2. President’s Note
by Barbara G. Phillips bgphillips@fs.fed.us
Coconino, Kaibab and Prescott National Forests, Flagstaff
2 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
What fun to be a member of the Arizona Native Plant Society when
one can share spectacular floral displays with kindred spirits! Spring
is now fully upon us after a very long hard winter. I joined Yuma
Chapter members spotting tiny annuals in the Castle Dome
Mountains in March, and we discovered abundant rare Bigelow
onions at our Tent Rocks Plant Atlas Project of Arizona (PAPAZ)
site in April. The Endangered Arizona cliffrose is greener and
enveloped with more pale yellow flowers than I have ever seen in
over 30 years of monitoring. The rare Pediocacti are in abundant
flower also so maybe this will be the year for the long-anticipated
germination event to reinvigorate the declining populations!
AZNPS is also undergoing change and renewal as State Board
members retire and new people take up their tasks:
Arlene Stigen is resigning as State Treasurer after valiantly
working to create order. Many thanks to you, Arlene, for all your
contributions while on the Board.
Doug Green has been very active in AZNPS in many capacities
for as long as I can remember. He was our State Membership
and Chapter Development Chair and lately has been the
President of the Phoenix Chapter. Doug has been a volunteer
extraordinare throughout the Phoenix area, speaking to
homeowner groups about native landscaping, representing
AZNPS at Invasive Weed Council meetings and numerous other
functions, and selling our AZNPS merchandise and tabling. We
cannot thank you enough, Doug.
We hope you enjoy this issue of The Plant Press. All over the state in
the midst or outskirts of cities (Willow Bend and the Highlands
Center) to further afield, our authors love of their favorite locality
comes through loud and clear. We urge you to not only enjoy
reading about these interesting sites but also to follow directions
and visit these “hidden treasures of Arizona native plants.”
A Jewel Called Ruby continued
our attention. At Ruby you can watch a dazzling array
of birds, from brilliant vermilion flycatchers to great
blue herons. You can glimpse or track deer, raccoon,
bobcat, fox, coyote, javelina; maybe even a coati or
puma. Mine shafts provide a year-round home for some
bats and a seasonal home for thousands of Mexican
free-tailed bats. They come to have their young here,
and every summer night they fly out in dense flickering
ribbons across the evening sky.
With so many birds, bats and mammals, you can
imagine the wealth of insects and the vegetation upon
which this abundance of life depends. Because of the
lakes and arroyos there are willows and some
cottonwoods and other riparian plants. One of the
Ruby lakes drains south into California Gulch where
there are swamps and pools for a good part of the year.
Without cattle, resident humans, and only rare bush
fires, Ruby has lovely stands of native grasses.
Ruby’s hills are clothed with oaks and mesquites, with
manzanita and juniper as you move up the canyons.
Drier slopes are crusted with thick prickly stands of
velvetpod mimosa, shindagger and prickly pear. Among
the rocks you may spot the beautiful rainbow cactus
(Echinocereus rigidissima), as well as the rare golden-
chested beehive cactus (Coryphantha recurvata).
One of my Ruby favorites is the rock trumpet
(Macrosiphonia brachysiphon). Its flowers are long tubes
of white among small dark green leaves. Because it’s a
perennial, you can find it all summer long among the
rocks on Ruby’s hillsides. Its wonderful fragrance can be
inhaled in the freshness of early mornings before that
hot summer sun rises glowing over the brow of
Montana Peak’s eastern ridge.
Another beautiful summer flower is the briefly
blooming Yellowshow (Amoreuxia species) with its
asymmetrical orange flowers and lovely palmate leaves.
above Rainbox cactus (Echinocereus rigidissimus)
produces its spectacular flowers in May.
3. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 3
This unusual perennial grows from a large tuberous root that
desert inhabitants used to dig up and eat.
One of Ruby’s strangest habitats is the tailings area that lies
between the two small lakes with their fish, birds and water
vegetation, and the swampy valley to the south. Little can survive
in these shifting sands, but every morning the fine sand yields a
record of whatever has walked across it in the night. In summer,
huge cicada-killer wasps nest in colonies all round the edges of the
sands. Not aggressive to people, they are deadly to cicadas, which
they paralyze then air-lift back to their burrows to serve as a living
larder for the wasp grubs. Ruby is an entomologist’s delight,
especially from July through September — it has an impressive
variety of butterflies, moths, dragonflies and other insects.
Come to Ruby with the Arizona Native Plant Society. Bats, Bugs
and Botany — trips are offered from time to time. Check the
Happenings, the Society’s newsletter.
For an illustrated and enticing history of Ruby in its heyday, we
recommend Ruby, Arizona: Mining, Mayhem and Murder by Bob
Ring, Al Ring and Tallia Cahoon. Ruby is privately owned but is open to the public Thursday
through Sunday. We would like to thank all the owners of Ruby Mines for saving Ruby and
allowing visitors to share it. Entry fee is $12, or $18 if you want to fish. There are campsites
with an outhouse but no other facilities — bring everything you will need, especially drinking
water. You can call before your visit to get up-to-date information about the roads, campsites,
etc.; the number is 520.744.4471.
