedicated staff? What was our approach to addressing these serious plant conservation issues? The key is partnerships and collaboration, and creating an outreach focus of spreading the mission into other organizations and individuals.
Wood lily Conservation History
The majority of the wood lily populations were discovered and documented in the 1970s and 1980s in over 10 counties scattered in the Cumberland plateau region. They were primarily found in powerlines and roadsides and nearby pine oak woodlands and barrens. Over the years, due to habitat loss, lack of fire, summer mowing, and herbivory the populations dwindled down to just a handful of populations. I worked on a project from 2011-2013 updating roadside rare plant populations in the Cumberland plateau region on and near the Daniel Boone National Forest and collected this data. It was alarming. If trends did not change, if threats were not mitigated, we may lose one of our beautiful native lily’s, among many other rare species and habitat, from our state in the near future. With some outreach, new partnerships were formed with KYTC transportation staff and roadside maintenance crews to alter mowing and other management of the rare plant populations. We partnered with David Taylor with the Daniel Boone National Forest and Jim Scheff and Tina Johnson of Kentucky Heartwood on additional monitoring and seed collection efforts. After a failed attempt at seed collection in 2016 due to extreme herbivory, we caged 27 plants scattered in the southern Cumberland plateau region to ensure seed collection in the fall. We knew it was important to propagate and seedbank these plants as soon as possible in order to transplant future plants into suitable habitat in the future. We needed to increase the number of viable populations and make up for some of of the many lost populations over the years.
Seed was successfully collected in 2017 by OKNP, Heartwood, and KNPS volunteers and a new project with Margaret Shea of Dropseed Nursery began. Margaret is a amazing native plant horticulturalist with a rare plant conservation background. Her success at propagating the seeds, growing and safeguarding the plants until we are able to transplant into recipient pine barrens sites is crucial to the restoration and transplantation process.
At the same time, land managers at the Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves, led by Josh Lillpop, began pine barrens restoration projects at on OKNP state nature preserves and natural areas in order to create more suitable pine barrens habiat for rare plants like the wood lily (Lilium phildelphicum), pine aster (Symphyotrichum concolor) and hairy snoutbean (Rhynchosia tomentosa). We partnered with staff at the Daniel Boone National Forest, including David Taylor, Claudia Cotton, Christy Wampler, and Jacob Royse who helped with population monitoring and connecting with existing pine barrens restoration efforts that could also provide future habitat for the wood lily. While our goal continued to be increasing networking with roadside and utility companies and staff on appropriate management practices for the existing rare pine barrens species, we also strived to create new populations within interior pine barrens restoration sites that are being managed with fire and mechanical removal of canopy, the pine barrens and savannah communities.
In the fall of 2021, 5 years after we began the project to protect the remaining populations and to propagate them for future introductions, the first transplantations finally began! A team from the Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves and Kentucky Plant Conservation Alliance volunteers transplanted wood lily bulbs into new several sites in Powell, Pulaski and Rockcastle counties that are being managed and restored to the pine barrens woodland community.
The November 2021 wood lily bulb planting team consisted of Tara Littlefield, Heidi Braunreiter, Rachel Cook, Vanessa Voelker, Ryan Fortenberry, Lexi Schoenloab, Dale Bonk, Jim Scheff and Tina Johnson. We quickly realized that a great planting tool for these tiny wood lily bulbs were spoons, hence the spoons in some of the group photos. We planted over 500 bulbs across 5 sites with plans to expand on our plantings and sites next year. Monitoring plots were installed and data was collected. Our team will be measuring the success of these plantings over the course of the next year and networking with land managers on future scheduled burns at these sites. Fingers crossed our wood lilies survive and flourish! Stay tuned!
By Tony Romano, OKNP botanist/Conservation Coordinator
Grasslands are an increasingly rare plant community type in Kentucky and the southeastern United States. Kentucky has often been depicted as a continuous forest, but we now understand that grasslands (defined broadly here to include prairie, savanna, barrens, and woodland communities) were once much more widespread throughout the state. Estimates of pre-settlement grassland communities in Kentucky range from 2.5 to 3 million acres. These grasslands are now nearly gone, with less than 1 percent of natural prairie and barrens remaining today in Kentucky (Abernathy et al. 2010). Much of this loss can be attributed to direct conversion of habitat through agricultural and urban development. The cessation of historical disturbances such as fire and grazing by large herds of animals has allowed the remaining grasslands to be degraded and slowly converted into forests by woody succession.
