Category Archives: Botany

July Flowers in the Bodie Hills

Here’s a very small sampling of plants observed in the Masonic Mountain area of the northern Bodie Hills a few weeks ago. After the very dry winter and spring of 2015, it seemed likely there would be very little in bloom this year. But then unusually high rainfall in May and June made a big difference, and there’s a lot to be seen this summer after all.

Castilleja linariifolia
Castilleja linariifolia, Desert paintbrush

Opuntia polyacantha
Opuntia polyacantha var. erinacea, Grizzlybear pricklypearErigeron aphanactis
Erigeron aphanactis, Rayless shaggy fleabaneMimulus nanus
Mimulus nanus var. mephiticus, Skunky monkeyflower

Cryptantha circunscissa
Cryptantha circumscissa, Cushion cryptantha

Eriogonum nidularium

Eriogonum nidularium, Birdnest wild buckwheatEriogonum nidularium
Eriogonum nidularium, Birdnest wild buckwheat, up close

Osmorhiza occidenralis
Osmorhiza occidentalis, Western sweet cicely (past flowering, but with its distinctive fruits)Phacelia hastata
Phacelia hastata var. hastata, Mountain phacelia Monardella odoratissima
Monardella odoratissima, Mountain pennyroyal

 


Copyright © Tim Messick 2015. All rights reserved.

A Native Peony in the Bodie Hills

Peonies are familiar to most people from their many cultivated varieties and the nearly 40 species that range across Eursia from Spain to Japan. Only two occur in the western hemisphere: Paeonia californica (mostly in the coastal ranges of southern California and northern Baja California) and Paeonia brownii (from the Sierra Nevada, North Coast Ranges, and Cascade Range to Wyoming).

Paeonia browniiPaeonia brownii near Lakeview Spring

Paeonia brownii is fairly common in dry pine forests, sagebrush scrub, and aspen groves in mountains from central California, Nevada, and Utah to Washington and Idaho. In the Bodie Hills I’ve seen it only among aspens in the Lakeview Spring area, but it’s likely to be present in or near some other large aspen groves as well.

Paeonia brownii

It’s easy to recognize—nothing else in its range looks like this plant. It’s a low, mound-shaped perennial herb, up to a foot or so tall. The large, slightly fleshy, green to bluish-green leaves are ternately (3 times) divided, with the outermost lobes more-or-less elliptic in shape. The primitive-looking flowers usually hang downward. Their leathery, maroon-colored sepals and petals enclose a dense cluster of yellow stamens.

A couple of interesting notes on the ecology of Brown’s peony: The flowers are pollinated mostly by Vespid wasps (e.g., queen hornets), Syrphid flies (flower flies), and Halictid bees (sweat bees) (Bernhardt et al. 2013). The seeds are large enough to be attractive to seed-caching rodents, like chipmunks, deer mice, and pocket mice, but are not as nutritious or as abundant as the seeds of pine trees. This may benefit the peony in that the rodents help disperse the seeds to their caches, but are slow to consume them, so some of the seeds survive to germinate (Barga and Vander Wall 2013).

References

Barga, Sarah C., and Stephen B. Vander Wall. “Dispersal of an herbaceous perennial, Paeonia brownii, by scatter-hoarding rodents.” Écoscience 20.2 (2013): 172-181.

Bernhardt, Peter, Retha Meier, and Nan Vance. “Pollination ecology and floral function of Brown’s peony (Paeonia brownii) in the Blue Mountains of northeastern Oregon.” Journal of Pollination Ecology 11 (2013).


Copyright © Tim Messick 2015. All rights reserved.

The View from Hilaria Hill

Last month during a quick trip down the northeast side of the Bodie Hills along NF-028 (a.k.a. Ninemile Ranch Road), I turned onto NF-128 and drove a short distance up the low northern slope of the Bodie Hills.

Red Wash Creek(See Flickr for a panoramic version of this photo)

There has been some prospecting in this area, but not much mining, so there are few roads through the relatively undisturbed pinyon-juniper woodland and few names on the features in this landscape. The drainage on the left side of this view is Red Wash Creek (which is usually dry), but none of these hills have names. Let’s call the place where I’m standing “Hilaria Hill,” because . . .

Hilaria jamesiiHilaria jamesii

Walking around on this low hill, I quickly encountered Galetta (Hilaria jamesii), a native grass that inhabits much of the arid southwest. Here, less than a mile from the southern boundary of Lyon County, Nevada, we are on the very westernmost edge of the species’ range.

Tetradimia spinosaTetradimia spinosa

Other plants here include the viciously armed Shortspine horsebrush (Tetradimia spinosa), the lovely Desert globemallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua) and the virtually leafless Nevada Mormon Tea (Ephedra nevadensis). There are lots more — I need to explore this place some more and go farther up the road. South of here there are some hydrothermally altered soils with Jeffrey pines that are disjunct from their primary range along the east side of the Sierra Nevada.

Sphaeralcea ambiguaSphaeralcea ambigua

Ephedra nevadensisEphedra nevadensis


Copyright © Tim Messick 2015. All rights reserved.