From central Tucson it is about 75 miles to Ruby. The fast route is via I-19, Amado and
Arivaca. The slower, but prettier route (sometimes a bit wash-boardy), is via AZ-86, Three
Points, AZ-286 and Arivaca. Either way you get to Arivaca. Once at Arivaca, turn south on
South Fifth Ave., which becomes Ruby Rd. This winding scenic road starts paved but becomes
unpaved about halfway through the 12 miles from Arivaca to Ruby. Our car has low clearance
and no 4WD but always gets through. During the last few miles there are signs warning you
about primitive roads, wildfires and illegal border activity; you may meet cows and streams
wandering across the road, and the Border Patrol is ever-present. All these serve to deter the
faint-hearted. Keep going. The entry to Ruby is clearly sign-posted. Upon arrival, be sure to
check in with the caretaker who lives on site and knows Ruby and surrounding area
thoroughly. He can share his knowledge of medicinal plants as well as much else and help you
enjoy your time in this wonderful “jewel” of an area.
above, left to right Two perennials — rock trumpet
(Macrosiphonia brachysiphon) and yellowshow (Amoreuxia spp.).
below Some of Ruby's habitats: rocky cliffs, oak woods and
grassland slope down to riparian vegetation around a permanent
lake. A prickly pear reclaims the ruins of an adobe house.
4. 4 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Granite Mountain is an easily identifiable landmark
located on the outskirts of Prescott. Surrounded by the
9,799-acre Granite Mountain Wilderness (designated in
1984), it is an island in a sea of developing lands. It offers
the experience of hiking among huge granite boulders,
outstanding views of the surrounding area, and a mosaic of
chaparral, oak and pine woodlands. There are a great
variety of plant habitats due to the unique blend of
location, elevation (over 7,600 ft.) and terrain. Prescott
National Forest Service manages both the Wilderness and the
adjacent Granite Basin Recreation Area.
On southern slopes, chaparral, a community of plants
including shrub live oak (Quercus turbinella), mountain
mahogany (Cercocarpus montanus), pointleaf and yellowleaf
manzanita (Arctostaphylos pungens, A. pringlei), Wright’s
silktassel (Garrya wrightii) and lemonade berry (Rhus
trilobata) dominate with scattered stands of singleleaf pinyon
(Pinus monophylla) and alligator juniper (Juniperus deppeana).
On northern slopes you’ll find pinyon-juniper woodlands and
some ponderosa pine (P. ponderosa) and Emory oak (Q.
emoryi). On the higher elevations ponderosa pine is common.
Mule deer and javelina inhabit the area, along with pronghorn,
mountain lion, bobcat, badger, fox, skunk, coyote, rabbit, and
woodrats. It is also home to collared lizards, horned toads and
blacktail rattlesnakes. Common birds are ravens, red-tailed
hawks, scrub jays, western kingbirds, ash-throated flycatchers,
and phainopeplas.
Only two maintained trails enter the Granite Mountain
Wilderness; several trails skirt its boundaries and are part of
the Granite Basin Recreation Area. Trail #261 takes you to the
top of the mountain. It starts at the Metate trailhead near
Granite Lake and descends into a thin belt of ponderosa pine
along a seasonal stream. The trail continues alongside a dry
wash surrounded by oak and pine woodlands, which become
more and more open, eventually revealing the steep southern
cliffs of the main peak. The cliffs and the area beneath are
home to an endangered population of peregrine falcons, and
are closed during the breeding season (February to July).
The trail climbs the southern slope and flattens at the top of a
ridge. It then curves around a lesser summit, over a level area
and finally up to the base of the peak, where the trail ends. A
little climbing is required to make it to the very top, an area
with flat rocks and a 360-degree view. The walk to this summit
is four miles and gains 2,000 feet.
A different experience can be found hiking Trail #308, the Tin
Trough Trail, which begins at the Williamson Valley Road
trailhead. Trail #308 starts in open grasslands with beautiful
views of Granite Mountain and its surrounding wilderness. The
landscape soon changes to a mix of chaparral, including rabbit
thorn (Lycium pallidum), Fremont mahonia (Mahonia fremontii),
scrub oak, mountain mahogany, lemonade berry, silktassel,
manzanita, and pinyon-juniper woodland. After two miles, the
trail crosses Mint Wash — often a running stream in winter and
after summer storms — and at about 2.5 miles it enters the
Granite Mountain Wilderness. The trail continues for three more
miles through a granite boulder-strewn landscape of pinyon-
juniper woodlands and chaparral.
A particularly delightful time to hike Trail #308 is late April to
early June. Along the trail are patches of miniature woollystar
(Eriastrum diffusum). A rocky slope near the beginning of the
trail is home to the blooms of mariposa lily (Calochortus
ambiguus) and Woodhouse’s phlox (Phlox woodhousei). A little
further down the trail a large stand of Mexican cliffrose (Purshia
stansburiana) may be in full bloom filling the air with their
wonderful scent. Shortly after the trail crosses Mint Wash a large
stand of apache plume (Fallugia paradoxa) may be sporting their
pink feathery plumes. Scattered along the trail are Fremont
mahonia with their clove-scented yellow blooms.
Summer is a great time to explore the areas along Mint Wash.
Sightings of birds in the summer months include black-headed
grosbeaks, Bullock’s orioles, and summer and western tanagers.
These birds are found in the presence of magnificent specimens
of velvet ash (Fraxinus velutina), Fremont cottonwood (Populus
fremontii), and Arizona walnut (Juglans major).
Avoid Trail #308 if it has recently rained — the soil is clay and
will quickly attach itself to your boots! Other than this warning,
these trails have a lot to offer almost anytime of the year.
above Purshia stansburiana.
