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Darlingtonia Summer 2012 Chapter Programs and Meetings
SUMMER 2012 Darlingtonia July-September Newsletter of the North Coast Chapter of the California Native Plant Society Dedicated to the Preservation of California Native Flora NATIVE PLANTS COME TO OLD TOWN: Inside this issue: The Lost Foods Native Plant Garden Feature Article: 1 by Monty Caid Native Plants Come to Old Town Field Trips and Plant Walks 2 Lost Foods Native Plant Garden, which I started in 2009, is located Chapter Programs 3 at 2nd and H Streets in Eureka, surrounding a city parking lot. The space was adopted from the City of Eureka, thanks to the Public Battling English Ivy—How Do 3 Works Dept. Adopt-a-Park Program. There are over one hundred Volunteer Corner 4 native plant species living together for the public to visit and become acquainted with. Some species are rarely seen anymore, others are Field Trip Reports: 5 Bluff Creek and E-Ne-Nuk more common, and all are native to Humboldt County. Walker Ridge and Cache Creek Lost Foods started as a business idea to reintroduce the public to our Mad River: Blue Lake and native food plants. "Lost foods" are the native plants that once West End Road covered our landscapes and were eaten and cared for by the original people of California. California became known as The Floristic Chapter Contacts 7 Province, and a world hot spot for biodiversity. Now mostly foreign Native Plant Gardening—Part 3 8 foods and domesticated crops cover the original landscape where in a Series: Lessons of a Laissez native foods once grew naturally. I felt that before the public is Faire Gardener reintroduced to native foods, we must start to restore our native Members’ Corner 10 food plant populations so these healthy, super foods will someday be Recycling Botanical Books 11 available again. -
Water Supply Management Report 2018-2019 Water Year
FINAL January 28, 2020 City of Santa Barbara Water Supply Management Report 2018-2019 Water Year Prepared by Water Resources Division, Public Works Department City of Santa Barbara Water Supply Management Report 2019 Water Year (October 1, 2018 – September 30, 2019) Water Resources Division, Public Works Department January 28, 2020 INTRODUCTION The City of Santa Barbara operates the water utility to provide water for its citizens, certain out-of-City areas, and visitors. Santa Barbara is an arid area, so providing an adequate water supply requires careful management of water resources. The City has a diverse water supply including local reservoirs (Lake Cachuma and Gibraltar Reservoir), groundwater, State Water, desalination, and recycled water. The City also considers water conservation an important tool for balancing water supply and demand. The City's current Long-Term Water Supply Plan (LTWSP) was adopted by City Council on June 14, 2011. This annual report summarizes the following information: The status of water supplies at the end of the water year (September 30, 2019) Drought outlook Water conservation and demand Major capital projects that affect the City’s ability to provide safe clean water Significant issues that affect the security and reliability of the City’s water supplies Appendix A provides supplemental detail. Additional information about the City's water supply can be found on-line at: www.SantaBarbaraCA.gov/Water. WATER SUPPLIES The City has developed five different water supplies: local surface water; local groundwater (which includes water that seeps into Mission Tunnel); State Water; desalinated seawater; and recycled water. Typically, most of the City’s demand is met by local surface water reservoirs and recycled water and augmented as necessary by local groundwater, State Water, and desalination. -
Anali Za Istrske in Mediteranske Študije Annali Di Studi Istriani E Mediterranei Annals for Istrian and Mediterranean Studies Series Historia Naturalis, 30, 2020, 2
