Mt. Diablo Fairy-Lantern (Calochortus Pulchellus)
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Contra Costa County, California
APPENDIX G BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT AND ARBORIST REPORTS Biological Resources Assessment for the Sufi Church Project Contra Costa County, California Prepared for: Meher Schools G-1 Prepared for: Meher Schools 999 Leland Drive Lafayette, CA 94549 925-938-9958 Prepared by: EDAW 2099 Mt. Diablo Blvd., Suite 204 Walnut Creek, CA 94596 (925) 279-0580 June 18, 2008 BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT FOR THE PROPOSED SUFI CHURCH PROJECT, CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA G-2 The information provided in this document is intended solely for the use and benefit of Meher Schools. No other person or entity shall be entitled to rely on the services, opinions, recommendations, plans or specifications provided herein, without the express written consent of EDAW, 2099 Mt. Diablo Blvd., Suite 204, Walnut Creek, CA 94596. G-3 TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY.............................................................................................................................. i 1.0 INTRODUCTION AND METHODS .............................................................................1 2.0 EXISTING CONDITIONS.............................................................................................5 2.1 SETTING......................................................................................................................5 2.2 PLANT COMMUNITIES AND WILDLIFE HABITATS........................................................5 3.0 SPECIAL-STATUS BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES.......................................................7 3.1 SPECIAL-STATUS PLANTS ...........................................................................................7 -
Extrapolating Demography with Climate, Proximity and Phylogeny: Approach with Caution
! ∀#∀#∃ %& ∋(∀∀!∃ ∀)∗+∋ ,+−, ./ ∃ ∋∃ 0∋∀ /∋0 0 ∃0 . ∃0 1##23%−34 ∃−5 6 Extrapolating demography with climate, proximity and phylogeny: approach with caution Shaun R. Coutts1,2,3, Roberto Salguero-Gómez1,2,3,4, Anna M. Csergő3, Yvonne M. Buckley1,3 October 31, 2016 1. School of Biological Sciences. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science. The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia. 2. Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield, UK. 3. School of Natural Sciences, Zoology, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland. 4. Evolutionary Demography Laboratory. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research. Rostock, DE-18057, Germany. Keywords: COMPADRE Plant Matrix Database, comparative demography, damping ratio, elasticity, matrix population model, phylogenetic analysis, population growth rate (λ), spatially lagged models Author statement: SRC developed the initial concept, performed the statistical analysis and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. RSG helped develop the initial concept, provided code for deriving de- mographic metrics and phylogenetic analysis, and provided the matrix selection criteria. YMB helped develop the initial concept and advised on analysis. All authors made substantial contributions to editing the manuscript and further refining ideas and interpretations. 1 Distance and ancestry predict demography 2 ABSTRACT Plant population responses are key to understanding the effects of threats such as climate change and invasions. However, we lack demographic data for most species, and the data we have are often geographically aggregated. We determined to what extent existing data can be extrapolated to predict pop- ulation performance across larger sets of species and spatial areas. We used 550 matrix models, across 210 species, sourced from the COMPADRE Plant Matrix Database, to model how climate, geographic proximity and phylogeny predicted population performance. -
Appendix C. Special-Status Species Lists
Appendix C Special-Status Species Lists Table C-1. Special-Status Wildlife Species Known to Occur or with Potential to Occur in East Contra Costa County Page 1 of 12 Statusa Likelihood for Occurrence Common and Scientific Name Federal/State California Distribution Habitats in Plan Areab Invertebrates Longhorn fairy shrimp E/– Eastern margin of central Coast Ranges from Small, clear pools in sandstone rock High. Covered species under Branchinecta longiantenna Contra Costa County to San Luis Obispo outcrops of clear to moderately turbid proposed Plan County; disjunct population in Madera clay- or grass-bottomed pools County Vernal pool fairy shrimp T/– Central Valley, central and south Coast Common in vernal pools; also found in High. Covered species under Branchinecta lynchi Ranges from Tehama County to Santa sandstone rock outcrop pools proposed Plan Barbara County; isolated populations also in Riverside County Midvalley fairy shrimp PE/– Central Valley, scattered populations in Small, short-lived vernal pools, seasonal High. Covered species under Branchinecta mesovallensis Sacramento, Solano, Contra Costa, San wetlands and depressions proposed Plan Joaquin, Madera, Merced, and Fresno Counties Vernal pool tadpole shrimp E/– Shasta County south to Merced County Vernal pools and ephemeral stock ponds High. Two CNDDB records from Lepidurus packardi inventory area Valley elderberry longhorn beetle T/– Stream side habitats below 3,000 feet Riparian and oak savanna habitats with High. Species may occur in suitable Desmocerus californicus throughout the Central Valley elderberry shrubs; elderberries are the habitat eastern fringe of inventory dimorphus host plant area; impacts would be limited Delta green ground beetle T/– Restricted to Olcott Lake and other vernal Sparsely vegetated edges of vernal lakes Low. -