Granite Mountain:
An Island in a Sea of
Developing Lands
by Sue Smith, Prescott Chapter member
5. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 5
It was 1949. A tall handsome field ecologist rode his horse down the
mountain into the little town of Richfield, Utah. He was noticed by a
beautiful young nurse, Jeanne Brunner, who had recently moved to
Richmond to take care of her father and find employment at the
local hospital. They married the next year and 61 years later the
partnership continues to glow. Jeanne worked to help put Ray
through graduate school. Over the years Jeanne accompanied and
helped Ray in the field and twice to east Africa, co-authoring in 1998,
Kenya’s Changing Landscape. They have three children, Terri, Martin,
and Justin, and four grandchildren.
Ray’s work is a life of esteemed collaborations. For me, on trips to
conferences in Mexico, as one of my professors at the University of
Arizona when I was a sapling, in the herbarium, as a guest in their
home— always time to help, always a smile. I admire Jeanne’s
dedication to home and place, to the neighbors and neighborhood.
Ray and Jeanne — ever a team.
As the wheel of time turns we come to treasure our friends and
mentors and those who have made a difference in everything that we
value. It was with great honor that together with fellow committee
members Andrew Salywon, Wendy Hodgson, Barbara Phillips, Tom
Van Devender and the entire Arizona botanist community, we
presented the Lifetime Achievement Award to Raymond Marriner
Turner and Jeanne Brunner Turner. Sixty-one years is a good start.
“Retired” since 1989, Ray subsequently co-authored or co-edited
four major books: Sonoran Desert Plants: An Ecological Atlas; Kenya’s
Changing Landscape; The Changing Mile Revisited; and Repeat
Photography: Methods & Applications in the Natural Sciences. You can
feast on Ray’s publications at: wwwpaztcn.wr.usgs.gov/ray_cv.html.
For every botanist, for every family member, every human — there
are no better role models than Raymond Marriner Turner and
Jeanne Brunner Turner.
Here are excerpts I read from
two of Ray’s many admirers:
Ben Wilder, graduate student at University of
California, Riverside, student of Exequiel
Ezcurra and collaborator with me on the flora
of Gulf of California islands, wrote:
Dr. Raymond Turner, long-time Sonoran Desert
ecologist and previous head of the Desert Lab at
Tumamoc Hill, has been a guide and inspiration,
and was my usher into my position at the Desert
Lab and the ecological world. As my interest
gravitated toward this field, I realized the significant
contributions of Ray’s work, and have been fortunate to
learn a great deal from his knowledge and demeanor.
One of the things that has always amazed me about
Ray is that he treats every single person, no matter the
circumstances, with the same amount of respect,
attention, and kindness. His work is careful, reasoned,
and well documented allowing for the next generation
of desert ecologists to continue the long-term
investigations he either began or continued from the
generation before him. Life, family and friends always
come before science or work for Ray and Jeanne and this
manner is fully engrained in their family. I have never
met a family as selfless and helpful as the Turners. In
the tradition of the Desert Lab, Ray’s work carefully
peels back the mysteries of the desert ecosystem through
meticulous long-term investigations. When I think
about striking a balance between work and life, there is
no better model to follow than Ray’s. One image I
always have of Ray in my mind is him in the field,
behind his camera matching a historic photograph,
lining up the shot, taking a Polaroid to make sure it is
on line, assessing the changes in the scene, and whistling
all the time, fully engrossed in the moment.
From Bob Webb, USGS in Tucson:
I could talk all day about Ray, my friendship with him,
my collaboration with him, and my respect for his work.
One of my greatest accomplishments was helping to
revise The Changing Mile, a classic book that really
launched my career. This year is the 50th anniversary of
the Desert Laboratory Collection of Repeat
Photography, which Rod Hastings and Ray founded
with initial matches in the Pinacates in June 1960. It is
a major accomplishment that alone could define a
career, but Ray clearly has done far more than that. He
also has helped push me towards long-term
quantification of desert plant demographics, at first in
Grand Canyon, second in the Mojave Desert, and now
at the Desert Lab long-term plots. Finally, the Agave
with the name of Agave turneri is now in press at
Brittonia, honoring his 45 years of plant biogeography
work in Baja California.
Honoring
Ray & Jeanne
Turner
at the Seventh Arizona Botany
Meeting, February 20, 2010
by Richard Felger
6. 6 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Located at the base of the sacred San Francisco Peaks near
Flagstaff, the Nature Conservancy’s (TNC) Hart Prairie
Preserve combines an oasis of beauty and grandeur with
heartfelt land stewardship and restoration ecology.
Home to a globally unique community of Bebb willows
(Salix bebbiana) and the nearly 300 species of native
flowers and grasses, visitors can watch the aspens
gracefully sway in the wind, climb Fern Mountain, study
native plants, watch monsoon storms or sing along with
migratory birds. Volunteers guide nature walks, don chaps
and wield a chainsaw, split wood, haul slash, remove
invasive weeds or participate in the native seed collecting
program with Preserve Manager, Neil Chapman, who
delights in bestowing the tenets of effective and successful
conservation.
There is also a rich human history, as the 125-year-old
homestead at Hart Prairie was the first stop on the
Flagstaff to Grand Canyon stagecoach route. Native
Americans have used this area for thousands of years. The early
populations of people, referred to as “Archaic Indians,” were the
earliest Native Americans known to have been in this area, from
about 7000 B.C. to 300 B.C.
