457 Vancouveria Hexandra

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

457 Vancouveria Hexandra Project: Hamlin Park .5 Acre Restoration Site Date: 12/20/2010 Sponsor: City of Shoreline Designed by: E. Elman, J. Jones Zone 1 Trailside Area (sq. ft.) 3500 Description: Length of trail and 10' from trail center Spacing (Ft. Abbr % of Mix Quantity Botanical Name Common Name Size O.C.) Notes Substitutions Monitoring Data TREE All Bare root stock to be installed prior to March 1. Potted and plugs by March 15. Tree Total 100% 0 No trees to reduce main't issues SHRUB Use to Shrubs/GC define path all year GASH 30% 117 Gaultheria shallon Salal 1 gal 3 Use larger stock only VAOV 35% 136 Vaccinium ovatum Evergreen huckleberry 1 gal 3 Use larger stock only MANE 30% 117 Mahonia nervosa low Oregon grape 1 gal 3 Use larger stock only ARUV 5% 19 Arctostaphylos uva-ursi Kinnikinnick 4" pot 3 Use larger stock only Shrub Total 100% 389 Low GC due to human impact GROUND Plant in repeating clusters, 1'OC GC in clusters of 10 POMU 70% 272 Polystichum munitum sword fern 1 gal 3 Use larger stock only TRBO 10% 350 Trientalis borealis ssp.latifolia Star flower br 1 VAHE 10% 350 Vancouveria hexandra Inside-out flower br 1 ACTR 10% 350 Achlys triphylla Vanilla leaf br 1 GC Total 100% 972 Zone 2 Interior Area (sq. ft.) 18280 Description: Approx 10' from trail center, entire interior Spacing (Ft. Abbr % of Mix Quantity Botanical Name Common Name Size O.C.) Notes TREE Distribute evenly PIMO 10% 13 Pinus monticola White Pine 1 gal 12 2-0 br, 18" ht ABGR 15% 19 Abies grandis Grand Fir 1 gal 12 25-50 QTY plugs Styro-10 TSHE 15% 19 Tsuga heterophylla Western Hemlock 1 gal 12 25 QTY, Plug Styro-15 THPL 15% 19 Thuja plicata Western Red Cedar 1 gal 12 2-0 br, 18" ht ARME 10% 13 Arbutus menziesii Pacific Madrone 1 gal 12 B&B 24-36" ACMA 20% 25 Acer macrophyllum Big Leaf Maple 1 gal 12 35 QTY 1-0 12-18" ht FRPU 5% 6 Frangula purshiana Cascara 1 gal 12 12 QTY 2-0 BR, 18" ht PICO 10% 13 Pinus contorta Shore pine 1 gal 12 25 QTY P-1 BR, 12-18" ht Tree Total 100% 127 SHRUB 5' oc species Install in clusters of 3-4 like species COCO 8% 48 Corylus cornuta Beaked hazelnut 2-0 br, 18" ht 5 1 gal 75% survival test plot RHMA 10% 60 Rhododendron macrophyllum Western rhododendron 1 gal 5 100QTY 2-4" pot Slow growing in test plot SYAL 8% 48 Symphoricarpos albus Snowberry 1-1 BR, 12-18" ht 5 No data SYMO 8% 48 Symphoricarpos hesperius (mollis) Creeping Snowberry 2-0 br, 18" ht 5 No data HODI 10% 60 Holodiscus discolor Oceanspray 2-0 br, 18" ht 5 No data OECE 5% 37 Oemleria cerasiformis Indian plum 2-0 br, 18" ht 5 1 gal No data VAOV 15% 286 Vaccinium ovatum Evergreen huckleberry 1 gal 3 3" oc species Install in islands of 6-8 like species 600 QTY, 2-4" pots 90% survival test plot MANE 15% 286 Mahonia nervosa low Oregon grape 2-0 BR, 6" ht 3 4" pot >90 survival+recruitment GASH 15% 286 Gaultheria shallon Salal 1 gal 3 >90 survival+recruitment ARUV 6% 122 Arctostaphylos uva-ursi Kinnikinnick 4" pot 3 No data Shrub Total 100% 1281 GROUND POMU 45% 914 Polystichum munitum sword fern 1 gal 3 Distribute 3' OC GC evenly 84% survival LOCI 10% 203 Lonicera ciliosa Orange honeysuckle 1-1 br, 12-18" ht 3 250 QTY 1-0 BR, 6-12" ht No data but some recruitment BLSP 10% 203 Blechnum spicant Deer fern 1 gal 3 No data TEGR 10% 457 Tellima grandiflora Fringecup 4" pot 2 Cluster 2'OC GC in groups of 10 60% survival TRBO 5% 229 Trientalis borealis ssp.latifolia Star flower br 2 4" pot, plug >90 survival+recruitment, a lot onsite already VAHE 10% 457 Vancouveria hexandra Inside-out flower br 2 4" pot, plug >90% survival test ACTR 10% 457 Achlys triphylla Vanilla leaf br 2 4" pot, plug >90 survival+recruitment, a lot onsite already GC Total 100% 2920 Zone 2 Totals 4328 Zone 1 Totals 1361 TOTAL 5689.