Figure 5: Ecologist and writer Aldo Leopold. Courtesy of the Aldo Leopold Foundation and University of Wisconsin-Madison Archives
Aldo Leopold, a name that looms large in ecology, recognized over 70 years ago that roadsides were some of the last bastions of the mid-west tallgrass prairie in Wisconsin and Illinois. Even in Leopold’s time, most of the tallgrass prairie in the mid-west was already lost to the same processes that have diminished Kentucky’s grasslands. A Sand County Almanac, a collection of Leopold’s essays published posthumously in 1949, is a seminal work of ecological and philosophical writing that continues to influence the thinking of ecologists and conservationists to this day. While re-reading Almanac this past winter, I was struck by two essays that had direct bearing on the topic of this article. In Prairie Birthday, Leopold describes a remnant prairie tucked in the corner of a cemetery which borders a highway. He describes a stand of compass plant (Silphium laciniatum), perhaps the last population in that county, that blooms each July in that cemetery. Sadly, the fence separating the prairie from the road is eventually removed and the Silphium is mowed. Leopold laments that “this is one little episode in the funeral of the native flora, which in turn is one episode in the funeral of the floras of the world.”
Recognizing that things don’t need to be this way, Leopold continues “…every highway is bordered by an idle strip as long as it is; keep cow, plow, and mower out of these idle spots, and the full native flora … could be part of the normal environment of every citizen.”
In a later essay, Illinois Bus Ride, Leopold describes the vestiges of native plants and animals that he observes out the window of a bus traveling through Illinois. He notes that “In the narrow thread of sod between the shaved banks and toppling fences grow the relics of what once was Illinois: the prairie.” The foresight of these essays, that roadside remnants would become vital for grassland conservation, is truly astounding.
Figure 6: Newly discovered roadside population of barrens silky aster (Symphyotrichum pratense)(G4/S3).
Figure 7: Prairie dock (Silphium terebinthinaceum) along a roadside in Meade County.
In recent years, roadsides and utility right-of-ways have been increasingly recognized by ecologists and land managers for their potential conservation value. Research has shown that roadsides can provide important habitat for many pollinating insects, including at-risk species like the monarch butterfly (Hopwood 2008). Because they are maintained in an open, grass dominated state, roadsides can also contain remnants of native grassland communities that support diverse and sometimes rare plant species. Importantly, research shows that intact, high-quality, grasslands provide some of the best habitat for pollinators due to the abundance and diversity of plant species that occur in these communities (Ries et al. 2001). In other words, if we can protect high-quality roadside grasslands, we will also be providing vital habitat to insect populations. Nationwide, approximately 10 million acres of roadside right-of-ways are managed by state transportation departments (Forman et al. 2003). If successfully managed for native plant species, ten million acres is a tremendous amount of potential pollinator and grassland habitat.
Fortunately, Leopold’s old idea has gained traction. At the federal level, an important 2014 Presidential Memorandum addressed concerns over the monarch butterfly and declining populations of important pollinating insects. The memo directed federal agencies to increase or improve pollinator habitat nationwide (White House 2014). The memo additionally directed the Federal Department of Transportation to work with state departments of transportation to promote pollinator friendly practices. In accordance with this memo, the Federal Highway Administration researched and published several documents outlining best management practices (BMPs) and restoration techniques for managing roadside right-of-ways for native plants and pollinating insects (U.S. Department of Transportation, 2016).
Figure 8: OKNP’s progress so far on roadside pollinator habitat and grassland surveys
Figure 9: Appalachian rosinweed (Silphium wasiotense) a globally rare plant (G3/S that thrives on roadsides.
