- Author: Grace Fruto, UC Davis
- Author: Trina Kleist, UC Davis
Published on: February 21, 2024
![Shooting stars, or Dodecatheon clevelandii; pink blooms reach for the blue sky](https://ucanr.edu/blogs/Green/blogfiles/104955small.jpg)
Shooting stars, or Dodecatheon clevelandii, is typical of the native plants that bloom in even higher abundance following a fire and a good rain in the Santa Monica Mountains of southern California. Photo by Justin Valliere, UC Davis
Wildflower displays threatened
Northwest of Los Angeles, springtime brings native wildflowers to bloom in the Santa Monica Mountains. These beauties provide food for insects, maintain healthy soil and filter water seeping into the ground – in addition to offering breathtaking displays of color.
They're also good at surviving after wildfire, having adapted to it through millennia. But new research shows wildflowers that usually would burst back after a blaze and a good rain are losing out to the long-standing, double threat of city smog and nonnative weeds.
A recent study led...
/h3>Tags: Justin Valliere (0), native plants (0), pollution (0), post-fire (0), Santa Monica Mountains (0), smog (0), Springs Fire (0), UC Davis (0), UC Davis Department of Plant Sciences (0), wildfire (0), wildflowers (0)
Focus Area Tags: Environment, Natural Resources
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