Recommended publications
  • Plant List 2016
    Established 1990 PLANT LIST 2016 European mail order website www.crug-farm.co.uk CRÛG FARM PLANTS • 2016 Welcome to our 2016 list hope we can tempt you with plenty of our old favourites as well as some exciting new plants that we have searched out on our travels. There has been little chance of us standing still with what has been going on here in 2015. The year started well with the birth of our sixth grandchild. January into February had Sue and I in Colombia for our first winter/early spring expedition. It was exhilarating, we were able to travel much further afield than we had previously, as the mountainous areas become safer to travel. We are looking forward to working ever closer with the Colombian institutes, such as the Medellin Botanic Gardens whom we met up with. Consequently we were absent from the RHS February Show at Vincent Square. We are finding it increasingly expensive participating in the London shows, while re-branding the RHS February Show as a potato event hardly encourages our type of customer base to visit. A long standing speaking engagement and a last minute change of date, meant that we missed going to Fota near Cork last spring, no such problem this coming year. We were pleasantly surprised at the level of interest at the Trgrehan Garden Rare Plant Fair, in Cornwall. Hopefully this will become an annual event for us, as well as the Cornwall Garden Society show in April. Poor Sue went through the wars having to have a rush hysterectomy in June, after some timely results revealed future risks.
    [Show full text]
  • Title Studies in the Morphology and Systematics of Berberidaceae (V
    Studies in the Morphology and Systematics of Berberidaceae Title (V) : Floral Anatomy of Caulophyllum MICHX., Leontice L., Gymnospermium SPACH and Bongardia MEY Author(s) Terabayashi, Susumu Memoirs of the Faculty of Science, Kyoto University. Series of Citation biology. New series (1983), 8(2): 197-217 Issue Date 1983-02-28 URL http://hdl.handle.net/2433/258852 Right Type Departmental Bulletin Paper Textversion publisher Kyoto University MEMolRs OF THE FAcuLTy ol" SclENCE, KyOTO UNIvERslTy, SERMS OF BIoLoGy Vol. VIII, pp. 197-217, March l983 Studies in the Morphology and Systematics of Berberidaceae V. Floral Anatomy ef Cauloplrytlum MICHX., Leontice L., Gymnospermium SpACH and Bongardia MEY. Susumu TERABAYASHI (Received iNovember 13, l981) Abstract The floral anatomy of CauloPh71tum, Leontice, G"mnospermittm and Bongardia are discussed with special reference given to vasculature. Comparisons offloral anatomy are made with the other genera og the tribe Epimedieae. The vasculature in the receptacle of Caulopnjilum, Leontice and G]mnospermiitm is similar, but that of Bongardia differs in the very thick xylem of the receptacular stele and in the independent origin ef the traces to the sepals, petals and stamens from the stele. A tendency is recognized in that the outer floral elements receive traces ofa sing]e nature in origin from the stele while the inner elements receive traces ofa double nature. The traces to the inner e}ements are often clerived from common bundles in Caulop/tyllttm, Leontice and G"mnospermittm. A similar tendency is observed in the trace pattern in the other genera of Epimedieae, but the adnation of the traces is not as distinct as in the genera treated in this study.
