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CALIFORNIA NATURAL HISTORY
INTRODUCTION CALIFORNIA PLANT
LIFE
TO
GUIDES
California Natural History
Guides
Phyllis M. Faber and B r u c e M. Pavlik, G e n e r a l Editors
Introduction to
We dedicate this revision to the memory of Robert Ornduff (1932-2000), plant lover par exellence and friend.
California Natural History Guides No. 6 9 University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California University of California Press, Ltd. London, England © 2003 by the Regents of the University of California Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ornduff, Robert. Introduction to California plant life / Robert Ornduff; revised by Phyllis M. Faber and Todd Keeler-Wolf.—Rev. ed. p. cm.—(California natural history guide series; 69) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-520-23704-9 (pbk.: alk. paper) 1. Botany—California. 2. Plant ecophysiology—California. 3. Plants— Identification. I. Faber, Phyllis M. II. Keeler-Wolf, Todd. III. Title. IV. Series QK 149.073 2003 581.9794—dc21 Manufactured in China 17 10 9 8 7 6 5 4
2002032078
3
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (R 1997) (Permanence of Paper). © Cover image: Blue oak {Quercus douglasii). Photo by John D. Stuart.
The publisher gratefully acknowledges the generous contributions to this book provided by the Moore Family Foundation Richard & Rhoda Goldman Fund and the General Endowment Fund of the University of California Press Associates.
Grateful acknowledgment is also made to the California Academy of Sciences.
CALIFORNIA. A c AI>EJMY < >1
SCIENCES
CONTENTS
1.
2.
3.
Preface Preface from the 1974 Edition Introduction
x xiii xv
THE CALIFORNIA FLORA
2
The Californian Floristic Province
4
Diversity of the Flora
6
Naming Plants: Latin Binomials and Common Names
17
The Meanings of Plant Names
21
A Hierarchy of Classification
28
Naming New Plant Species
31
Rarity and Endemism
34
CALIFORNIA'S TOPOGRAPHY, CLIMATE, AND SOILS
40
Topographical Features of California
42
Climate
50
Geology and Soils
58
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL INFLUENCES ON PLANTS
68
Soil and Topography
70
Sun and Wind
72
Effect of Shade
72
4.
Competition for Water and Light
73
Water and Salinity
74
The Presence of Fire
75
Fungi and Bacteria
77
Plant Competition and Allelopathy
79
Herbivory
80
Pollination
80
Seed Dispersal
86
Adaptations to Aridity
88
Reading the Landscape by Indicator Species
93
V A R I A T I O N OR
ECOTYPES
OF P L A N T S P E C I E S Climatic Ecotypes
5.
6.
7.
96 98
Soil Ecotypes
105
I N T R O D U C T I O N TO CALIFORNIA VEGETATION
110
Vegetation and Flora
112
Concepts of Plant Community and Vegetation
113
A Classification System
115
Ecological Dominance
119
Plant Succession
121
Life Zones
125
V E G E T A T I O N T Y P E S IN CISMONTANE CALIFORNIA
150
The Cismontane Region (West of the Sierra Nevada Crest)
152
V E G E T A T I O N T Y P E S IN M O N T A N E AND TRANSMONTANE CALIFORNIA
198
Montane Region (High Mountain Areas)
200
Transmontane Region (Areas East of the Sierra Nevada Crest and the Deserts)
8.
EVOLUTION OF THE CALIFORNIA FLORA Arcto-Tertiary Geoflora
9.
