Tag Archives: Mineral County

Food of the Gods in the Bodie Hills

How can a scrawny plant, growing in disturbed soils, with painfully sharp spines all over its fruits come to be named  for the mythical “food of the Greek gods”—Ambrosia—a name also related, apparently, to the Greek word for immortality, αθανασία (athanasia)? Carl Linnaeus himself, the “father of modern taxonomy,” bestowed the name in 1754. But why Ambrosia? I haven’t found an explanation. The authoritative Flora North America says “allusion unclear.” One might say it’s a crusty old botanist’s joke on posterity, but I won’t impugn the intentions of the great Linnaeus. The genus isn’t native to Sweden and he may have examined only a few specimens from North America (collected by others). Maybe they smelled nice, but he probably didn’t get to know the genus well enough.

Ambrosia

Ambrosia acanthicarpa, annual bur-weed or annual ragweed, grows on disturbed, sandy soils, often along roadsides, throughout much of western—especially southwestern—North America. The plants seen here were on a dirt road near the north edge of the Bodie Hills, in Lyon County, Nevada. I’ve also seen it beside Hwy 270 at Mormon Meadow and I’ve probably overlooked it at other locations. (Though you’re not likely to overlook it if you encounter it while wearing open-toed sandals.)

It’s not immediately obvious, but Ambrosia is a composite—in the sunflower family (Asteraceae). There are more than 40 species of Ambrosia in the New World, mostly in western North America. Ambrosia now includes plants formerly placed in Hymenoclea and Franseria.

Ambrosia

Despite its vicious demeanor, Ambrosia has an intriguing anatomy. The male flowers, bulging with stamens, are tightly clustered into numerous small heads, dangling along the axis of a tall raceme. The pollen shed from those anthers causes agonizing irritation of eyes and sinuses in anyone getting a face-full of the stuff. Magnified, the pollen grains look like lethal medieval weapons.

ambrosia_artem-wikipedia

While the male flowers will insult your eyes and upper respiratory system, it is the female flowers that will draw blood from your toes and fingers. Pistillate flowers are in the axils of leaves below the staminate inflorescence—the better to catch those heavily armed pollen grains. They lack corollas and are encased, usually one at a time, in a long-spined “bur.” (These spines are derived from the paleas—in Asteraceae, the usually very thin, papery, scale-like or bristle-like “chaffy bracts” at the base of each flower.)  As the fruit matures, the bur becomes very hard. The spines stiffen and become very sharp.

Ambrosia

Did you notice the tire tracks in the first photo? Above you see evidence for one of this plant’s long-range dispersal mechanisms. The mature burs attach themselves freely to automobile tires. No doubt this is one reason Ambrosia acanthicarpa is fairly common along disturbed road shoulders and many lesser-used unpaved tracks throughout the American west.


Copyright © Tim Messick 2017. All rights reserved.
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The Checklist: New 2017 Edition

I’ve made some corrections and additions to Plants of the Bodie Hills: an Annotated Checklist, based on some fieldwork and other research during 2016. CLICK HERE to visit the Downloads page. The January 2017 edition of the checklist is a 47-page, 5.1 mb PDF file. [UPDATE, January 16: A few more typos corrected. You may want to download again if you downloaded prior to 1-16-2017.]

Checklist Cover 2017

The Bodie Hills encompass about 417 square miles in northern Mono County, California, western Mineral County, Nevada, and southern-most Lyon County, Nevada. The checklist includes 679 taxa of vascular plants, of which 575 are definitely known to occur in the Bodie Hills and 104 others are considered likely to be present. The list includes 52 families of dicots, 15 families of monocots, and 8 families of vascular cryptogams.

Travertine Hot Springs

Travertine Hot Springs has extensive alkaline wet meadows and dry outcrops.

Cinnabar Canyon

Cinnabar Canyon contains pinyon-juniper woodland and an unusual wet meadow.

Bodie Mountain

Bodie Mountain supports high-altitude sagebrush scrub with lots of
cushion plants and several alpine species.

Bodie

Bodie is in the south-central Bodie Hills.

 


Copyright © Tim Messick 2017. All rights reserved.
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Earthquakes in Fletcher Valley

Early this morning (December 28, 2016), 18 minutes after midnight, there was a magnitude 5.7 earthquake in Fletcher Valley, just east of the Bodie Hills. Four minutes later there was another, also 5.7, about a mile north of the first. Then 51 minutes later, there was a third tremor, magnitude 5.5, less than half a mile east of the first one. All three occurred about 5 to 7.5 miles beneath the valley floor. During the next 10 hours another 30 small quakes of magnitudes between 2.5 and 4.1 occurred in central Fletcher Valley and the eastern Bodie Hills. Another 86, much smaller, were under magnitude 2.5.

Fletcher Valley Earthquakes

Epicenters of the 3 initial earthquakes (USGS).

Fletcher Valley Earthquakes

Epicenters of the all earthquakes in the following 15 hours (USGS).

Fletcher Valley Aftershocks

A day later: here’s a map showing all the aftershocks as of about 35 hours after the initial jolt. Dots for the initial 3 quakes are outlined in red (USGS).

Fletcher Valley

Where it happened: the epicenters of the 5.5–5.7 earthquakes were out there
in the sunny area and in the shadows beyond. The Wassuk Range is in the background (July 2016).

Fletcher Valley is a pretty remote and empty place, so did anyone feel it? Yes indeed, and over a fairly wide area. According to the event page at Earthquake-Report.com, people felt light to moderate shaking throughout west-central Nevada, the central Sierra Nevada mountains, and across the southern Sacramento and northern San Joaquin Valleys—even in San Francisco. Sorry to say, I didn’t notice anything (at home in Davis).

People up and down the east and west sides of the central Sierra reported beds shaking, glasses rattling on shelves, and startled dogs. There was, sadly, “severe damage” to the historic stone-walled house at Ninemile Ranch (the only house in Fletcher Valley). The quakes rattled Lee Vining (post on the Mono Lake Committee site). The road through Bodie Canyon (a.k.a. Del Monte Canyon) was closed by boulders dislodged from cliffs above.The Bodie State Historic Park web page reports, “The park will be closed due to the recent earthquake in Hawthorne NV. We are assessing any damage that may have occurred in the park and will reopen as soon as possible.”

Here’s another blog post, on the geology of this event, from Jay Patton, professor of geology at Humboldt State University.

Fletcher Valley

Fletcher Valley from the north (September 2016).

Fletcher Valley

Fletcher Valley from the west (September 2016).

Fletcher Valley

Looking northeast across Fletcher Valley to the Wassuk Range. Hawthorne
and Walker Lake are on the other side (July 2016).

Ninemile Ranch

The old house at Ninemile Ranch (circa mid-1860s) was severely damaged
(July 2016 photo).


Copyright © Tim Messick 2017. All rights reserved.
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