    [Show full text]
  • Fair Use of This PDF File of Herbaceous
    Fair Use of this PDF file of Herbaceous Perennials Production: A Guide from Propagation to Marketing, NRAES-93 By Leonard P. Perry Published by NRAES, July 1998 This PDF file is for viewing only. If a paper copy is needed, we encourage you to purchase a copy as described below. Be aware that practices, recommendations, and economic data may have changed since this book was published. Text can be copied. The book, authors, and NRAES should be acknowledged. Here is a sample acknowledgement: ----From Herbaceous Perennials Production: A Guide from Propagation to Marketing, NRAES- 93, by Leonard P. Perry, and published by NRAES (1998).---- No use of the PDF should diminish the marketability of the printed version. This PDF should not be used to make copies of the book for sale or distribution. If you have questions about fair use of this PDF, contact NRAES. Purchasing the Book You can purchase printed copies on NRAES’ secure web site, www.nraes.org, or by calling (607) 255-7654. Quantity discounts are available. NRAES PO Box 4557 Ithaca, NY 14852-4557 Phone: (607) 255-7654 Fax: (607) 254-8770 Email: [email protected] Web: www.nraes.org More information on NRAES is included at the end of this PDF. Acknowledgments This publication is an update and expansion of the 1987 Cornell Guidelines on Perennial Production. Informa- tion in chapter 3 was adapted from a presentation given in March 1996 by John Bartok, professor emeritus of agricultural engineering at the University of Connecticut, at the Connecticut Perennials Shortcourse, and from articles in the Connecticut Greenhouse Newsletter, a publication put out by the Department of Plant Science at the University of Connecticut.
    [Show full text]
  • NATIVE PLANT FIELD GUIDE Revised March 2012
    NATIVE PLANT FIELD GUIDE Revised March 2012 Hansen's Northwest Native Plant Database www.nwplants.com Foreword Once upon a time, there was a very kind older gentleman who loved native plants. He lived in the Pacific northwest, so plants from this area were his focus. As a young lad, his grandfather showed him flowers and bushes and trees, the sweet taste of huckleberries and strawberries, the smell of Giant Sequoias, Incense Cedars, Junipers, pines and fir trees. He saw hummingbirds poking Honeysuckles and Columbines. He wandered the woods and discovered trillium. When he grew up, he still loved native plants--they were his passion. He built a garden of natives and then built a nursery so he could grow lots of plants and teach gardeners about them. He knew that alien plants and hybrids did not usually live peacefully with natives. In fact, most of them are fierce enemies, not well behaved, indeed, they crowd out and overtake natives. He wanted to share his information so he built a website. It had a front page, a page of plants on sale, and a page on how to plant natives. But he wanted more, lots more. So he asked for help. I volunteered and he began describing what he wanted his website to do, what it should look like, what it should say. He shared with me his dream of making his website so full of information, so inspiring, so educational that it would be the most important source of native plant lore on the internet, serving the entire world.