In the Commonwealth, the Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves (OKNP) and the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) have partnered on a 5-year project to survey all of the state maintained roads for high-quality pollinator and grassland habitat. KYTC maintains approximately 31,000 miles of roadside right-of-way which includes the interstates, US highways, and all state highways. Surveys began in 2020, and so far our botanists have surveyed over 13,000 miles of road in over 40 counties. We have evaluated over 200 sites for pollinator habitat and have identified over 30 high-quality grasslands. We also identified over 20 additional sites that do not necessarily meet high-quality grassland criteria, but still provide important habitat for certain rare plant species like the Appalachian Rosinweed (Silphium wasiotense). This Silphium is a globally rare species (G3/S3), endemic to Kentucky and Tennessee, that thrives on forest edges along roads in eastern Kentucky. In line with the goals of the Kentucky Pollinator Protection Plan (Kentucky Department of Agriculture 2019), once important sites are identified, we are working with KYTC to modify existing management to support and benefit these grassland communities and rare plant habitats. We believe this work will help preserve the full native flora of Kentucky.
Now, there is a second old idea in Leopold’s essays that I would like to briefly touch on if the reader will permit it. In addition to his concern over the retreating prairie, Leopold was once again ahead of his time when he observed what we would now call “plant blindness” in his contemporaries. In Illinois Bus Ride he comments that “No one in the bus sees these relics. A worried farmer … looks blankly at the lupines, lespedezas, or Baptisias … He does not distinguish them from the parvenu [exotic] quackgrass in which they grow.” Leopold continues “Were I to ask him the name of that white spike of pea-like flowers hugging the fence, he would shake his head. A weed, likely.” In Prairie Birthday he states the issue directly “We grieve only for what we know. The erasure of Silphium from western Dane County is no cause for grief if one knows it only as a name in a botany book.”
Figure 10: “…that white spike of pea-like flowers” isn’t a weed, its white wild indigo (Baptisia leucantha)!
Figure 11: Newly discovered roadside population of round-head bush clover (Lespedeza capitata) (G5/S3).
Figure 12: Tony Romano, OKNP botanist, at a newly found and highly diverse roadside prairie.
Coined in 1998 by botanists Elisabeth Schussler and James Wandersee the term “plant blindness” refers to “the inability to see or notice the plants in one’s own environment” (Allen 2003). Plant blindness among the general public diminishes peoples understanding, interest, and connection to nature. Left untreated, plant blindness can result in declines in funding for plant biology education, research, and conservation initiatives. One of the primary missions of KNPS is to educate the public about plants and alleviate plant blindness. It is my hope that OKNP’s roadside habitat project will contribute to the visibility of native plants and spark interest in learning about and conserving our native flora.
One way that readers could help our efforts is to take a look at your local backroads. OKNP’s roadside survey project is limited to state maintained roads and generally excludes county and local roads. Please join our inaturalist project and help us document important habitat by adding your observations of roadside native plants to the project at https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/kentucky-roadside-native-plants.
References:
Abernathy, G., D. White, E. L. Laudermilk, and M. Evans, editors. 2010. Kentucky’s Natural Heritage: An Illustrated Guide to Biodiversity. University Press of Kentucky, Lexington, KY., USA.
Allen, W. 2003. Plant Blindness. BioScience. 53(10).
Forman, R. T. T., D. Sperling, J.A. Bissonette, A. P. Clevenger, C.D. Cutshall, V.H. Dale, L. Fahrig, R. France, C. R. Goldman, K. Heanue, J.A. Jones, F.J. Swanson, T. Turrentine, and T.C. Winter. 2003. Road Ecology: Science and Solutions. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.
Hopwood, J. 2008. The contribution of roadside grassland restorations to native bee conservation. Biological Conservation. 141.
Kentucky Department of Agriculture. 2019. Kentucky Pollinator Protection Plan. Available at: https://www.kyagr.com/statevet/documents/OSV_Bee_KY-Pollinator-Pro-Plan.pdf. Accessed: October 2021.
Ries, L., Debinski, D.M., and M.L. Wieland. 2001. Conservation value of roadside prairie restoration to butterfly communities. Conservation Biology. 15(2).
U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration. 2016. Pollinators and Roadsides: Best Management Practices for Managers and Decision Makers. Available: https://www.environment.fhwa.dot.gov/env_topics/ecosystems/Pollinators_Roadsides/BMPs_pollinators_roadsides.pdf. Accessed: October 2021.
White House Office of Press Secretary. 2014. “2014 Pollinator Presidential Memo.” Available: https://www.nps.gov/subjects/pollinators/presidential-memo.htm. Accessed: October 2021.