The characteristic look of California Chaparral—a soft bluish-green blanket of vegetation gently covering the hills—is known to millions who have seen it as the backdrop in movies and television productions. This complex ecological community of plants and animals is not just a feature of the hills around Hollywood, but is a quintessential part of the entire California landscape. It is a highly resilient community adapted to life with recurring fires and droughts. Written for a wide audience, this concise, engaging, and beautifully illustrated book describes an ancient and exquisitely balanced environment home to wondrous organisms: Fire Beetles that mate only on burning branches, lizards that shoot blood from their eyes when threatened, Kangaroo Rats that never drink water, and seeds that germinate only after a fire, even if that means waiting in the soil for a 100 years or more. Useful both as a field guide and an introductory overview of the ecology of chaparral, it also provides a better understanding of how we might live in harmony, safety, and appreciation of this unique ecological community. * Identifies chaparral’s common plants, animals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and insects * Features 79 color illustrations, 56 black-and-white photographs, and 3 maps * Examines the role of humans and fire in chaparral, covering the placement and design of homes, landscaping, and public policy
Rundel introduces readers to the plant communities of the Southern California coastal areas and foothills, including color photos of 250 species and additional color habitat photos.
Flowering Plants: The Santa Monica Mountains, Coastal & Chaparral Regions of Southern California
The Big Horn Lake population survived and flowered at all three sites . The plant height and vigor were best at Timberline , however , suggesting that for all the rigors of the alpine climate , the Big Horn Lake plants " liked " their ...
Vegetation burning by California Indians as shown by early records. University of California, Berkeley, Forestry Library, Pamphlet 16, Fire Vol. 28. Knudtson, P. M. 1977. The Wintun Indians of California and their neighbors.
Inland Fishes of California
Publisher Description "This book engages readers at a personal level.
Spring in the desert provides some of the most spectacular wildflowers shows in California, making this the perfect wildflower book to pack for a day in the Mojave or Colorado Deserts.
The common name white cheese bush is sometimes used to distinguish this species from the singlewhorl burrobrush ( H. ... 120 ) Isomeris arborea An ill - scented , profusely branched shrub that often grows to be 2.75 m ( 9 ft ) tall .
"Best known for his comprehensive lifetime's work on serpentine plants, Arthur Kruckeberg here addresses how all of what he lovingly calls "kooky soils"--serpentine, gabbro, carbonates, volcanics, vernal pools and others--have shaped ...
MAMMALS The legacy of California's fur rush, which preceded the Gold Rush, is just beginning to be appreciated. european exploration and exploitation of inland California during the 1820s were driven by the quest for beaver pelts (Dolin ...