Woodbury considered the species '
endangered' in 1975. This tree was recommended for federal listing in the 1978 book
Endangered and threatened plants of the United States, issued by the
Smithsonian Institution and
World Wildlife Fund. Based on that, it was federally listed as a
threatened species by the United States government in 1991. Listing took so long because other species had priority, but it had been in the pipeline since 1980. It was first assessed as 'indeterminate' by Walter and Gillett for the
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in 1997, but was declared to be '
endangered' by the World Conservation Monitoring Centre for the same organisation's website the following year. These newer assessments are all based on the same information from 1991. The most up to date information about the state of the species is still by Marelisa Rivera at the
Fish and Wildlife Service in the
Federal Register of 1991, at this time there were some 200 trees growing in the wild, in five locations. These plants were in a good condition and in all stages of growth, indicating the plant was and had been propagating naturally without hindrance, which led to the assessment as 'threatened' as opposed to 'endangered'. The largest population, in Isabela, was on private land owned by the company Costa Isabela Partners. This company had indicated this land was to be donated to the Puerto Rico Department of Natural Resources for its protection, and that they supported federally listing the species. The species was being propagated in Puerto Rico in 2006 in order to replant it in new areas in the future. It is also being grown in
Arboretum Parque Doña Inés. ==References==