212
228 231
Neotropical Tertiary Geoflora
236
Madro-Tertiary Geoflora
237
Fossil History of Coast Redwood
241
EARLY PLANT EXPLORATION AND BOTANY IN CALIFORNIA Early Explorers
246 248
Early Plant Collectors
252
The First American Explorers
257
Surveys for Railroads
263
Botany in California Since Statehood
265
10. RECENT CHANGES IN CALIFORNIA'S FLORA
270
Climate Change
272
Native American Usage of the Land
273
The Impact of Agriculture and Grazing
276
The Impact of Invasive Weeds
277
Tracking Habitat Destruction and Loss of Species
284
Habitat Restoration
288
Saving Biodiversity: A Call for Action
290
Glossary Supplemental Reading References Art Credits and Additional Captions Index of Plant Names General Index
297 301 303 315 317 331
PREFACE
An Introduction to California Plant Life, written by Professor Robert Ornduff and published in 1974, has in the intervening years introduced many thousands of students to California's unique flora. During the nearly 30 intervening years, however, a number of new findings have occurred in the field of botany. Changes in the taxonomic treatment of plants have resulted in the reclassification of several plants,, and studies have led to new information regarding several aspects pertaining to the plants of California. Dr. Ornduff died in September of 2000 before he could make needed revisions to his book. Since his death, Dr. Todd Keeler-Wolf, vegetation ecologist with the California Department of Fish and Game, and I have taken on the assignment to update it. Our goal throughout has been to maintain the integrity of Bob's original work, as his extensive knowledge and love of the California flora remains unmatched. In light of recent taxonomic changes, scientific plant names in this revised edition conform to The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California (Hickman 1993), and the common names used are preferentially from the Jepson Manual, the CNPS Inventory of Rare and Endangered Vascular Plants of California (Tibor 2001), or A California Flora (Munz 1968). Todd has added a discussion of "vegetation type," a term more currently in use than "plant community." A controversy over these terms was noted even in the first edition of this book. We have retained the selection of plant communities
Ornduff described because they continue to represent in broad terms the basic assemblages of plants found in California. The seven chapters of the 1974 edition have been increased to 10, with discussions of biological and physical influences on plant life and plant ecotypes separated into two chapters, and the evolution of the California flora and present human influences also in two chapters. We have added a chapter, chapter 9, on early explorers and plant collectors, the first part of which was written by Dr. Elizabeth McClintock of the California Academy of Sciences. Her material originally appeared in the California Horticultural Society Journal (McClintock 1967). The full chapter appeared with minor changes in a syllabus, prepared by Dr. Ornduff for the University of California Extension course, Integrative Biology xl 13 in 1992. Chapter 10 contains an expanded discussion of plant conservation topics and some of the impacts of human activities on native plants and plant communities. A reference list, originally provided for each chapter with an additional general list, has been merged into a single reference list and updated. We also have added a short, supplemental reading list and a small glossary. Many people have helped to make this revision better. Richard Moe from the University of California Herbarium has assisted with taxonomic nomenclature and species numbers, and Roxanne Bittman from the Natural Diversity Data Base helped with rare plant information. A number people have reviewed parts or all of the manuscript: an anonymous reviewer saw three versions of the manuscript; Frank Almeda and Paul di Silva both reviewed an early version, Diane Renshaw critiqued chapter 10; and Pam Muick and Emily Roberson each added information to chapter 10. All have been generous with their knowledge, time, and suggestions, and we thank each of them. Because of better printing technology, many new photographs have been added to this edition, some from the Orn-
PREFACE
xi
duff collection but many from other sources. John Game and Wilma and Bill Follette deserve special mention for graciously providing numerous photographs on short notice. Drawings in the original publication were redrawn by Peter Gaede, map 1 was provided by Paula Nelson, maps 2,3, and 4 were redrawn by William Nelson, and water color illustrations are by Virginia Bates. We hope that those who read and learn from this book will appreciate and enjoy California's unique plants and natural landscapes and will play an active role in preserving them. Phyllis M. Faber June 2002
xii
PREFACE
PREFACE FROM THE 1974 EDITION
To many Californians, the wealth of the state lies in its gold, its petroleum, its timber, or its fertile valleys. To those of us who are amateur or professional botanists, or who simply enjoy "plant watching," the riches of California are also reflected in the diversity of wildflowers, shrubs, and trees that occur throughout the state. California is isolated from the rest of North America by deserts or mountains that have allowed the development within its boundaries of one of the most varied floras that occurs anywhere on earth. The plant cover ranges from the forests of the northern coast and the mountain slopes, to the woodlands and scrublands of the foothills and deserts, to the grasslands of the valleys. Our plants range in size from the stately Coast Redwoods of the fog-shrouded coast to the minute belly plants of the southern deserts, and in age from the venerable four-thousand-year-old Bristlecone Pines to the diminutive ephemeral annuals whose life span can be counted in weeks. This small book introduces you to the plant life of California and tells you something of how plants are grouped into communities and what environmental influences determine the pattern of distribution of these communities in the state. It also discusses the origin of our flora, how plants are adapted to the diverse climates of the state, and how they respond to