Over the last 100 years, a number of human impacts have
altered the course of this landscape from its original trajectory.
The ponderosa pine forests that today surround the
meadowlands were once far more open, with grassland and an
understory of shrubs filling the open prairie between scattered
large pines. Low-intensity grass fires would sweep through the
area randomly on a two to fifteen year cycle, killing young pine
saplings but leaving the thick-barked older trees intact.
Livestock grazing and active fire suppression have resulted in a
far greater density of young pines, reducing the overall health of
the ecosystem for several reasons. More nutrients are locked in
the biomass of the trees, fallen limbs, and needle litter, and are
not recycled back into soil nutrients as they naturally would be
by fire. There is greater competition for groundwater, and more
tree evapotranspiration, reducing soil moisture from its
previous levels. The existing trees are thus weaker, and dense
forests are more prone to catastrophic fires that kill everything
in their paths, making regeneration much more difficult.
In addition, early settlers channelized the original meandering
streambeds through the prairie in order to bring water to their
cultivated fields. This further reduced natural percolation and
soil retention of water needed by wetland plants such as the
Bebb willows. High numbers of Rocky Mountain elk, which
were introduced to the Peaks early this century, have had a
serious impact on the ability of both the willow community and
surrounding aspen forests to regenerate. Young saplings of both
species are relished by elk. Consequently, most of the stands of
trees are aging, without young replacements. At Hart Prairie
Preserve, aspen and willow saplings exist only within elk
exclosures.
The Nature Conservancy is actively experimenting with
restoring natural processes to the Preserve, and is cooperatively
working with the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), Northern Arizona
University, and the Ecological Restoration Institute to effect
positive changes to the landscape. Fire has been reintroduced to
the prairie successfully, and some of the encroaching ponderosas
have been removed. Stock tanks have been removed, and the
original meandering stream channels have been restored to help
distribute runoff from precipitation throughout the site, and to
recharge the groundwater. Monitoring of rare and significant
plant species and of the hydrologic effects of restoration is
ongoing, with special attention being given to how the
ecosystem responds to management activities.
The Bebb willow-dominated Hart Prairie riparian community is
unique in that it is the largest and most extensive yet driest
known population of this species. The Hart Prairie population
of Bebb willow is in a decadent or declining condition, with
Hart Prairie
Preserve
by Neil Chapman1
and Keri Stiverson2
1
Hart Praire Preserve Manager; 2
Museum of Northern Arizona.
above Salix bebbiana
7. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 7
little natural recruitment.
This decline is not only of
concern because of the
unique nature of the
community, but also
because it supports a wide
variety of species. A
diverse population of
more than 121 bird
species, including at least 23 neo-tropical migrants, makes their
home in the Bebb willow and aspen trees in the Hart Prairie
area. Additionally, TNC has identified 31 mammal, 4 reptiles
and amphibians, and 37 butterfly species.
Primary threats to the Bebb Willow riparian community are:
1) Altered Hydrology: Diversion of water from springs and
seeps; surface modifications (ditches and roads) that interrupt
overland flow; channel entrenchment; and conversion of short
grass prairie to pine stands within the Hart Prairie watershed;
2) Fire Suppression: Fire creates sites and conditions favorable
for Bebb willow recruitment and slows successional processes
detrimental to willows; and
3) Excess Herbivory: Bebb willow is a nutritious and palatable
plant with extreme levels of herbivory by non-native Rocky
Mountain elk.
Due to these threats, this community lacks necessary natural
regeneration and consists primarily of older age classes of
willows. In order for Bebb willow regeneration to be successful,
it requires bare, moist soil and protection from disturbance until
it reaches a viable height to withstand browsing. The restoration
of natural ecological processes and minimization of human-
caused disturbances ensures that new plants and a healthy
riparian community can become established over time.
Working in the lush meadows and drainages at the base of the
San Francisco Peaks on the Hart Prairie Preserve is a rare
treasure. The beauty of the area and the significance of its
ecology make the work of the Budding Botanists (BBs) who
have adopted Hart Prairie as their collection site vital to the
future health of this landscape. In 2009, a partnership began
between TNC and the Arizona Native Plant Society’s Plant Atlas
Project of Arizona (PAPAZ) to aide in the documentation of the
Preserve’s flora. Information garnered by the BBs will assist
TNC in the development of land management practices and
restoration strategies used on the Preserve. This data will also be
used by TNC as they work with the USFS to develop land
management policies for the USFS lands surrounding Hart
Prairie Preserve.
During the 2009 field season small groups of BBs ventured
north to the Preserve to begin collecting voucher specimens that
will later be housed in several herbaria throughout the state. It
was a very dry year and less than half of the nearly 300 species
known to exist at the Preserve were collected. Of those collected,
the vast majority were from the Bebb willow drainages where a
trickle of water managed to persist. Hunkering out of the wind
behind the willows or under the heat of the sun in the open
meadows, BBs worked tirelessly on this important project,
accumulating over 150 volunteer hours. The vibrant deep blue
flowers of the Gentian (Gentiana rusbyi) nestled among the
grasses of the open meadow offered a welcome dash of color
during one of our less spectacular growing seasons. Although it
was dry, the Hart Prairie BBs collected three species not
previously documented on preserve property.