Anali za istrske in mediteranske študije Annali di Studi istriani e mediterranei Annals for Istrian and Mediterranean Studies Series Historia Naturalis, 30, 2020, 2 UDK 5 Annales, Ser. hist. nat., 30, 2020, 2, pp. 131-290, Koper 2020 ISSN 1408-533X UDK 5 ISSN 1408-533X e-ISSN 2591-1783 Anali za istrske in mediteranske študije Annali di Studi istriani e mediterranei Annals for Istrian and Mediterranean Studies Series Historia Naturalis, 30, 2020, 2 KOPER 2020 ANNALES · Ser. hist. nat. · 30 · 2020 · 2 Anali za istrske in mediteranske študije - Annali di Studi istriani e mediterranei - Annals for Istrian and Mediterranean Studies ISSN 1408-533X UDK 5 Letnik 30, leto 2020, številka 2 e-ISSN 2591-1783 Alessandro Acquavita (IT), Nicola Bettoso (IT), Christian Capapé (FR), UREDNIŠKI ODBOR/ Darko Darovec, Dušan Devetak, Jakov Dulčić (HR), Serena Fonda COMITATO DI REDAZIONE/ Umani (IT), Andrej Gogala, Daniel Golani (IL), Danijel Ivajnšič, BOARD OF EDITORS: Mitja Kaligarič, Marcelo Kovačič (HR), Andrej Kranjc, Lovrenc Lipej, Vesna Mačić (ME), Alenka Malej, Patricija Mozetič, Martina Orlando- Bonaca, Michael Stachowitsch (AT), Tom Turk, Al Vrezec Glavni urednik/Redattore capo/ Editor in chief: Darko Darovec Odgovorni urednik naravoslovja/ Redattore responsabile per le scienze naturali/Natural Science Editor: Lovrenc Lipej Urednica/Redattrice/Editor: Martina Orlando-Bonaca Lektor/Supervisione/Language editor: Petra Berlot Kužner (angl.) Prevajalci/Traduttori/Translators: Martina Orlando-Bonaca (sl./it.) Oblikovalec/Progetto grafico/ Graphic design: -
Disaster Declarations in California
Disaster Declarations in California (BOLD=Major Disaster) (Wildfires are Highlighted) 2018 DR-4353 Wildfires, Flooding, Mudflows, And Debris Flows Declared on Tuesday, January 2, 2018 - 06:00 FM-5244 Pawnee Fire Declared on Sunday, June 24, 2018 - 07:11 FM-5245 Creek Fire Declared on Monday, June 25, 2018 - 07:11 2017 DR-4301 Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, and Mudslides Declared on Tuesday, February 14, 2017 - 13:15 EM-3381 Potential Failure of the Emergency Spillway at Lake Oroville Dam Declared on Tuesday, February 14, 2017 - 14:20 DR-4302 Severe Winter Storm Declared on Tuesday, February 14, 2017 - 14:30 DR-4305 Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, and Mudslides Declared on Thursday, March 16, 2017 - 04:48 DR-4308 Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, Mudslides Declared on Saturday, April 1, 2017 - 16:55 DR-4312 Flooding Declared on Tuesday, May 2, 2017 - 14:00 FM-5189 Wall Fire Declared on Sunday, July 9, 2017 - 14:18 FM-5192 Detwiler Fire Declared on Monday, July 17, 2017 - 19:23 DR-4344 Wildfires Declared on Tuesday, October 10, 2017 - 08:40 2016 FM-5124 Old Fire Declared on Saturday, June 4, 2016 - 21:55 FM-5128 Border 3 Fire Declared on Sunday, June 19, 2016 - 19:03 FM-5129 Fish Fire Declared on Monday, June 20, 2016 - 20:35 FM-5131 Erskine Fire Declared on Thursday, June 23, 2016 - 20:57 FM-5132 Sage Fire Declared on Saturday, July 9, 2016 - 18:15 FM-5135 Sand Fire Declared on Saturday, July 23, 2016 - 17:34 FM-5137 Soberanes Fire Declared on Thursday, July 28, 2016 - 16:38 FM-5140 Goose Fire Declared on Saturday, July 30, 2016 - 20:48 -
Introduction
INTRODUCTION Although much of the San Francisco Bay Region is densely populated and industrialized, many thousands of acres within its confines have been set aside as parks and preserves. Most of these tracts were not rescued until after they had been altered. The construction of roads, the modification of drainage patterns, grazing by livestock, and the introduction of aggressive species are just a few of the factors that have initiated irreversible changes in the region’s plant and animal life. Yet on the slopes of Mount Diablo and Mount Tamal- pais, in the redwood groves at Muir Woods, and in some of the regional parks one can find habitats that probably resemble those that were present two hundred years ago. Even tracts that are far from pristine have much that will bring pleasure to those who enjoy the study of nature. Visitors to our region soon discover that the area is diverse in topography, geology, cli- mate, and vegetation. Hills, valleys, wetlands, and the seacoast are just some of the situa- tions that will have one or more well-defined assemblages of plants. In this manual, the San Francisco Bay Region is defined as those counties that touch San Francisco Bay. Reading a map clockwise from Marin County, they are Marin, Sonoma, Napa, Solano, Contra Costa, Alameda, Santa Clara, San Mateo, and San Francisco. This book will also be useful in bordering counties, such as Mendocino, Lake, Santa Cruz, Monterey, and San Benito, because many of the plants dealt with occur farther north, east, and south. For example, this book includes about three-quarters of the plants found in Monterey County and about half of the Mendocino flora. -
Board of Directors' Meeting