xiii
forest and chaparral fires, to unusual soils, to man, and to each other. The contents of this book are adapted from a syllabus that I wrote for an Independent Study course developed for the University of California, Berkeley. Because most of my botanizing has been in northern California, the contents of the book are perhaps unevenly weighted toward this portion of the state. Drafts of portions of the manuscript were read by L. R. Heckard, J. R. McBride, D. R. Parnell, and a few other friends and colleagues to whom I am indebted for helpful suggestions. I am also grateful to S. C. H. Barrett, R. Benseler, S. Carlquist, D. Hafner, L. M. Moe, and A. C. Smith for allowing me to reproduce their slides, to C. Mentges for executing the line drawings, and to R Watters for her assistance in preparing the manuscript. Several of the color illustrations have been taken from the slide collection of the Jepson Herbarium, University of California, Berkeley. I am also indebted to my students, who have proven time and again that there is still a great deal that I have to learn about California plants, and that most of this will be gained by studying the plants themselves and not what is written about them in books. Map 1. Major topographical features of California. The portion of the state in the California Floristic Province is to the coastward side of the hatched line. Robert Ornduff June 1974
xiv
PREFACE FROM THE 1974
EDITION
INTRODUCTION
Nearly one-fourth of the plants found in North America north of Mexico, and more than are found in any other state, grow in California. Around 6,000 species, subspecies, and varieties of native flowering plants, conifers, and ferns grow in woodlands, deserts, mountains, and wetlands of California, some from the days when dinosaurs roamed the earth and some of far more recent origin. California is home to the world's tallest trees, the coast redwood (Sequoia semperviretts), the world's largest trees, the giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum), and the world's oldest trees, the western bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva). The extraordinary diversity found in California's native plants is a reflection of the complex geologic history, diverse topography, and climate of the area now called California that has changed dramatically over the eons. Particles eroded from base rocks combine with organic matter to slowly form soils. Where an area is wet and warm, soils form faster, where dry and hot, soil formation can be almost nonexistent. Today's vegetation is a reflection of environmental conditions found in years past together with conditions found today. As conditions change, some plants can persist, whereas others cannot and become extinct. Fan palms (Washingtoniafilifera), for example, are relics from 60 million years ago when the region was less mountainous and the climate tropical; the coast redwood and the giant sequoia are remnants from 40 million years ago when the climate was cooler and wetter; and some
XV
of the oaks and desert shrubs we see today are descendents of species that evolved in the warmer, drier period of 10 million years ago. Because plants occur where environmental conditions meet their needs, understanding the subtle factors that affect plant distribution can be interesting and a challenge. Noting features such as slope direction, soil depth, history of disturbance, intensity of shade, and availability of moisture enable prediction of the assemblages of plants that might be expected, or the understanding of why certain plants so often grow together. California'a landscape is rich and varied, with dozens of vegetation types ranging from those found on coastal bluffs and dunes to towering montane forests. The stunning beauty of the annual spring wildflower displays on coastal terraces and on valley slopes alone brings visitors from around the world. As the population of this state continues to expand rapidly, being good stewards of this rich resource becomes a daunting challenge. Gaining an understanding and enjoyment of the plant life found in this state is a good place to begin.
xvi
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1 THE CALIFORNIA
FLORA
The Californian Floristic Province California is a large state with a complex topography and a great diversity of climates and habitats, resulting in a very large assemblage of plant species that vary in size and include both the world's largest trees and some of the smallest and most unique plant species. In order to create manageable units for plant investigations, botanists have divided the continental landform into geographic units called floristic provinces. These units reflect the wide variations in natural landscapes and assist botanists in predicting where a given plant might be found. Within the borders of California, there are three floristic provinces, each extending beyond the state's political boundaries. The California Floristic Province includes the geographical area that contains assemblages of plant species that are more or less characteristic of California and that are best developed in the state. This province includes southwestern Oregon and northern Baja California but excludes certain areas of the southeastern California desert regions, as well as the area of the state that is east of the Sierra Nevada-Cascade Range axis (map 1). The flora of the desert areas and those east of the Sierra Nevada crest are best developed outside the state, and therefore, parts of the state of California are not in the California Floristic Province. The Great Basin Floristic Province includes some of the area east of the Sierra Nevada and some regions in the northeastern part of the state, although some botanists consider the latter area to belong to another distinct floristic province, the Columbia Plateau Floristic Province. A third floristic province partly located within California is the Desert Floristic Province, which makes up the southeastern portion of California. The climate in this province is unpredictable from year to year, but rainfall is uniformly scarce.