To better aide in directing management efforts, the collection
area of this site has been expanded and now reaches from Forest
Road 151 on the west to the Wilderness area boundary (Arizona
Trail) on the east. While we still have much to collect on
Preserve property, the 2010 season will find us trekking to Fern
Mountain as well as Bismark Lake. The abundant winter
moisture whets our appetite and gives us hope for a wetter 2010
collecting season. We have many years of work ahead of us, but
without the commitment of the BBs this work would take much
longer or perhaps not be done at all. Thanks to all the
wonderful BBs who have worked on this and other PAPAZ
projects. We could not accomplish such meaningful work
without your dedication and passion.
from left Penstemon
virgatus,Helianthella
quinquenervis, Frasera
speciosa
Guided nature walks at the Hart Prairie Preserve are led
every Sunday from June through mid-October. These ninety-
minute walks offer a wonderful opportunity to learn more
about birds, wildflowers, forest ecology, and TNC’s work
across the region. To join the walks, meet at 10am at the Fort
Valley Plaza Shopping Center, 1000 N. Humphreys Street at
the southwest corner by the guardrail. The following items
are essential to the walks — sturdy shoes, sun protection,
rain gear or jacket, and water. Reservations are not required.
For more information, contact The Nature Conservancy at
928.774.8892 x5 or email hartprairie@tnc.org. Due to the
ecologically sensitive area, please, no pets.
8. 8 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Imagine sitting by the cool, babbling waters in Oak Creek with
the leafy fluttering of deciduous trees around you. Now take
yourself along a trail on the Peaks, winding between boulders,
massive logs and hidden wildflowers in a shady mixed conifer
forest. Next, wade through a wide forest meadow where grass
heads tickle your legs and the blue of blooming lupines rival the
sky. Now realize you are wandering between these and other
native habitats — and you’re still in central Flagstaff!
You are in the Backyard Wildlife Demonstration Gardens that
surround the Willow Bend Environmental Education Center in
Sawmill Multicultural Art & Nature County Park, one of my
favorite places in my hometown.
This urban Coconino County park was created within the city
of Flagstaff in 2000 on the south side of the expansive
“brownfield” where the first — and last — sawmill operated
from 1908 to 1993. Downhill from the park, the Rio de Flag
carries snow melt and storm water through the channel of
Sinclair Wash. On the Rio’s curve you can see the namesake of
the Environmental Education Center, a lone willow tree. To the
north, the rocky face of Mount Elden and the broad forests of
the San Francisco Peaks provide the backdrop.
What makes this park unique is the vision the Coconino
County Parks and Recreation Department planners and Willow
Bend educators had in establishing five habitat demonstration
gardens. The Center’s staff and visiting organizations have been
utilizing these replicated habitat plots for convenient public,
school and private classes while conserving on travel time and
expenses. Under an earlier community adoption program, local
organizations and companies with outdoor interests and
sustainability ethics became volunteer groundskeepers of each
of the five gardens. Along with their members, employees
and/or friends, I enjoyed participating in the sponsored planting
parties and regular maintenance of the plots. I personally
adopted the Wetland and Pond for two years because I like to
garden, and I like to play in the mud. The County also registered
these gardens as a National Wildlife Federation Backyard
Wildlife Habitat™ site.
In earlier years the grounds were set up for drip and nighttime
spray irrigation using the City’s reclaimed water. The initial
seeding and transplants benefited from this supplemental
watering, and when I tended the garden at sunrise, I found the
still damp soil easy to work. Recycling household greywater
lessens our dependence on pumping deep wellwater for non-
domestic use. Since the process of recycling water does not
remove many contaminants — the wet garden often smelled of
perfumed laundry detergents — I began wondering what effects
the human hormones and drugs would have on plants and birds
over time. In a 2008 presentation for Northern Arizona
Audubon Society, the Arizona Game and Fish Department
acknowledged over 20 chemicals are not removed during the
process, though they also endorse the use of reclaimed water for
wildlife water. I hope the ongoing research into the effects of
reclaimed water on vegetation and wildlife produces answers
sooner than later.
The gardens continue to evolve with the growth of plants as well
as new conservation and landscaping ideas. Last year Willow
Bend installed a huge rain barrel, adding 1,500 gallons to the
existing 410-gallon harvesting system. Rainwater, not reclaimed
water, will be used for the new food garden on native edible and
heritage crops.
Individual plant identification tags have occasionally been used,
though they focused on only a handful of species. This year, the
Parks Department plans to install secure species signs. Whether
you come with books and keys to test your identification skills
Willow Bend Environmental Education Center:
Learning from Native Landscapes Text and photos by Zack Zdinak1
1
Naturalist, Life Drawing and Education, Flagstaff, Arizona
9. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 9
or simply to revel in the colors, take a stroll through at your own
speed. Plan to visit several times a season to catch the changing
growth, flowering, seeding, and color.
A Walk Through the Five Gardens
With many plants indigenous to habitats around northern
Arizona, these gardens provide a convenient place for adults and
children to learn about our region’s biodiversity. Initially, native
seed mixes were sown. Some perennial plants have persisted for
many years. With years of additional native plants purchased
and donated by local nurseries and green-thumbed home
gardeners, the assemblages are impressive. Visit the gardens
through the season to witness the changes in growth, blooming
and fruiting. You may come during exceptionally wet or dry
times to find different species thriving. Look for evidence of the
several species of woody shrubs and trees that persistently root
sprout. This natural growth in this limited space requires active
pruning to accommodate the wide variety of species established
for public viewing in these demonstration gardens. Consider
situations where root sprouting could be a detriment or a
benefit for home gardeners.