CConejoonejo OOpenpen SpaceSpace ConservationConservation AgencyAgency CCommonommon NativeNative WWildflildfl o wowersers i nin CConejoonejo OOpenpen SSpacepace AAreasreas Open space areas in the Conejo Valley host a broad diversity of fl owering plants thanks to the variety of habitat types that are present in these areas. This guide idenƟ fi es naƟ ve wildfl owers and fl owering shrubs commonly found along trails in open space areas managed by the Conejo Open Space ConservaƟ on Agency (COSCA). Bloom Ɵ mes for some species occur as early as January, while others occur as late as September. The plants below are arranged by general color group (White/Cream, Yellow/Orange, Pink/Red, Blue/Purple) and then alphabeƟ cally by plant family, genus, and species. FiŌ y-one plant families are included. This guide is also available electronically at: www.conejo-openspace.org Lemonadeberry2 Sugar Bush2 Narrow-leaved Milkweed1 White Yarrow1 Rhus integrifolia Rhus ovata Asclepias fascicularis Achillea millefolium White Pincushion1 Cliff Aster3 California Everlas ng1 Silver Puff s (seed head)1 ChaenacƟ s artemisiifolia Malacothrix saxaƟ lis Pseudognaphalium californicum Uropappus lindleyi Common Cryptantha6 Eucrypta3 Fringepod2 Chaparral Honeysuckle2 Cryptantha intermedia var. intermedia Eucrypta chrysanthemifolia Thysanocarpus laciniatus Lonicera subspicata var. denudata ManagingManaging andand protecprotec nngg ConejoConejo ValleyValley openopen spacespace sincesince 19771977 wwww.conejo-openspace.orgww.conejo-openspace.org ppagea65ge 1 Chaparral Morning Glory5 Small-fl owered Morning Glory2 Wild Cucumber1 Bigberry Manzanita8 Calystegia macrostegia ssp. intermedia Convolvulus simulans Marah macrocarpa Arctostaphylos glauca Santa Barbara Milkvetch4 White-fl owering Currant2 White Sage1 Black Sage2 Astragalus trichopodus var. phoxus Ribes indecorum Salvia apiana Salvia mellifera Miner’s Le uce1 Willow-herb Clarkia2 White Eardrops3 White Snapdragon2 Claytonia perfoliata ssp. -
Baseline Biodiversity Report
FINAL Baseline Biodiversity Survey for Potrero Mason Property Prepared for: County of San Diego Department of Parks and Recreation 5500 Overland Avenue Drive, Suite 410 San Diego, California 92123 Contact: Jennifer Price Prepared by: 605 Third Street Encinitas, California 92024 Contact: Brock Ortega DECEMBER 2012 Printed on 30% post-consumer recycled material. Final Baseline Biodiversity Survey Potrero Mason Property TABLE OF CONTENTS Section Page No. LIST OF ACRONYMS ................................................................................................................ V EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .......................................................................................................VII 1.0 INTRODUCTION..............................................................................................................1 1.1 Purpose of the Report.............................................................................................. 1 1.2 MSCP Context ........................................................................................................ 1 2.0 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION ...........................................................................................9 2.1 Project Location ...................................................................................................... 9 2.2 Geographical Setting ............................................................................................... 9 2.3 Geology and Soils .................................................................................................. -
Vascular Plants of Santa Cruz County, California
ANNOTATED CHECKLIST of the VASCULAR PLANTS of SANTA CRUZ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA SECOND EDITION Dylan Neubauer Artwork by Tim Hyland & Maps by Ben Pease CALIFORNIA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY, SANTA CRUZ COUNTY CHAPTER Copyright © 2013 by Dylan Neubauer All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission from the author. Design & Production by Dylan Neubauer Artwork by Tim Hyland Maps by Ben Pease, Pease Press Cartography (peasepress.com) Cover photos (Eschscholzia californica & Big Willow Gulch, Swanton) by Dylan Neubauer California Native Plant Society Santa Cruz County Chapter P.O. Box 1622 Santa Cruz, CA 95061 To order, please go to www.cruzcps.org For other correspondence, write to Dylan Neubauer [email