trying to do the right thing

People often try to do the right thing, but along the way things somethings can go astray.

san-clemente-canyon-spring-green

Saturday I was hiking one of our local urban canyons, San Clemente Canyon, with some other plant people. Like the rest of our local canyons, the plants you find there are a mix of native and introduced species. It’s not pristine, by any means, particularly when you consider that there’s a freeway a couple hundred feet behind where this photo was taken. But many of the really big plants are original to the canyon. You can get a good impression of what it was like two centuries ago, and hopefully that’ll motivate people to preserve what’s left.

wrong-poppies-in-san-clemente-canyon

During that walk everyone paused at a big clearing in the trees. It was a broad area that had been cleared of the invasive species and replanted with California plants. The project was financed by the city authority that maintains the sewer lines that run through the park. The maintenance roads eat into the native habitat, and for ever acre of road, the agency did an offset of five acres where they tried to mitigate the damage done by the bulldozed access routes. It’s a pretty reasonable way to deal with something a big city needs to operate–sewers–and at the same time improve the integrity of the semi-wild spaces.

After oohing and awing at the improvements, several of us noticed the poppies. California poppies, yes they were, but big, tall orange ones and not the petite yellow-to-gold ones that you typically find in the local environment.

wrong-poppies-in-tecolote-canyon

A trip yesterday to Tecolote Canyon, another of the local urban canyons, revealed exactly the same thing in a restoration in progress there.

Technically, under current botanical systems, both versions of the poppy are considered the same species. But a quick look at them yells you that they’re as distinct from one another as cousins in a family, and they have genetics that evolved to making them appropriate for their different environments.

Take a look at their leaves, to start. The one on the left, below, is from the classic “California poppy” that people know (Escholzia californica). The one on the right is from the version found around here (at once classified as Escholzia californica maritima). The one on the left has less leaf surface, and to me looks like it’s evolved to deal with more drought.

escholzia-californica-typical-form-form-leaf-detail

escholzia-californica-maritima-form-leaf-detail

Growing the two versions side-by side in the garden also reveals another difference. The regular California poppy develops powdery mildew this cool and humid time of year, whereas the local version seems to be close to unaffected.

So when you combine the plant size, flower size, flower color and the plants’ resistance to powdery mildew, you can see that the plants are quite different, and that the coastal version is probably better suited for living here. (In gardens the typical orange form is pretty rugged and no slouch, but its disease issues give it a disadvantage to being as spectacular as it might be in a drier region like the Antelpe Valley, the location of the California Poppy Preserve.)

Recon Native Plants, a San Diego wholesale native plant nursery that specializes in habitat restoration, takes extra pride in knowing exactly where their plants come from. Their site advertizes:

For example, an Artemisia californica from the Sierra Nevada and an Artemisia californica from coastal San Diego County are the same species, however they have evolved and adapted with different genetics for different environments. With the source identified, RECON Native Plants can tell our clients within 5 miles, the origin of each plant and the client can select the location most appropriate to their project.

It’s a good illustration of the difference between planting a garden and going the extra distance to effect a successful habitat restoration project. Many gardeners would prefer the splashier Antelope Valley version of the state flower, but that’s not the form that makes most sense for our local flora. Somewhere along the planning, implementation or sourcing of these two habitat restoration projects, something went a little astray. It’s a small detail, but it’s one that many people consider important as we try to keep our open spaces as wild as we can.

EDIT, April 7: Check out another post on two different poppy forms over at DryStoneGarden.

7 thoughts on “trying to do the right thing”

  1. Interesting post. Country Mouse is working on habitat restoration and is often asked “What difference does it make whether I use locally native plants”. Here’s the difference! thanks.

  2. Town Mouse, I think gardeners “get” the difference between strains, since we’ll often go to great lengths to get a specific color or size of a plant.

    DryStoneGarden, thanks for the link. Your own post on the different poppy strains is terrific.

    Kate, it’s a really specialized market, to be sure, but I’m glad people are interested in keeping diversity alive.

  3. Your post makes an important point, but is one of the reasons I hesitate to go too far down the path of native garden design – I’m worried I’ll make a mistake, and it seems like a much bigger deal than simply choosing the wrong color of hellebore.

    Of course, I’m just a residential garden designer, I would expect someone doing habitat restoration to be better informed.

  4. Susan, as I wrote this the differences between gardens and natural spaces became clearer to me. I’d hate to discourage anyone from using more natives in their garden plantings. It seems like the time to be most concerned with choosing plants extra-carefully is if you’re establishing new landscaping on the edge of a fairly pristine wild area, where there might be as much of a chance of garden plants moving into the wilds as there’d be of the wild species colonizing the garden. In more urban areas, what plants you select would have less impact on the wild spaces.

  5. In choosing natives, and especially in San Diego, the foremost concern is always and forever………..water. Like you say, the larger leaves indicate what may eventually be less tolerance for the predictable drought conditions which are also a part of why they developed the way they did. What often happens is the usual – commerce and some one messed up on a contractor is my bet.

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