The Pond and Wetland Garden
The low depression in front of the Willow Bend Center parking
lot receives water from snowmelt and summer rains like many
ephemeral wetlands in northern Arizona. A variety of sedges
and rushes grows best in the lowest, wettest portion. Check to
see if northern water plantain or cardinal flower are persisting
along the muddy edges. Up the gradual slopes of this basin, look
for wild delphinium, cut-leaf coneflower, wild bergamot,
Missouri goldenrod, harebells and big bluestem. Woody plants
around this wetland include red-ozier dogwood, water birch,
narrow-leaf cottonwood and trembling aspen. The backdrop to
the wetland is a low ridge of coyote or sandbar willow.
As you walk the path toward the Willow Bend Center building,
take time to sit on the bench between the coyote willows and a
thinleaf alder, to enjoy the sound and sight of the stony water
feature babbling into the tranquil pond. Both yellow and red
monkeyflower have graced the waterfall. Dragonflies of several
species are often patrolling the pool between the cattails. Look
for canyon grape, Virginia creeper, virgin’s bower and an
Arizona walnut in the surrounding foliage.
The subtle movement and sound of the pond also attract local
birdlife to drink and bathe. One May, a male blue grosbeak
began territorial singing around this tiny oasis. Unfortunately,
no female took up his offer and he left by the middle of June.
The winter of 2005-06, a ruddy ground dove frequented the
willow thicket from December to March. Though this primarily
Mexican species does move into Arizona deserts in the winter,
this occurrence was unusually far north.
The Forest Garden
The forest plot wraps around the west and north sides of the
Willow Bend Center building and expands behind the pond.
Visitors can view the plot from the sidewalk to the front door, or
along the path from the east corner of the parking lot to the
building. Ponderosa pine, Bigtooth maple and New Mexico
locust are the tree species here. Large boulders and a massive log
add structure to separate this plot from the Pond and Wetland
Garden and transports garden strollers into a sense of the
littered forest floor. The shade on the north side of the building
creates a cooler, shaded forest environment, retaining more soil
moisture than sunnier areas. Look for creeping barberry, golden
pea, Arizona sweet pea, Arizona valerian (hardy plants left of the
front door), western red columbine, silvery lupine, purple
geranium and pearlseed. Depending on the Park’s maintenance
and pruning schedule, you may see subtle or overwhelming root
sprouting of the locust and Wood’s rose, a serious growth habit
of these plants to consider for home gardens!
The Lizard Garden
Planned to mimic exposed sunny habitats like Mount Elden and
rocky ridges in lower pinyon-juniper forests, this garden began
living up to its wildlife name by the second year when local tree
lizards gave their approval. When you visit, keep an eye out for
short-horned lizards on the rocks, too; they are common in our
local forests and are bound to show up in the gardens sooner or
later.
Circling pathways and a large mounded bed give viewers ample
opportunity to find the typical wildflowers. Between the pinyon
pine and alligator juniper, look for the plains prickly pear and
claret cup cactus, Sunset Crater penstemon, Colorado four
o’clock, Parry’s agave, banana and narrow-leaf yuccas.
Additional shrubby plants create a border between the path and
downhill slope. Rabbitbrush, squawbush, cliffrose and fernbush
are locally common. Beargrass occurs in Oak Creek Canyon and
other mid-elevation area to our south. Big sagebrush range over
much of the intermountain west south to the Grand Canyon’s
Coconino plateau and northeast Arizona.
Big sagebrush was included in native seeds used for restoration
after the widening of Rt. 180 north of Flagstaff and the Sunset
Crater National Monument turnoff over 10 years ago. Over the
years, I’ve noted its roadside establishment and gradual spread.
Time will tell if they will continue to spread out of the local
highway right-of-ways. This scenario has me keeping vigil of my
home garden (yes, I have a big sagebrush, too, and other non-
local native species) as well as my neighborhood for seedlings of
non-local plants I may be introducing!
The Hummingbird Garden
The furthest garden centers around a stone water basin, ringed
with golden columbine. A nearby bench accommodates those
who want to stay to watch the animated interaction of
hummingbirds as they feed and socialize. Broad-tailed
hummingbirds (the green ones) return to our area in late March
or early April, nesting through the summer and heading south
in late September. Rufous hummingbirds (the orange ones)
migrate north mostly through California, nesting in the Pacific
Northwest states and provinces. Migrating south early, this
species comes back to Arizona by mid-July, adding noisy and
comical interactions with the green guys.
continued ne
continued next page
10. Red flowers attract the hummers, so this plot is planted with
firecracker and scarlet bugler penstemon. Since these bird brains
are smart, they do test flowers of all colors. In my home gardens,
hummingbirds show a preference for golden over red columbine
(hmmm, they do have much larger nectar-producing spurs).
New Mexico vervain, and even the diminutive mat penstemon
are also visited for sweets.
The Wildflower Garden
A wide open, sunny meadow fills the space on the side of the
Willow Bend Center. Depending on the season, I have seen a
variety of sun-loving plants growing, blooming and fruiting.
Look for Rocky Mountain iris, yarrow, paintbrush, skyrocket,
poison milkweed, decumbent goldenrod, sunflowers and purple
aster. Grasses like Arizona fescue, blue grama and others fill in
between the flowering forbs.