    [Show full text]
  • Acer Macrophyllum Big Leaf Maple Aceraceae Acer Circinatum Vine
    Plant list updated by Cyndy Dillon, Carol Smith, Regina Johnson, Bob Wodsworth Sharon Berquist-Moody, and Lois Sweany - November 2012 Twahnoh Park (Union) Twahnoh Park (Union), Compiled by, Updated 2012 by * non-native Genus/Species Common Name Plant Family Acer macrophyllum Big leaf maple Aceraceae Acer circinatum Vine maple Aceraceae Achlys triphylla vanilla leaf Berberidaceae Actaea rubra Baneberry Ranunculaceae Adenocaulon bicolor pathfinder Asteraceae Adiantum aleuticum maidenhair fern Pteridaceae Alnus rubra red alder Betulaceae Arbutus menziesii Pacific madrone Ericaceae Asarum caudatum wild ginger Aristolochiaceae Athyrium filix-femina lady fern Dryopteridaceae Bellis perennis* English daisy Asteraceae Berberis (Mahonia) aquifolium tall Oregon grape Berberidaceae Berberis (Mahonia)nervosa dull Oregon-grape Berberidaceae Blechnum spicant deer fern Blechnaceae Cardamine hirsuta* hairy bittercress, shotweed Brassicaeae Chamerion angustifolium fireweed Onagraceae Chimophila umbellata pipsissewa, prince's pine Ericaceae Cirsium vulgare* bull thistle Asteraceae Claytonia sibirica Siberian miner's-lettuce Montiaceae Convolvus arvensis* field bindweed. morning glory Convolvulaceae Cornus nuttallii Pacific dogwood Cornaceae Cornus sericea red-osier dogwood Cornaceae Corylus cornuta beaked hazelnut Betulaceae Dactylis glomerata* orchard grass Festuceae Digitalis purpurea* purple foxglove Scrophulariaceae Dryopteris expansa spreading or spiny wood fern Dryopteridaceae Equisetum arvense common, field horsetail Equicetaceae Frangula (Rhamnus)
    [Show full text]
  • Native Plant Alternatives To
    NATIVE PLANT ALTERNATIVES TO English Ivy is a non-native, invasive plant that is severely damaging our urban forests and has been added to the WA State Noxious Weed List. It is often used as an ornamental climber or as a groundcover. Below is a list of native plants that can be used in its place. CLIMBERS GROWING CONDITIONS Western trumpet honeysuckle partial to full shade (Lonicera ciliosa) SOME BENEFITS OF NATIVE PLANTS GROUNDCOVER GROWING CONDITIONS Native plants are drought beach strawberry sun, part shade; tolerant and do not require extra (Fragaria chiloensis) dry to moderate moisture water once they are established. bunchberry, Canadian dogwood partial to full shade; Native plants provide food and (Cornus canadensis) humus-rich soil nesting sites for native wildlife coltsfoot moist shade (Petasites palmatus) Native plants do not require fertilizers or pesticides, which false lily-of-the-valley full to partial shade; helps to preserve water quality. (Maianthemum dilatatum) moist soil Roots of native plants reach fringe cup partial shade; varying depths in the soil which (Tellima grandiflora) moist soil helps to distribute water through inside-out flower sun to shade the soil and hold the soil in place. (Vancouveria hexandra) wgab 0209_IVYalternatives.ai kinnikinnick sun, some shade; For more info on English ivy and (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi) well drained soil other Noxious Weeds contact : King County Noxious Weed low Oregon grape prefers shade; Control Program (Mahonia nervosa) can tolerate sun 201 S Jackson St., Suite 600 Lyngby’s sedge moist shade Seattle, WA 98104 (Carex lyngbyei) 206-296-0290 e-mail: oak fern dry to moist shade or [email protected] (Gymnocarpium dryopteris) partial shade For info on native plants and partridgefoot sun; moist acid soil Ivy O.U.T.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Native Plant List CITY of OREGON CITY 320 Warner Milne Road , P.O
    Native Plant List CITY OF OREGON CITY 320 Warner Milne Road , P.O. Box 3040, Oregon City, OR 97045 Phone: (503) 657-0891, Fax: (503) 657-7892 Scientific Name Common Name Habitat Type Wetland Riparian Forest Oak F. Slope Thicket Grass Rocky Wood TREES AND ARBORESCENT SHRUBS Abies grandis Grand Fir X X X X Acer circinatumAS Vine Maple X X X Acer macrophyllum Big-Leaf Maple X X Alnus rubra Red Alder X X X Alnus sinuata Sitka Alder X Arbutus menziesii Madrone X Cornus nuttallii Western Flowering XX Dogwood Cornus sericia ssp. sericea Crataegus douglasii var. Black Hawthorn (wetland XX douglasii form) Crataegus suksdorfii Black Hawthorn (upland XXX XX form) Fraxinus latifolia Oregon Ash X X Holodiscus discolor Oceanspray Malus fuscaAS Western Crabapple X X X Pinus ponderosa Ponderosa Pine X X Populus balsamifera ssp. Black Cottonwood X X Trichocarpa Populus tremuloides Quaking Aspen X X Prunus emarginata Bitter Cherry X X X Prunus virginianaAS Common Chokecherry X X X Pseudotsuga menziesii Douglas Fir X X Pyrus (see Malus) Quercus garryana Garry Oak X X X Quercus garryana Oregon White Oak Rhamnus purshiana Cascara X X X Salix fluviatilisAS Columbia River Willow X X Salix geyeriana Geyer Willow X Salix hookerianaAS Piper's Willow X X Salix lucida ssp. lasiandra Pacific Willow X X Salix rigida var. macrogemma Rigid Willow X X Salix scouleriana Scouler Willow X X X Salix sessilifoliaAS Soft-Leafed Willow X X Salix sitchensisAS Sitka Willow X X Salix spp.* Willows Sambucus spp.* Elderberries Spiraea douglasii Douglas's Spiraea Taxus brevifolia Pacific Yew X X X Thuja plicata Western Red Cedar X X X X Tsuga heterophylla Western Hemlock X X X Scientific Name Common Name Habitat Type Wetland Riparian Forest Oak F.
