- Las Pilitas - Back to Plant Communities - Habitats
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The Mixed Evergreen Forest plant community is found mostly in the northern coastal mountains of California, though extending down to the central coastal mountains. Some of the component species include Tanbark Oak (Lithocarpus densiflora), Madrone (Arbutus menziesii), Douglas Fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), California Bay (Umbellularia californica), Bigleaf Maple (Acer macrophyllum), Canyon Live Oak (Quercus chrysolepis), Black Oak (Quercus kelloggii), Coast Live Oak (Quercus agrifolia) and California Hazelnut (Corylus californica). This forest is filled with leafy trees and few conifers. This makes for a softer looking forest. However this forest is not really that soft. There is often a dense understory of brush and a canopy containing several species of oak (It's so dark you have to use a flash to take a digital picture.)
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Many of the components of the Mixed Evergreen Forest are also found in the Yellow Pine Forest as well as the Redwood Forest. The Mixed Evergreen Forest has a wonderful fresh smell given off by the aromatic California Bay (or California Laurel ) trees. The dense brush and thick evergreen trees are an excellent habitat for birds. There is an abundance of food for wildlife in the form of various acorns as well as California Bay seeds. See http://www.laspilitas.com/bird.htm for more bird information. |
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In some areas there exists nearly solid serpentine soils. Where the conditions would normally dictate Mixed Evergreen Forest, there is a mosaic transition, depending on soil depth, the amount of serpentine rock, and location in California, to Northern Coastal Scrub, Coastal Sage Scrub or Chaparral and then, to a serpentine grassland. We do not separate this as a community because the serpentine plant community is usually the plant community that is supposed to be there, minus the plants that cannot tolerate serpentine. On real 'raw' serpentine areas this will be nearly all seasonal forbs, grasses and bulbs that occur in the adjacent Northern Coastal Scrub, Coastal Sage Scrub, Chaparral, or Mixed Evergreen Forest. The serpentine soil just brings the plant community to extremes. In the Mixed Evergreen Forest the trees and shrubs (Coulter Pine (Pinus coulteri), California Bay (Umbellularia californica), Coffeeberry (Rhamnus californica), California Lilac (Ceanothus papillosus or C. foliosus) give way to bald spots full of bulbs such as Mariposa Lily (Calochortus spp.), and perennials like Coyote Mint (Monardella villosa ), Checker (Sidalcea spp.), Creeping Sage (Salvia sonomensis) and many others. |
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When transpiration (loss of water from plants) exceeds available soil moisture plant communities change. This is minor in Coastal Sage Scrub and very minor in Northern Coastal Scrub but very limiting in Chaparral. Some factors that can affect this moisture limitation can be summer heat, rainfall, summer fog, blowing winds, humidity, depth of soil, etc.. For one example, Mixed Evergreen Forest will change to Chaparral under these conditions. BUT, you can often move Chaparral to Mixed Evergreen Forest! Also, one item that we don't think about too much is that as plants grow they can actually change the climate, just by being there. So, if you have a dry, hot, sunny, open spot and the more trees and shrubs (such as from the Mixed Evergreen Forest) that you grow, the more the climate will change and your spot will be moist, cool, shady, and closed-in! |
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