protected] ISBN: 978-0-615-85493-9 Printed on recycled paper by Community Printers, Santa Cruz, CA For Tim Forsell, who appreciates the tiny ones ... Nobody sees a flower, really— it is so small— we haven’t time, and to see takes time, like to have a friend takes time. —GEORGIA O’KEEFFE CONTENTS ~ u Acknowledgments / 1 u Santa Cruz County Map / 2–3 u Introduction / 4 u Checklist Conventions / 8 u Floristic Regions Map / 12 u Checklist Format, Checklist Symbols, & Region Codes / 13 u Checklist Lycophytes / 14 Ferns / 14 Gymnosperms / 15 Nymphaeales / 16 Magnoliids / 16 Ceratophyllales / 16 Eudicots / 16 Monocots / 61 u Appendices 1. Listed Taxa / 76 2. Endemic Taxa / 78 3. Taxa Extirpated in County / 79 4. Taxa Not Currently Recognized / 80 5. Undescribed Taxa / 82 6. Most Invasive Non-native Taxa / 83 7. Rejected Taxa / 84 8. Notes / 86 u References / 152 u Index to Families & Genera / 154 u Floristic Regions Map with USGS Quad Overlay / 166 “True science teaches, above all, to doubt and be ignorant.” —MIGUEL DE UNAMUNO 1 ~ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ~ ANY THANKS TO THE GENEROUS DONORS without whom this publication would not M have been possible—and to the numerous individuals, organizations, insti- tutions, and agencies that so willingly gave of their time and expertise. -
1 Supplemental Methods
Supplemental methods for: Geographic range dynamics drove hybridization in a lineage of angiosperms 1 1 1 2 1 R.A. FOLK , C.J. VISGER , P.S. SOLTIS , D.E. SOLTIS , R. GURALNICK 1Florida Museum of Natural History 2Biology, University of Florida 3Author for correspondence: [email protected] 1 Sequencing: Sequencing followed previously developed methods1 with the following modifications: library preparation was performed by RAPiD Genomics (Gainesville, FL; using TruSeq-like adapters as in Folk et al. 2015), the targeted insert size was > 200 bp, and sequencing used a 300-cyle (150 bp read) kit for a HiSeq 3000 instrument. The overall outgroup sampling (21 taxa total; Supplementary Table S1) was improved > 5 fold.2 This includes several representatives each of all lineages that have been hypothesized to undergo hybridization in the Heuchera group of genera. For the transcriptomes, reads were assembled against the low-copy nuclear loci from our targeted enrichment experiment, where the targets stripped of intronic sequence but assembly methods otherwise followed a previously developed BWA-based approach1. Transcriptomic reads were also mapped to a Heuchera parviflora var. saurensis chloroplast genome reference1 which was stripped of intronic and intergenic sequence. Assembly methods for target-enriched data followed the BWA-based approach1 directly. In practice, intronic sequence can be recovered from RNAseq data,3 but has consistently lower coverage (pers. obs.); moreover non-coding read dropout can be expected to be high for more divergent outgroups added here. For this reason, only coding reference sequences were used to assemble transcriptomic taxa. For nuclear analyses, reads were assembled with 277 references comprising the gene sequences used for bait design, with intronic sequences stripped. -
FIN Pg.1 January 8, 2018
FIN Pg.1 January 8, 2018 FIN Pg.2 January 8, 2018 FIN Pg.3 Agenda Item #2 January 8, 2018 FIN Pg.4 January 8, 2018 FIN Pg.5 MONTECITO FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT CASH RECONCILIATION - ALL FUNDS October 31, 2017 Fund 3650 Fund 3651 Fund 3652 Fund 3653 General Pension Obl. Capital Res. Land & Bldg All Funds Cash Balance at 10/1/17 1,561,179.41 102,976.06 2,659,745.58 5,360,247.92 9,684,148.97 Income: Tax Revenue 765,803.27 - - - 765,803.27 Interest income 9,653.91 254.06 6,611.43 13,326.56 29,845.96 Other: CalOES - Sand Fire, 7/24-7/25/17 3,623.25 - - - 3,623.25 CalOES - Elm 2 Fire, 5/18-5/21/17 28,613.55 - - - 28,613.55 CalOES - Hill Fire, 6/26-6/27/17 11,879.94 - - - 11,879.94 EMS Mgmt LLC, First response pmt 25,389.65 - - - 25,389.65 Witness fee for Fire Marshal 279.51 - - - 279.51 Cal Card rebate, Q2 708.97 - - - 708.97 SY Pharmacy donation 500.00 - - - 500.00 Community member donation 1,000.00 - - - 1,000.00 847,452.05 254.06 6,611.43 13,326.56 867,644.10 Expenses: Warrants and Claims (104,801.23) - (40,471.70) (63.00) (145,335.93) Payroll (1,274,032.09) - - - (1,274,032.09) Other: Interfund Transfers - - - - - Reimbursed expenses* 11,673.78 - - - 11,673.78 (1,367,159.54) - (40,471.70) (63.00) (1,407,694.24) Cash