Planning a little time travel jaunt, back to the days when bunch grasses like this grew all over California......
Click on the illustration below for maximum viewing pleasure
Once upon a time the California bunch grasses, like this purple needle grass, flourished along with masses of spring wildflowers. With the invasion of Europeans and European grasses in the mid-eighteenth century most of our grasses and wildflower meadows began to look like some other continent.
This purple needle grass continues to grow in Edgewood Preserve, because it grows on serpentine soil (1% of California has serpentine soil, 10% of the entire planet) and also because of determined Weed Warriors and local research scientists who work in the park to eliminate invasive plants and improve the habitat for native wildflowers and grasses.
Click on the illustration below for maximum viewing pleasure
Once upon a time the California bunch grasses, like this purple needle grass, flourished along with masses of spring wildflowers. With the invasion of Europeans and European grasses in the mid-eighteenth century most of our grasses and wildflower meadows began to look like some other continent.
This purple needle grass continues to grow in Edgewood Preserve, because it grows on serpentine soil (1% of California has serpentine soil, 10% of the entire planet) and also because of determined Weed Warriors and local research scientists who work in the park to eliminate invasive plants and improve the habitat for native wildflowers and grasses.
Thanks for this info, I love knowing the dirt. :)
ReplyDeletefascinating!!
Thanks Dirt Fan!
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