Lesser goldfinches, dark-eyed juncos and other birds frequent
this field for seed and insects on the ground or for seed in the
feeder the Willow Bend staff offers. But to be truly an authentic
meadow, this garden needs native rodents to aerate the soil and
keep the plants on their toes. Northern pocket gophers have
crossed the pavement to the parking lot island strip along
Sawmill Road where tasty tulip bulbs have been planted (how
did they know?). But to date I have not seen their burrows or
hills in this or any of the gardens.
10 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Nature Trail to Reclaimed Wetland
Across the sidewalk opposite Willow Bend’s front door, a stone
lined path descends the hill slope to the Rio de Flag’s channel
(actually this is Sinclair Wash; the Rio’s name came with
upstream diversions decades ago). Since the ephemeral channel
usually runs dry, there is no bridge. Crossing the streambed, the
path connects to the Flagstaff Urban Trail System, or FUTS as it’s
known for short (some say the literal “futs”, some say “foots”). Be
aware: this wider path is multi-use and may have bicycle and
jogging traffic; it is best to step off the path for them.
Turning to the left or downstream, the Sinclair Wash Trail winds
through a shaded ravine under Gambel oak and ponderosa
pine. Beneath the trees and on rocky slopes, look for Arizona
honeysuckle, wild candytuft, golden and red columbines,
Arizona valerian, creeping barberry, leatherflower and golden
pea. After a couple of curves, the forest opens to a meadow, the
actual confluence of the Rio de Flag and Sinclair Wash. On that
short walk, the surface geology has changed from basalt to
Kaibab limestone. The pathway curves around a low ridge.
Arizona grape, virgin’s bower, taperleaf, squawbush, and
snowberry grow on the sunny portions of the limestone slope.
Several signs along this portion of trail interpret the history of
flooding, stream relocation and the natural history of the Rio de
Flag drainage.
alligator juniper,Juniperus
deppeana
Arizona fescue,Festuca arizonica
Arizona honeysuckle,Lonicera
arizonica
Arizona sweet pea,Lathyrus
arizonicus
Arizona valerian,Valeriana
arizonica
Arizona walnut,Juglans deppeana
banana yucca,Yucca baccata
beargrass,Nolina bigelovi
big sagebrush,Artemisia
tridentada
big-bluestem,Andropogon gerardii
bigtooth maple,Acer
grandidentatum
blue grama,Bouteloua gracilis
canyon grape,Vitis arizonica
cardinal flower,Lobelia cardinalis
cattail,Typha latifolia
claret cup cactus,Echinocereus
coccineus
cliffrose,Purshia stansburiana
Colorado four o’clock,Mirabilis
multiflora
coyote or sandbar willow,Salix
exigua
creeping barberry,Mahonia repens
cut-leaf coneflower,Rudbeckia
laciniata
decumbent goldenrod,Solidago
decumbens
fernbush,Chamaebatiaria
millefolium
firecracker,Penstemon barbatus
Gambel oak,Quercus gambelii
golden columbine,Aquilegia
chrysantha
golden pea,Thermopsis montana
harebells,Campanula parryi
leatherflower,Clematis hirsutissima
Missouri goldenrod,Solidago
missouriensis
narrow-leaf cottonwood,Populus
angustifolia
narrow-leaf yucca,Yucca
angustissima
New Mexico locust,Robinia
neomexicana
New Mexico vervain,Verbena
macdougalii
northern water plantain,Alisma
triviale
paintbrush,Castilleja spp.
Parry’s agave,Agave parryi
pearlseed,Macromeria viridiflora
pineleaf penstemon,Penstemon
linariodes
pinyon pine,Pinus edulis
plains prickly pear,Opuntia
polyacantha
poison milkweed,Asclepias
subverticillata
ponderosa pine,Pinus ponderosa
purple aster,Machaeranthera
canescen
purple geranium,Geranium
caespitosum
rabbitbrush,Ericameria nauseosa
red monkeyflower,Mimulus
cardinalis
red-ozier’s dogwood,Cornus
sericea
Rocky Mountain iris,Iris
missouriensis
rushes,Juncus spp.
scarlet bugler,Penstemon eatonii
sedges,Carex spp.
silvery lupine,Lupinus argenteus
skyrocket,Ipomopsis aggregata
snowberry,Symphoricarpos albus
squawbush,Rhus trilobata
sunflowers,Helianthus spp.
Sunset Crater penstemon,
Penstemon clutei
taperleaf,Pericome caudata
thinleaf alder,Alnus tenufolia
trembling aspen,Populus
tremuloides
virgin’s bower,Clematis
ligusticifolia
Virginia creeper,Parthenocissus
quinquefolia
water birch,Betula occidentalis
western red columbine,Aquilegia
desertorum
wild bergemont,Monarda fistulosa
wild candytuft,Thlaspi montanum
or Noccaea montana
wild delphinium,Delphinium spp.
yarrow,Achillea spp.
yellow monkeyflower,Mimulus
guttatus
bald eagle,Haliaeetus
leucocephalus
blue grosbeak,Passerina caerulea
broad-tail hummingbirds,
Selasphorus platycercus
dark-eyed junco,Junco hyemalis
lesser goldfinch,Carduelis psaltria
ruddy ground dove,Columbina
talpacoti
rufous hummingbird,Selasphorus
rufus
northern pocket gopher,
Thomomys talpoides
short-horned lizard,Phrynasoma
douglassii
tree lizard,Urosaurus ornatus
Below is a list of scientific names of plants and animals mentioned in the article:
Willow Bend Environmental Education Center continued
continued next page
11. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 11
For more information, visit these websites:
www.coconino.az.gov/parks — Sawmill Multicultural Art &
Nature County Park, Coconino County Parks and Recreation
Department. The Park has a bike rack and public restrooms
at the parking lot.