California Wildflower Collection of Watercolors
The Santa Barbara Botanic Garden presents the SBBG Blaksley Library “California Wildflower Collection of Watercolors” by Patrick O’Hara 1212 Mission Canyon Road Patrick O’Hara has built a high international reputation in the world of Santa Barbara, botanical art – reaching around the world from the tiny village of Currabinny California 93105 in the south-west of Ireland. The “California Wildflower Collection of (805) 682-4726 Watercolors,” specifically commissioned by the Santa Barbara Botanic www.sbbg.org Garden is the culmination of a lifetime’s deep involvement with plant conservation, and nearly forty years’ experience as an artist. Patrick has studied rare and special wildflowers in wilderness and rugged habitats right around the world and his botanic art has been used to support and highlight conservation projects in many different countries. The extent of his travels around the United States continually surprises Americans, and although, like the first European settlers, it took him a while to reach California, he felt in 1996 that he had finally reached his “land of flowers and honey.” The Santa Barbara Botanic Garden Presents Patrick O’Hara SBBG Patrick O’Hara #1 “The Star Lily and the Iris” Douglas Iris (Iris douglasiana) Star Lily (Zigadenus fremontii) Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) Location studied: cliff top woodland edge at Point Lobos Season: early April 2006 Dimension: 18.5” x 21.5” Framed Artist’s own reference: W/P 620. The story behind “The Star Lily and the Iris” Although I had visited Point Lobos State Reserve in 1996 and 1998, and quite fallen in love with this magical headland a short distance from Monterey, with its profusion of marine and coastal fauna and flora, I had not expected to see a virtual carpet of Douglas irises under the pine trees one morning in early April, 2006. -
Table C-1. Special-Status Wildlife Species Known to Occur Or with Potential to Occur in East Contra Costa County Page 1 of 12
Table C-1. Special-Status Wildlife Species Known to Occur or with Potential to Occur in East Contra Costa County Page 1 of 12 Statusa Likelihood for Occurrence Common and Scientific Name Federal/State California Distribution Habitats in Plan Areab Invertebrates Longhorn fairy shrimp E/– Eastern margin of central Coast Ranges from Small, clear pools in sandstone rock High. Covered species under Branchinecta longiantenna Contra Costa County to San Luis Obispo outcrops of clear to moderately turbid proposed Plan County; disjunct population in Madera clay- or grass-bottomed pools County Vernal pool fairy shrimp T/– Central Valley, central and south Coast Common in vernal pools; also found in High. Covered species under Branchinecta lynchi Ranges from Tehama County to Santa sandstone rock outcrop pools proposed Plan Barbara County; isolated populations also in Riverside County Midvalley fairy shrimp PE/– Central Valley, scattered populations in Small, short-lived vernal pools, seasonal High. Covered species under Branchinecta mesovallensis Sacramento, Solano, Contra Costa, San wetlands and depressions proposed Plan Joaquin, Madera, Merced, and Fresno Counties Vernal pool tadpole shrimp E/– Shasta County south to Merced County Vernal pools and ephemeral stock ponds High. Two CNDDB records from Lepidurus packardi inventory area Valley elderberry longhorn beetle T/– Stream side habitats below 3,000 feet Riparian and oak savanna habitats with High. Species may occur in suitable Desmocerus californicus throughout the Central Valley elderberry shrubs; elderberries are the habitat eastern fringe of inventory dimorphus host plant area; impacts would be limited Delta green ground beetle T/– Restricted to Olcott Lake and other vernal Sparsely vegetated edges of vernal lakes Low. -
A Checklist of Vascular Plants Endemic to California
Humboldt State University Digital Commons @ Humboldt State University Botanical Studies Open Educational Resources and Data 3-2020 A Checklist of Vascular Plants Endemic to California James P. Smith Jr Humboldt State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.humboldt.edu/botany_jps Part of the Botany Commons Recommended Citation Smith, James P. Jr, "A Checklist of Vascular Plants Endemic to California" (2020). Botanical Studies. 42. https://digitalcommons.humboldt.edu/botany_jps/42 This Flora of California is brought to you for free and open access by the Open Educational Resources and Data at Digital Commons @ Humboldt State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Botanical Studies by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Humboldt State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A LIST OF THE VASCULAR PLANTS ENDEMIC TO CALIFORNIA Compiled By James P. Smith, Jr. Professor Emeritus of Botany Department of Biological Sciences Humboldt State University Arcata, California 13 February 2020 CONTENTS Willis Jepson (1923-1925) recognized that the assemblage of plants that characterized our flora excludes the desert province of southwest California Introduction. 1 and extends beyond its political boundaries to include An Overview. 2 southwestern Oregon, a small portion of western Endemic Genera . 2 Nevada, and the northern portion of Baja California, Almost Endemic Genera . 3 Mexico. This expanded region became known as the California Floristic Province (CFP). Keep in mind that List of Endemic Plants . 4 not all plants endemic to California lie within the CFP Plants Endemic to a Single County or Island 24 and others that are endemic to the CFP are not County and Channel Island Abbreviations . -