    [Show full text]
  • Native Herbaceous Plants in Our Gardens
    Native Herbaceous Plants in Our Gardens A Guide for the Willamette Valley Native Gardening Awareness Program A Committee of the Emerald Chapter of the Native Plant Society of Oregon Members of the Native Gardening Awareness Program, a committee of the Emerald chapter of the NPSO, contributed text, editing, and photographs for this publication. They include: Mieko Aoki, John Coggins, Phyllis Fisher, Rachel Foster, Evelyn Hess, Heiko Koester, Cynthia Lafferty, Danna Lytjen, Bruce Newhouse, Nick Otting, and Michael Robert Spring 2005 1 2 Table of Contents Native Herbaceous Plants in Our Gardens ...........................5 Shady Woodlands .................................................................7 Baneberry – Actaea rubra ................................................... 7 Broad-leaved Bluebells – Mertensia platyphylla .....................7 Hound’s-tongue – Cynoglossum grande ............................... 8 Broad-leaved Starflower –Trientalis latifolia ..........................8 Bunchberry – Cornus unalaschkensis (formerly C. canadensis) ....8 False Solomon’s-seal – Maianthemum racemosum ................ 9 Fawn Lily – Erythronium oregonum .........................................9 Ferns ..........................................................................10-12 Fringecup – Tellima grandiflora and T. odorata ..................... 12 Inside-out Flower – Vancouveria hexandra ....................... 13 Large-leaved Avens – Geum macrophyllum ...................... 13 Meadowrue – Thalictrum spp. ...............................................14
    [Show full text]
  • Reproductive Biology of the Rare Plant, Dysosma Pleiantha (Berberidaceae): Breeding System, Pollination and Implications for Conservation
    Pak. J. Bot ., 47(3): 951-957, 2015. REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY OF THE RARE PLANT, DYSOSMA PLEIANTHA (BERBERIDACEAE): BREEDING SYSTEM, POLLINATION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSERVATION XI GONG 1, BI-CAI GUAN 2, *, SHI-LIANG ZHOU 3 AND GANG GE 2 1State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, College of Life Science and Food engineering, Nanchang University, Nanchang 330047, China 2Jiangxi Key Laboratory of Plant Resources, Nanchang University, Nanchang 330031, China. 3State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China. *Corresponding author e-mail: [email protected], Tel.: +86 0791 83969530) Abstract Dysosma pleiantha is an endangered and endemic species in China. We have reported the flowering phenology, breeding system and pollinator activity of the species distributed in Tianmu Mountain (Zhejiang Province) nature reserves. Flowering occurred during the months of early April to late May, with the peak in the middle of the April, and was synchronous across all four subpopulations. The anthesis of an intact inflorescence lasted from sixteen to twenty-three days with eight to eleven days blossom of an individual flower. In D. pleiantha , the morphological development of flowers and fruit leading to the development of mature seeds takes place over a period 3–5 months from flowering. The average of pollen-ovule ratio (P/O) was 18 898.7. The pollen transfer in this species was mainly performed by flies, Hydrotaea chalcogaster (Muscidae). Controlled pollination experiments indicated D. pleiantha was obligate xenogamyous and self- incompatible, and pollination was pollinator-dependent. Controlled pollination experiments showed that the mean fruit set (%) under the natural condition (17.1%) was markedly lower than that of manual cross-pollination (75.6%).
