Showing posts with label Orobanchaceae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orobanchaceae. Show all posts

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Castilleja and Triphysaria

A continual favorite photographic subject of mine are the Indian Paintbrushes and their allies. The names and families have been in a bit of flux over the last decade or so but now they are mostly known as Castilleja and Triphysaria in the Orobanchaceae.

The genus Castilleja has about 200 species with a center of distribution of western North America. We definitely have a lot here in the Bay Area. Almost every time I head out on a trail or down a back road there are anywhere from 1 to 4 species in bloom.

Here are some of my favorites:

Castilleja exserta, Panoche Road,
San Benito County, California
Castilleja kraliana, Bibb Glades,
Bibb County, Alabama
Triphysaria eriantha ssp. rosea,
Salt Point State Park, Sonoma County

Triphysaria eriantha ssp. rosea,
Salt Point State Park, Sonoma County
Castilleja tenuis, near Leland Meadow, 
off CA 108, Tuolomne County, California
Castilleja coccinea, near Eureka Springs, Arkansas

Castilleja foliolosa, off Brim Road, Colusa County

Castilleja affinis, Bean Hollow
State Beach, San Mateo County
Castilleja ambigua, Bean Hollow State Beach
San Mateo County
Castilleja attenuata, Bear Valley Road,
Colusa County



Saturday, August 14, 2010

Summertime on the Northern California Coast

Dudleya farinosa, growing along
cliffs at Pt. Reyes National Seashore
The spring bloom in California is world-renowned as one of the best natural floral displays on the Earth. Less known but just as interesting are our summer-blooming flowers, especially along the coast.

This summer I visited the Chimney Rock and Lighthouse Trail areas of Pt. Reyes National Seashore, Abbott's Lagoon at Pt. Reyes, and Bean Hollow and Pescadero State Beaches in San Mateo County. The rugged coast, with tidepools and crumbling cliffs make for a spectacular background to the flowers, appearing like colorful jewels sprinkled among the dry grasses of summer.

Castilleja affinis and Dudleya farinosa, Bean Hollow
State Beach, San Mateo County
Most people botanizing along the coast in the summer are looking for orchids. The most common coastal orchid is Piperia elegans and its various subspecies followed by Spiranthes romanzoffiana. However, orchids are not the showiest or most numerous. Other showy wildflower genera in bloom include Grindelia, Eriogonum, Dudleya, Monardella, Angelica, Agoseris, Orobanche, Camissonia, Castilleja, Cirsium, Madia.

My favorites are the orchids and the various Castilleja species.

Here is a sampling of what I saw on my walks:
Piperia elegans ssp. decurtata is a locally
endangered subspecies restricted to a
few sites in the southern part of
Pt. Reyes National Seashore
Orobanche californica ssp. californica - Chimney Rock,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore
Angelica hendersonii - Bean Hollow State
Beach, San Mateo County
Spiranthes romanzoffiana - - Bean Hollow
State Beach, San Mateo County

Oenothera elata - - Bean Hollow State Beach, San Mateo County

Castilleja ambigua - - Bean Hollow State
Beach, San Mateo County

Castilleja affinis - - Bean Hollow State Beach,
San Mateo County


Astragalus pycnostachyus var. pycnostachyus -
Pescadero State Beach, San Mateo County
Gentiana affinis var. ovata - Abbott's Lagoon,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore

Horkelia californica - Abbott's Lagoon,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore

Polygonum amphibium var. emersum - Abbott's Lagoon, Pt. Reyes National Seashore
Eriophyllum stoechadifolium - Abbott's Lagoon,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore

Mentha arvensis - Abbott's Lagoon,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore

Stachys chamissonis - Abbott's Lagoon,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore

Symphyotrichum chilense - Abbott's Lagoon,
Pt. Reyes National Seashore
Castilleja affinis - Pescadero State Beach,
San Mateo County
Navarretia squarrosa - Pescadero State Beach,
San Mateo County

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Bibb County Glades - a botanical wonderland

Through a Flickr contact in Minnesota, Dr. Brian O'Brien at Gustavus Adolphus College, outside of the Twin Cities in Minnesota, I learned of a very special botanical preserve in Alabama, the Kathy Stiles Freeland Bibb County Glades Preserve, located 90 minutes southwest of Birmingham. 

Cedar Glade - notice the forest ends abruptly
where the ultramafic soil begins?
This spectacular botanical wonderland was undiscovered until 1993, when a fish biologist and botanist went on a canoe trip to survey the Little Cahaba River.  What they found astounded them: 8 new species of plants and several others that had not been seen in decades, one of which was presumed extinct. Species of Castilleja, Liatris, Onosmodium, Silphium were all found to be new to science!

Solanum pumilum, a new record for
this species in Alabama
I had to visit this place! I grew up in the suburbs of Birmingham and return infrequently to visit family. My last return home in May 2009 I made plans to visit the Bibb Glades. It rained 4 of the 7 days I was in Birmingham but I was determined to make it to the Glades, so I headed off one morning in a drizzle that thankfully was gone by the time I reached the glades. I'd forgotten about the humidity and mosquitos of Alabama, though, which made the visit that much more interesting.

Castilleja kraliana, new
species to science
Briefly, the glades are special because of their soil. A particularly pure form of limestone, Dolomite, is found at the surface of the earth here. This limestone weathers into a soil that is toxic to most but not all plants, known as ultramafic. The mixed broadleaf-pine forests that dominate most of Alabama cannot grow in this soil. This leaves a large opening in the forest canopy and a fascinating mix of ultramafic-tolerant plant species.
Leptopus phyllanthoides
The place was simply amazing. So much of Alabama has been farmed, developed, planted, etc. that everything you see that's green and growing is disturbed by human touch. About the only native plants left are the trees. Walking through the Bibb Glades I felt like I was really back in a place and time very few people have experienced, particularly in such a developed area.

Marshallia mohrii, a previously
undiscovered population and the
plant that alerted the botanist
there was something special on
the Little Cahaba River
The glades are now owned by the Nature Conservancy and are open to visitors during daylight hours. Click on any of the photos in this post to see the incredible diversity of plants I encountered and photographed at the Glades that day.