Balance at 10/31/17 1,041,471.92 103,230.12 2,625,885.31 5,373,511.48 9,144,098.83 Cash in Treasury per Balance Sheet 1,724,766.40 103,230.12 2,625,885.31 5,373,511.48 9,827,393.31 Difference to reconcile 683,294.48 - - - 683,294.48 Reconciliation: Outstanding payroll payments CalPERS retirement contribution (11/1) 87,094.44 - - - 87,094.44 Mass Mutual contribution (11/1) 19,715.00 - - - 19,715.00 Payroll deposit (11/1) 487,642.21 - - - 487,642.21 EFT Payable (Acct 1015) Montecito Firefighter's Association 6,955.50 - - - 6,955.50 CalPERS retirement contribution (10/16) 80,418.02 - - - 80,418.02 Accounts Payable (Acct 1210) Life Assist 1,469.31 - - - 1,469.31 683,294.48 - - - 683,294.48 * Summary of reimbursed expenses: Conexis flexible spending account refund (10/13/17) Conexis flexible spending account refunds (3/2017), $166.70 MERRAG reimb. -
ON MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE. Geico.Com 1-800-442-9253 Limitationsapply.See Geico.Com for More Details
SPORTS LOCAL Rams’ McVay 2 SLO County SAVE UP TO will be youngest supervisors get $234 IN COUPONS to win – or lose early start on INSIDE – Super Bowl 1C 2020 bids 1B STAY CONNECTED FACEBOOK.COM/SLOTRIBUNE NEWS ALL DAY. Breezy with rain SANLUISOBISPO.COM TWITTER.COM/SLOTRIBUNE YOUR WAY. SUNDAY FEBRUARY 3 2019 $3 57°/49° See 6C POWERLESS Rain, wind slam SLO County, downing trees; hundreds without power PHOTOS BY DAVID [email protected] A car crashed into a power pole along Los Osos Valley Road in San Luis Obispo on Saturday morning, causing more than 1,500 customers nearby to lose power. BY SCOTT MIDDLECAMP AND DAN ITEL Powerful storm batters [email protected] Southern California [email protected] roads. High wind and heavy rain lashed the BY CHRISTOPHER WEBER A wind gust in Santa Central Coast on Saturday morning, Associated Press Barbara County topped 80 downing trees, flooding creeks and leav- mph as the storm moved ing thousands without power across San LOS ANGELES south and later dropped Luis Obispo County. Mudslides and The second in a string more than a half-inch of more flooding farther south in Santa of powerful storms bat- rain in five minutes. Trees Barbara County was rampant as the tered California on Sat- and power lines were southern Central Coast received the urday, shutting key high- down across the region. brunt of the storm. ways after water and mud In the Montecito area of A tree fell on a house on San Marcos rushed into lanes from Santa Barbara County, Court in San Luis Obispo where a wed- bare hillsides in wildfire several miles of U.S 101, a ding was scheduled for later in the day. -
California Directory of Building, Fire, and Water Agencies
California Directory Of Building, Fire, And Water Agencies American Society of Plumbing Engineers Los Angeles Chapter www.aspela.com Kook Dean [email protected] California Directory Of Building, Fire, And Water Agencies American Society of Plumbing Engineers Los Angeles Chapter www.aspela.com Kook Dean [email protected] 28415 Pinewood Court, Saugus, CA 91390 Published by American Society of Plumbing Engineers, Los Angeles Chapter Internet Address http://www.aspela.com E-mail [email protected] Over Forty years of Dedication to the Health and safety of the Southern California Community A non-profit corporation Local chapters do not speak for the society. Los Angeles Chapter American Society of Plumbing Engineers Officers - Board of Directors Historian President Treasurer RICHARD REGALADO, JR., CPD VIVIAN ENRIQUEZ KOOK DEAN, CPD Richard Regalado, Jr., Mechanical Consultants Arup City of Los Angeles PHONE (626) 964-9306 PHONE (310) 578-4182 PHONE (323) 342-6224 FAX (626) 964-9402 FAX (310) 577-7011 FAX (323) 342-6210 [email protected] [email protected] Administrative Secratary ASPE Research Foundation Vice President - Technical Walter De La Cruz RON ROMO, CPD HAL ALVORD,CPD South Coast Engineering Group PHONE (310) 625-0800 South Coast Engineering Group PHONE (818) 224-2700 [email protected] PHONE (818) 224-2700 FAX (818) 224-2711 FAX (818) 224-2711 [email protected] Chapter Affiliate Liaison: [email protected] RON BRADFORD Signature Sales Newsletter Editor Vice President - Legislative PHONE (951) 549-1000 JEFF ATLAS RICHARD DICKERSON FAX (957) 549-0015 Symmons Industries, Inc. Donald Dickerson Associates [email protected] PHONE (714) 373-5523 PHONE (818) 385-3600 FAX (661) 297-3015 Chairman - Board of Governors FAX (818) 990-1669 [email protected] Cory S.