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see also Habitats |
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Chaparral of California |
California cities that occur in Chaparral. Chaparral is far from uniform so it is not possible to 'connect the dots'. I've drawn out the areas that could be in the range of the Chaparral plant community.
1. Firemen don't usually die in brush fires, they die in grass fires. Weedy fields burn faster than you can drive, never mind run. By the time you figure out a grassy area is burning, it is over. It's like standing in the middle of a tunnel with a high speed train coming. Remove the alien, annual grasses and weeds; manage the native brush.
4. A properly managed Chaparral slope is very hard to burn (try back firing it!); erosion is very low and and the Chaparral can survive in extreme drought. Leave no dead limbs or debris other than very small twigs and leaves. Thin the solid, dense stands of shrubs to about 50% to 30% of the original numbers, depending on your site conditions. Leave all of the Toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia) and remove most (not all) of the Chamise (Adenostoma fasciculatum) or Red Shanks (Adenostoma sparsifolium). 5. Most brush fires occur at the end of a drought when everyone is on rationing and can't water their plants. The 'firesafe' non-natives turn into dead twigs that burn very well, thank you.
WITH NO WEEDS PRESENT! Serpentinite soils
What to do if you are in a fire area. A list of California native plants that tolerant of deer and fire ... Wildfire and California Native Plants, design, native landscaping |
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This is a very diverse plant community that can survive almost on winter blowing fog/clouds in Anza, California, or be adjacent to our very wet Redwood Forest. Chaparral is also loosely called brushland, or brush. The only consistent pattern is: Chaparral usually does not occur on good soil. BUT, it is more than likely that the early settlers removed all the chaparral as nasty brush from ALL the flatter richer soils so the only places Chaparral is left is on the slopes and poorer soils. So, for now, Chaparral exists on rocky, shallow soils overlaying a subsoil that is clay or rock that commonly holds moisture. The variable being soil depth, these three close plant communities transition: from Grassland (the shallowest soil), to Chaparral (intermediate in soil depth) to Oak Woodland (the deepest soil, deep enough to support trees, often over 4 feet in depth). Chaparral occurs in areas of occasionally freezing winters (to -5F(-20C)), but usually mild, moist winters and dry, hot summers (commonly above 100F (38C). During the weather patterns that existed when the Spanish explorers came to California, the Chaparral was REAL cold. The temperatures were probably -20F (-29C) along much of the central coast ranges. In most of California the climate is called Mediterranean, which corresponds with the Chaparral plant community.
Sclerophyllous (hard-leaved) plants commonly form the foundation of this plant community. They have small, hard leaves, that roll up, under, or fall off during the normal summer drought. Then there are the many evergreen bushes with extensive root systems that hold on to their leaves for dear life. These are very efficient plants that defy the PhD's with their sophisticated machines. These plants consistently draw more moisture from the ground than comes down in rain. There is no measurable runoff in a chaparral plant community. Oh, you get creeks because of springs and other slow releases, but not runoff directly from the hillside.(Patric, James. 1974) What elevation is chaparral found in?Chaparral usually isn't in the real lowlands. In places like Malibu it starts out at about 500 ft. up slope, with Coastal Sage Scrub only living in a narrow band right next to the water. On the other hand, Coastal Sage Scrub runs up to about 4000 foot in Julian, California, and some areas around Riverside and Highland. In some areas like Julian, Chaparral exists in a narrow strip, between Coastal Sage Scrub and Yellow Pine Forest. So elevation is probably not a great predictor for Chaparral.
Delineating characteristics of this plant community1. Fire is a major factor in the dynamics of this Chaparral plant community, and plants are adapted to fire, ie. crown-sprouting shrubs, and annual fire- followers. WEEDS AND HUMAN CARELESSNESS HAVE CHANGED the FIRE FREQUENCY!!! Normal fire frequency should be about 100-400 years, depending on the Chaparral type and location. The presence of weeds, and human carelessness has increased the fire frequency to as little as six months. Many of the native plants that live in Chaparral require years to develop the right conditions for their seeds to germinate. Weed seeds can germinate and set seed in as little as a few months. Once certain cascading events are set into motion, namely frequent fires, in addition to the presence of weeds, in a Chaparral plant community, you have a recipe for plant community degradation and destruction. Suppress fire in the Chaparral plant community for as long as you possibly can and remove the weeds, and you might keep the Chaparral plant community intact. 2. This plant community is highly adapted to very long dry spells, but unlike desert plant communities, areas of Chaparral can have very wet winters, also. 30-40 inches of rainfall in two months is common and no rain for 1-2 years has also been documented.
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A list of California native plants that grow in the Chaparral plant community.