- Author: Robert J Keiffer
One of the most unique tree species found on the west coast of North America is the Pacific Madrone (Arbutus menziesii). Found from Vancouver Island down and into California, its species name was given to honor the Scots naturalist Archibald Menzies who noted the tree during George Vancouver's voyage of exploration. It is a common tree species within the mixed hardwood vegetation zones of UC-HREC. Being an evergreen the tree, it is never without leaves, but it does shed its annual crop of leaves in late summer blanketing the ground underneath with a golden carpet. This is one of the larger specimens found on the Center.
- Author: Robert J Keiffer
These beautiful springtime flowers of the northern California Coast Ranges mountains are endemic to Northern California. Many times these colonies are found in chaparral brushlands where they can easily missed because of the over-story of woody species. Erythronium californicum Purdy, which is in the family Liliaceae, has sometimes been called the "soul of spring". It was first described by the famous botanist and plant collector Carl Purdy (the USGS Quad on the north end of HREC is called "Purdy's Garden").
- Author: Robert J Keiffer
Mendocino County has 409 species of birds that have been documented within its terrestrial and off-shore boundaries. Bob Keiffer, Supt. and Chuck Vaughn (retired SRA) have diligently archived all historical and current important birds records from Mendocino County for over twenty years. Hard files are kept with data such as observer notes and descriptions and photographs, and digital files (approximately 7000 entries thus far) are kept on an Avisys database. Keiffer is the official compiler of the county records, and Vaughn is the "gatekeeper" of all the Mendocino County eBird records.
Here you see a first-year Short-billed Albatross (pink-bill) seen yesterday at 6 miles SW off Noyo Harbor. Up until now there has been only one accepted county record for this species ... a species thought to be extinct after WWII. The species was brought to near extinction by the feather trade and war activities, but a few nesting pair were found nesting on the volcanic island of Torishima in the 1950's. Conservation efforts since that time have rebounded the population to about 2000 birds, and they are once again rarely showing up along the Pacific West Coast of North America where we know they were once common from archeological evidence found at Native American "middens".
- Author: Robert J Keiffer
A bright yellow aster bloom adorns three small isolated locations at the UC Hopland Research & Extension Center. Colusa Layia (Layia septentrionalis) is an annual herb that is endemic to California and is only found in 9 counties, with Mendocino County being one of those. It is included in the California Native Plant Society Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants and is rated as 1B.2 (rare,threatened, or endangered in CA and elsewhere). This plant qualifies for the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) protection. The plant is currently blooming at HREC, and the blooms are quite thick and robust this year.
- Author: Robert J Keiffer
The UC Hopland Research & Extension Center has quite a medley of oak species at the Center with over a dozen species occurring (19 species currently accepted as native in California). The Black Oak (Quercus kelloggii) is a deciduous (looses its leaves in winter) oak, and this photo shows the bright, new foliage that has just emerged. Found in mixed evergreen forests, oak woodlands, and coniferous forests in California and Oregon, this oak produces acorns that were historically a favorite food of Native American tribes because of lesser amounts of tannins as compared to other oak species' acorns.