4
THE CALIFORNIA
FLORA
Diversity of the Flora The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California (Hickman 1993), the current authority on the higher plants of California, includes 7,000 vascular plant taxa (species, subspecies, and varieties) as occurring in California outside of cultivation. Of these, 5,862 are considered native, and 1,023 are presumed to have been introduced during the immigrations of the eighteenth through twentieth centuries. The Jepson Manual defines vascular plants as having a well-developed vascular system to transport water, dissolved minerals, and other substances throughout the plant body. Club mosses, horsetails, ferns, gymnosperms, and flowering plants are vascular plants; fungi, algae, mosses, and liverworts are not. These 7,000 taxa are distributed in The Jepson Manual among 1,227 genera and 173 plant families, with 19 families consisting entirely of naturalized (nonnative) species. Of the 5,862 native taxa, 4,693 are considered distinct species, and 1,169 are considered varieties or subspecies. There are 1,416 species endemic to California—that is, they are found nowhere else in the world— and 737 endemic varieties or subspecies. At least 26 endemic species are presumed extinct. The large number of endemic species is the result of the great diversity of climate, soils, and topography found in California.
TABLE
l. Six Largest Families in California Alternative Family Name
Number of Genera
Asteraceae (sunflowerfamily)
Compositae
185
907
Poaceae (grass family)
Gramineae
106
438
Fabaceae (pea family)
Leguminosae
44
400
Family
Scrophulariaceae (figwort family) Brassicaceae (mustard family) Cyperaceae (sedge family)
6
THE C A L I F O R N I A
FLORA
Cruciferae
Number of Species
30
313
56
279
14
210
In the 10 years since The Jepson Manual went to press, scientific understanding of California plants has continued to advance, and botanical collections from previously unvisited locations have led to new discoveries. As a result, the numbers of species given in the 1993 manual are already somewhat out of date. The California Native Plant Society's Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants of California (Tibor 2001), which uses somewhat different definitions or limitations defining rarity than does The Jepson Manual, estimates that there are 6,300 California native plants. The Jepson Herbarium located at the University of California, Berkeley, has begun a program, the Jepson Interchange, that is intended to follow and evaluate proposed changes in the taxonomy of California higher plants. The six largest plant families, with approximate numbers, are listed in table 1. A simple analysis of the numbers in table 1 reveals that 40 percent of the species of vascular plants in California belong to only six families. You can simplify the task of identifying plants in any part of the state by learning the distinguishing characteristics of these six families, listed here. In the sunflower family (Asteraceae) (fig. 1, pi. 1), flowers are in a dense head and have disk florets, ray florets, or both. The heads are surrounded by bracts, and the anthers are generally fused into cylinders around the style. The calyx is c ììi^M
a
b
d
e
Figure 1. Sunflower family (Asteraceae). (a) Sunflower, (b)goldfield, (c) portion of flower head, (d) details of disk floret, (e) dandelion, (f) thistle.
THE
CALIFORNIA
FLORA
7
Plate 1. Sunflower family (Asteraceae), balsam-root (Balsamorhiza sagittata).
represented by a scaly or bristly pappus on the one-seeded inferior ovary. Members of the sunflower family include sunflowers (Helianthus spp.), asters (Aster spp.), ragweeds (.Ambrosia spp.), sagebrushes (Artemisia spp.), goldfields (Lasthenia spp.), pineapple weed (Matricaria matricariodes), thistles (Cirsium spp.),balsam-root (Balsamorhiza sagittata), tarweeds (Madia spp. and Hemizonia spp.), and dandelions (Taraxacum spp.). In the grass family (Poaceae) (fig. 2, pi. 2), flowers are very small, greenish, and inconspicuous, and the stamens, pistil, or d
Ì
1 ' ;
v
,
ì I/if I
l Vi f
> >•
' 7 4 - 7 5 , 9 4
261 University of California, Berkeley,
water loss adaptations, 7 2 , 9 2 , 9 3 , 1 7 8 , 179
266-267 Jepson Herbarium, 7 , 2 6 8 - 2 6 9 University o f California Natural Reserve System classification, 114,
weed eradication, 284 weeds, invasive, 2 7 3 , 2 7 7 - 2 8 4 native species, 283 Weiss, Martha, 8 3 - 8 4
116 University o f California Press, 269 Upper Sonoran life zone, 130-132