    [Show full text]
  • Classification of the Vegetation Alliances and Associations of Sonoma County, California
    Classification of the Vegetation Alliances and Associations of Sonoma County, California Volume 1 of 2 – Introduction, Methods, and Results Prepared by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife Vegetation Classification and Mapping Program California Native Plant Society Vegetation Program For: The Sonoma County Agricultural Preservation and Open Space District The Sonoma County Water Agency Authors: Anne Klein, Todd Keeler-Wolf, and Julie Evens December 2015 ABSTRACT This report describes 118 alliances and 212 associations that are found in Sonoma County, California, comprising the most comprehensive local vegetation classification to date. The vegetation types were defined using a standardized classification approach consistent with the Survey of California Vegetation (SCV) and the United States National Vegetation Classification (USNVC) system. This floristic classification is the basis for an integrated, countywide vegetation map that the Sonoma County Vegetation Mapping and Lidar Program expects to complete in 2017. Ecologists with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the California Native Plant Society analyzed species data from 1149 field surveys collected in Sonoma County between 2001 and 2014. The data include 851 surveys collected in 2013 and 2014 through funding provided specifically for this classification effort. An additional 283 surveys that were conducted in adjacent counties are included in the analysis to provide a broader, regional understanding. A total of 34 tree-overstory, 28 shrubland, and 56 herbaceous alliances are described, with 69 tree-overstory, 51 shrubland, and 92 herbaceous associations. This report is divided into two volumes. Volume 1 (this volume) is composed of the project introduction, methods, and results. It includes a floristic key to all vegetation types, a table showing the full local classification nested within the USNVC hierarchy, and a crosswalk showing the relationship between this and other classification systems.
    [Show full text]
  • Plant List Twin Lakes
    *Non-native Twin Lakes Plant List as of 2/6/2013 compiled by Tanya Harvey T27S.R2E.S9,16 westerncascades.com FERNS & ALLIES Betulaceae Spiraea xhitchcockii Blechnaceae Alnus viridis ssp. sinuata Salicaceae (Alnus sinuata) Blechnum spicant Salix lasiandra var. lasiandra (Salix lucida ssp. lasiandra) Dryopteridaceae Caprifoliaceae Symphoricarpos mollis Dryopteris arguta Salix sitchensis (Symphoricarpos hesperius) Polystichum munitum Sapindaceae Cornaceae Acer circinatum Lycopodiaceae Cornus sericea Lycopodium clavatum (Cornus stolonifera) Acer glabrum var. douglasii HERBACEOUS DICOTS Ophioglossaceae Ericaceae Sceptridium multifidum Arctostaphylos nevadensis Apiaceae (Botrychium multifidum) Heracleum maximum Arctostaphylos patula (Heracleum lanatum) Polypodiaceae Gaultheria ovatifolia Ligusticum grayi Polypodium sp. Phyllodoce glanduliflora Lomatium hallii Woodsiaceae Rhododendron macrophyllum Athyrium filix-femina Osmorhiza berteroi Vaccinium membranaceum (Osmorhiza chilensis) Cystopteris fragilis Vaccinium ovalifolium Osmorhiza occidentalis TREES & SHRUBS: CONIFERS Fagaceae Perideridia gairdneri Cupressaceae (Perideridia montana) Chrysolepis chrysophylla Callitropsis nootkatensis (Castanopsis chrysophylla) Perideridia oregana (Chamaecyparis nootkatensis) Grossulariaceae Sanicula graveolens Calocedrus decurrens (Libocedrus decurrens) Ribes binominatum Aristolochiaceae Pinaceae Ribes lacustre Asarum caudatum Abies amabilis Ribes lobbii Asteraceae Abies concolor x grandis Ribes viscosissimum Achillea millefolium Abies grandis Rosaceae Adenocaulon
    [Show full text]