Diablo Foothills Wildflowers
Diablo Foothills Wildflowers A photographic guide to showy wildflowers of Diablo Foothills Regional Park Sorted by Flower Color Photographs by Wilde Legard Botanist, East Bay Regional Park District Revision: February 23, 2007 More than 2,000 species of native and naturalized plants grow wild in the San Francisco Bay Area. Most are very difficult to identify without the help of good illustrations. This is designed to be a simple, color photo guide to help you identify some of these plants. The selection of showy wildflowers displayed in this guide is by no means complete. The intent is to expand the quality and quantity of photos over time. The revision date is shown on the cover and on the header of each photo page. A comprehensive plant list for this area (including the many species not found in this publication) can be downloaded at the East Bay Regional Park District’s wild plant download page at: http://www.ebparks.org. This guide is published electronically in Adobe Acrobat® format to accommodate these planned updates. You have permission to freely download and distribute, and print this pdf for individual use. You are not allowed to sell the electronic or printed versions. In this version of the guide, only showy wildflowers are included. These wildflowers are sorted first by flower color, then by plant family (similar flower types), and finally by scientific name within each family. Under each photograph are four lines of information, based on the current standard wild plant reference for California: The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California, 1993. Common Name These non-standard names are based on Jepson and other local references. -
Carquinez Strait Wildflowers
Carquinez Strait Wildflowers A photographic guide to showy wildflowers of Carquinez Strait Regional Shoreline Sorted by Flower Color Photographs by Wilde Legard Botanist, East Bay Regional Park District Revision: February 23, 2007 More than 2,000 species of native and naturalized plants grow wild in the San Francisco Bay Area. Most are very difficult to identify without the help of good illustrations. This is designed to be a simple, color photo guide to help you identify some of these plants. The selection of showy wildflowers displayed in this guide is by no means complete. The intent is to expand the quality and quantity of photos over time. The revision date is shown on the cover and on the header of each photo page. A comprehensive plant list for this area (including the many species not found in this publication) can be downloaded at the East Bay Regional Park District’s wild plant download page at: http://www.ebparks.org. This guide is published electronically in Adobe Acrobat® format to accommodate these planned updates. You have permission to freely download and distribute, and print this pdf for individual use. You are not allowed to sell the electronic or printed versions. In this version of the guide, only showy wildflowers are included. These wildflowers are sorted first by flower color, then by plant family (similar flower types), and finally by scientific name within each family. Under each photograph are four lines of information, based on the current standard wild plant reference for California: The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California, 1993. Common Name These non-standard names are based on Jepson and other local references. -
Dos Osos Biological Resources Evaluation
Biological Resources Evaluation for the Dos Osos Reservoir Replacement Project Orinda, California July 20, 2016 Prepared For: East Bay Municipal Utility District 375 11th St Oakland, MS 701, CA 94607 510-287-1086 [email protected] Prepared By: Jessica Purificato Fisheries and Wildlife Division East Bay Municipal Utility District 500 San Pablo Dam Rd Orinda, CA 94563 510-287-2034 [email protected] Table of Contents 1.0 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................................... 5 1.1 Project Setting ..................................................................................................................................... 5 1.2 Proposed Project Description .............................................................................................................. 5 2.0 REGULATORY BACKGROUND .................................................................................................................. 7 2.1 Special Status Biological Communities ................................................................................................ 7 Waters of the United States ................................................................................................................. 8 Waters of the State ............................................................................................................................... 8 Streams, Lakes, and Riparian Habitat .................................................................................................. -