wetlands habitat restoration, 288 loss of, 1 6 2 - 1 6 3 , 1 9 7 , 2 8 4
Valley and Foothill Woodland, 118, 143,185-187,238
marshes; vernal pools
Valley Grassland, 1 1 8 , 1 4 3 , 1 8 7 - 1 9 1
Whipple expedition, 263
Valley Sonoran/Great Valley life zone,
Wiggins, I.L., 268 wildlife. See animals
129-130 Vancouver expedition, 2 5 0 - 2 5 1
Wilkes Expedition, 2 5 9 - 2 6 0
variability. See ecotypes
wind adaptations, 72
varieties, 1 9 , 2 8 4 - 2 8 5
wind pollination, 82
vascular plants, number o f taxa, 6 - 7
winds, 5 7 , 7 2
Vasek, Frank, 224
woodland vegetation types
vegetation types classification systems compared,
340
See also Freshwater Marsh; salt
Joshua Tree Woodland, 118,148, 220-222
113-116,118,137-139
Pinyon-Juniper Woodland, 118,
distribution maps, 116-117
1 4 6 - 1 4 7 , 2 1 2 - 2 1 3 , pi. 139
GENERAL
INDEX
Riparian Woodland, 118,144, 191-194 Valley and Foothill Woodland, 118, 143,185-187,238 Wash Woodland, 224-225,227 See also oak woodlands
wool imports, weeds and, 279 xerophytes, 92-93,178 Yellow Pine Forest, 118 Zoe (journal), 266
GENERAL
INDEX
341
Series Design: Design Enhancements: Design Development: Composition: Cartographers: Text: Display: Printer and Binder:
Barbara Jellow Beth Hansen Jane Tenenbaum Impressions Book and Journal Services, Inc. Bill Nelson and Paula Nelson 9.5/12 Minion ITC Franklin Gothic Book and Demi Everbest Printing Company
Field G u i d e s
Sharks, Rays, and Chimaeras of California, by David A. Ebert, illustrated by Mathew D. Squillante Field Guide to Beetles of California, by Arthur V. Evans and James N. Hogue Geology of the Sierra Nevada, Revised Edition, by Mary Hill Mammals of California, Revised Edition, by E.W. Jameson, Jr., and Hans J. Peeters Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of the San Diego Region, by Jeffrey M. Lemm Dragonflies and Damselflies of California, by Tim Manolis Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of California, Revised Edition, by Samuel M. McGinnis, illustrated by Doris Alcorn Field Guide to Owls of California and the West, by Hans J. Peeters Raptors of California, by Hans J. Peeters and Pam Peeters Field Guide to Plant Galls of California and Other Western States, by Ron Russo Field Guide to Butterflies of the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento Valley Regions, by Arthur M. Shapiro, illustrated by Tim Manolis Geology of the San Francisco Bay Region, by Doris Sloan Trees and Shrubs of California, by John D. Stuart and John O. Sawyer Pests of the Native California Conifers, by David L. Wood, Thomas W. Koerber, Robert F. Scharpf, and Andrew J. Storer introductory Guides
Introduction Introduction Introduction Introduction Hogue
to Air in California, by David Carle to Fire in California, by David Carle to Water in California, by David Carle to California Beetles, by Arthur V. Evans and James N.
Introduction to California Birdlife, by Jules Evens and Ian C. Tait Weather of the San Francisco Bay Region, Second Edition, by Harold Gilliam Introduction to Trees of the San Francisco Bay Region, by Glenn Keator Introduction to California Soils and Plants: Serpentine, Vernal Pools, and Other Geobotanical Wonders, by Arthur R. Kruckeberg Introduction to Birds of the Southern California Coast, by Joan Easton Lentz
Introduction to California Mountain Wildflowers, Revised Edition, by Philip A. Munz, edited by Dianne Lake and Phyllis M. Faber Introduction to California Spring Wildflowers of the Foothills, Valleys, and Coast, Revised Edition, by Philip A. Munz, edited by Dianne Lake and Phyllis M. Faber Introduction to Shore Wildflowers of California, Oregon, and Washington, Revised Edition, by Philip A. Munz, edited by Dianne Lake and Phyllis Faber Introduction to California Desert Wildflowers, Revised Edition, by Philip A. Munz, edited by Diane L. Renshaw and Phyllis M. Faber Introduction to California Plant Life, Revised Edition, by Robert Ornduff, Phyllis M. Faber, and Todd Keeler-Wolf Introduction to California Chaparral, by Ronald D. Quinn and Sterling C. Keeley, with line drawings by Marianne Wallace Introduction to the Plant Life of Southern California: Coast to Foothills, by Philip W. Rundel and Robert Gustafson Introduction to Horned Lizards of North America, by Wade C. Sherbrooke Introduction to the California Condor, by Noel F. R. Snyder and Helen A. Snyder ¡Regional G u i d e s
Natural History of the Point Reyes Peninsula, by Jules Evens Sierra Nevada Natural History, Revised Edition, by Tracy I. Storer, Robert L. Usinger, and David Lukas