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Point Reyes National Seashore
Coastal Scrub
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One of the most common plant communities at the Seashore, coastal scrub stretches over much of the gentle hills above the ocean. These plants tolerate abrasive conditions – high winds, little rain, blowing salt spray and poor soils - but still they persist. They make do with the resources they have, keeping short and shrubby, putting extra support into stiff leaves, and growing a long taproot for stability and to reach deep water. Vast tracts of coyote bush indicate that you are in the coastal scrub. The scrub is made up of other shrubs like yellow bush lupine, poison oak, and blackberry and lone stunted conifers. In the southern parts of the park, California sagebrush and California buckwheat replace coytote bush. Springtime finds this community alive with color. A common flower is the sticky monkey-flower, whose flower is orange and resembles a monkey’s face. Bright red Indian paintbrush steals nutrients and water from other plants’ roots. California poppies and Douglas irises also grow in the coastal scrub.
Learn more about the Fire Ecology of Coastal Scrub.
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 Bishop Pine Forest at Point Reyes more... | |  Coastal Grasslands at Point Reyes more... | |  Douglas-fir/Mixed Evergreen Forest at Point Reyes more... | |  Coastal Dunes at Point Reyes more... | |
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Did You Know?
Northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) began breeding at Point Reyes in 1981 after being absent for over 150 years. The population breeds at terrestrial haul out sites at Point Reyes Headland, one of only eleven mainland breeding areas for northern elephant seals in the world.
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Last Updated: May 09, 2008 at 12:39 EST |