GEOG 442

Biogeography

Native Plants in Your Own Neighborhood

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Calflora What Grows Here?

This lab has two purposes:
  • to familiarize you with a wonderful resource for biogeographical exploration: Calflora's What Grows Here
  • to familiarize you with a few of the native plants that have been recorded in your own neighborhoods or other places of interest to you in California.

Get Your Data

First, go to http://www.calflora.org/app/wgh?page=entry, where you're asked to choose how to get into the What Grows Here database. You can pick your own town or Zip code or watershed or whatever with a radio button. Then, click Go.

You'll be asked to fill in the name or Zip or whatever and then Go to location. This brings up a map and a dialogue box. You can filter your search by status (native, rare, invasive, non-native -- let's stick to native), lifeform, blooming season, and various other choices. The Quality box refers to whether the species have only been spotted once in your area or more times and whether the identification is high quality professional or lower quality unvouched for. Area lets you fine-tune by delineating areas on the map (don't go too small!). Points lets you get a map of points where the species has actually been recorded. Results lets you shape the output into a format you like and whether you'd like a picture or just text. Search launches a search constrained by you in one or more of those dialogues.

So, try it out a few times and a few differnt ways. Up will come lists of sometimes hundreds of critters. You can try other filters to reduce the number. Once you've gotten your list, learn about some of your green neighbors.

Organize and Present Your Data

Click on a dozen of the species that seem most interesting to you. Learn a few facts about them, organize them into bullet statements (about half a dozen per species), and assemble your mini-reports into a common word processed document or table (probably 2 pages or so). The bullet statements could include such things as:
  • Latin name(s), common name(s)
  • Life form, e.g., "shrub" or "perennial" or "forb"
  • Location, e.g., "Found in most counties of California"
  • Associated with, e.g., "wetland-riparian" or "Valley grassland" or "chaparral"
  • Flowers, e.g., "composite flower with yellow rays"
  • Height, e.g., "1-2 m"
  • Status, e.g., "rare"
  • Any other item of interest, e.g., "important to butterflies"

The Point, However, Is to Change Your World!

I hope you enjoy learning about what's in your backyard. Maybe, if you're into gardening or even gardening in pots, you could plant a few of the locals (sources: Theodore Payne Foundation, Matilija Nursery, Las Pilitas Nursery, the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, or the .

Happy botanizing (and maybe even gardening)!

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This document is maintained by Dr. Rodrigue
First put on the web: 11/07/07
Last Updated: 04/17/13

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