Plants Mount Diablo Fairy-Lantern (Calochortus Pulchellus)
Plants Mount Diablo Fairy-Lantern (Calochortus pulchellus) Mount Diablo Fairy-Lantern (Calochortus pulchellus) Status Federal: None State: None CNPS: List 1B Population Trend Global: Unknown State: Unknown Within Inventory Area: Unknown Robert Potts © California Academy of Sciences Data Characterization The location database for Mount Diablo fairy-lantern (Calochortus pulchellus) includes 29 data records dated from 1940 to 1996 (California Natural Diversity Database 2001). Over half of the occurrences were documented in the previous 10 years, and all of the occurrences are believed to be extant. Most of the occurrences are of high precision and may be accurately located, including those within the inventory area. Very little information is available on the ecology of Mount Diablo fairy-lantern. The literature on the species pertains primarily to its taxonomy. The main sources of general information on the species are the Jepson Manual (Hickman 1993) and the California Native Plant Society (2001). Specific observations on habitat and plant associates, threats, and other factors are summarized in the California Natural Diversity Database (2001). Range Mount Diablo fairy-lantern is endemic to the Diablo Range in Contra Costa County, ranging in elevation between 650 and 2,600 feet (Hickman 1993). These occurrences are mostly located on lands managed by the California Department of Parks and Recreation, East Bay Recreation and Park District, and City of Walnut Creek, with several populations occurring on privately owned land or land of unknown ownership (California Natural Diversity Database 2001). Occurrences within the ECC HCP/NCCP Inventory Area Twelve occurrences of Mount Diablo fairy-lantern are within the inventory area, 11 of which are on public lands. -
MIMULUS CARDINALIS Douglas Ex Bentham (SCARLET MONKEY
MIMULUS CARDINALIS Douglas ex Bentham (SCARLET MONKEY FLOWER), AND WHERE IN THE CALIFORNIA COAST RANGES DID DAVID DOUGLAS FIND THE CLOSELY RELATED MIMULUS LEWISII Pursh? By David Rogers Due to its salient corollas, Mimulus cardinalis is one of the most conspicuous (and thus most well known) of the native wildflowers that occur in wet or moist habitats in western North America. Although this species is most often encountered along perennial streams, it can also be found at springs, seeps, and in other kinds of wet or perpetually moist habitats, such as in hanging gardens on seepy cliffs, or at the bases of cliffs where water from a overhanging seep drips. The first scientific specimens of Mimulus cardin- alis, along with the seeds by which it was intro- duced into European gardens, were collected by David Douglas, the famous botanical explorer of western North America, during his extended stay in California in the early 1830s. In a letter to his men- tor, Sir William Jackson Hooker, datelined “Monte- rey, Upper California, Nov. 23rd, 1831,” Douglas noted that “To Mimulus I have added several, among them the magnificent M. cardinalis.”1 Douglas was then on his second expedition to western North America on behalf of the Horticul- tural Society of London, to which he sent his col- lections of plant specimens and seeds; Douglas also made duplicate collections, which he sent to Hooker in Scotland. On the receiving end in London there were two gentlemen who, like Sir William Jackson Hooker, rank amongst the most famous botanists of th the 19 century: George Bentham, the secretary of David Douglas (1799-1834), as portrayed in volume two of The the Horticultural Society, and John Lindley, the Companion to the Botanical Magazine (1836). -
Sedgwick Field Notes 10Th Anniversary
Sedgwick Field Notes Occasional Ramblings for Volunteers and Friends of the Sedgwick Reserve June 2008 10th Anniversary On April 5th more than 250 people gathered to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Sedgwick Reserve. Supporters, educa- tors, docents and friends took nature hikes, road rough trails on mountain bikes and listened to lectures on topics such as pollen movement in California Valley Oaks and the diversity of plant communities on serpentine soils. A BBQ was the hit of the day and, for nostalgia sake, ice cream bars were handed out as dessert. Music was supplied by the T-Bone Ramblers for the enjoyment of all. Our thanks to all that made the day such a success especially to coordinator Sue Eisaguirre for all her ideas and en- ergy. Photos by Terry Leden Construction Begins!! The Tipton Meeting House Construction has begun on the Tipton Meeting House, which is being built to “Platinum Rating,” standards of the Lead- ership in Energy and Environmental Design Green Building Rating System, the highest possible level for a “green” home, said Dennis Thompson and Jeff King, of Thompson Naylor Architects, Inc. Among the elements that make the Tipton Meeting House a green building include the use of two onsite water cisterns that will be used to heat and cool the building; the installation of photovoltaic panels to supply about 75 percent of the elec- tricity for the building; natural cross ventilation and ceiling fans for cooling; the use of high efficiency spray foam building insulation; native plant landscaping; shielded exterior lights; waterless urinals and dual flush toilets and a roof rain water catch basin for flushing toilets.