www.willowbendcenter.org — Willow Bend Environmental
Education Center. For hours and events, call 928.779.1745.
www.flagstaff.az.gov/index.aspx?nid=1379 — Flagstaff
Urban Trail System, or the City of Flagstaff Visitor Center at
www.flagstaffarizona.org/playing_parks.html
EDUCATION AND OUTREACH COMMITTEE REPORT
First Meeting of SEINet participants at Arizona
Sonoran Desert Museum a great success!
by Wendy Hodgson, Education and Outreach Committee Chair
“The Southwest Biodiversity Consortium (SBC) is an
organization of individuals and institutions devoted to
specimen-based knowledge sharing and development of digital
resources that facilitate the preservation of biodiversity. The area
of interest is the southwestern US and northwestern Mexico.
The Consortium unites data providers, agency scientists, the
scientific community, and interested public, encouraging a
democratic dialogue in an open forum environment for the
rapid exchange of ideas. The primary goals of the SBC are to
advance the value of natural history collections and the role they
play in society for understanding life and global change.”1
Many of you are already familiar, and use the plant database
SEINet swbiodiversity.org/seinet/index.php, which is under the
umbrella of the SBC and serves as the single access point for
botanical specimens held in 21 herbaria from 5 western states
(Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, California), and the
Mexican state of Sonora. The majority of the data providers of
the SBC are herbaria, but it also includes fauna collection and
observational data. We are excited that MABA, or Madrean
Archipelago Biodiversity Assessment Project, is in collaboration
with SEINet now, under the management of AZNPS Board
member, Tom VanDevender (see
www.madrean.org/maba/symbfauna/).
The first meeting involving all collections currently participating
in SEINet and interested parties took place on February 19th at
the Arizona Sonoran Desert Museum in Tucson, the day before
the Arizona Botany Meeting. Thirty one participants attended.
Corinna Gries, Tom Nash and Ed Gilbert led the exciting
discussions during the meeting, a testament to the success and
support SEINet has already garnered. Committees were formed,
including an Outreach Committee to give the program greater
exposure to families, children, land managers and others, an
Organizational Committee responsible for policies,
responsibilities and finance, and a Rare Species Committee.
SEINet is already a wonderful database, but all those present at
the meeting are very excited at the prospect of making it even
better, further connecting and educating people with plants. Did
you know that from the end of February through the end of
March of this year there were 9848 visits to SEINet, and most
were new (66%)? And that they came from 129 countries, as far
away as India (thank you to Ed Gilbert for this information)?
The program is always being updated, tweeked or provided with
new additions and fun surprises, so check it out and keep using
it!
1
Excerpted from the Southwest Biodiversity Consortium website:
http://swbiodiversity.org/
In addition to natural runoff from the Sinclair Wash and Rio de
Flag, this perennial cattail marsh receives supplemental water
from the Rio de Flag Water Reclamation Plant up the hill to the
east. The FUTS trail merges with a maintenance road as it
follows the outflow from the marsh under the I-40 bridges.
South of I-40 a wider, deeper basin creates an open pond with
limited cattails on the shoreline. Wintering waterfowl and bald
eagle take advantage of the ice-free water in the pond and
upstream marsh. Songbirds and shorebirds frequent the
environs during migration, and a handful of riparian species
nest here during the summer. (Caution: the polluted water can
smell pretty bad at times.) The pond is a little more than half
mile from Willow Bend and Sawmill Park.
Visit Sawmill Park for Education and Ideas
Are you a backyard gardener? Looking for ideas on what native
plants work well in a garden? Parents, are you looking for easily
accessed, recreational and educational outdoor experiences with
your kids? These free, growing gardens are here to provide
information and examples on how the community, and you,
too, can reclaim degraded sites and incorporate native plants
into your home or business landscapes. They are also a great
place to just come smell the flowers!
Willow Bend Environmental Education Center continued
12. 12 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Charismatic megafauna seem to get all of the attention
sometimes: a remote camera captures a photograph of an ocelot
or a jaguar in Sonora or Arizona, or a wolverine in California,
and it’s front-page news and on NPR (National Public Radio).
People love the large furry exotic animals. Land conservation
efforts often rally around a charismatic animal as symbolic of
the need to preserve. But there are other things living on the
land that are also fascinating, rare or threatened, and in need of
preservation. As members of the Arizona Native Plant Society,
you know this well.
Sky Island Alliance is a regional conservation organization
working to preserve the native biodiversity of the Sky Island
region: roughly, southeastern Arizona, southwestern New
Mexico, northern Sonora and northern Chihuahua. The Sky
Island Region is a permanent home for many species and a
temporary home for other migrating species. Situated between
the Sierra Madre to the south and the Rocky Mountains to the
north, the several dozen mountain islands that are the Sky
Islands, with the desert and grassland valley “seas” between
them, are globally important. Temperate species reach the
southernmost extent of their range here, while tropical species
reach the northernmost extent of theirs.
The rapid altitude gradients of mountains such as the
Chiricahuas, Pinaleños, Sierra Azul, Sierra del Tigre, and others
compress multiple lifezones in a small area—resulting in a wide
variety of habitat types and overlapping species ranges. The
region is special; Conservation International has named the Sky
Island region a World Biodiversity Hotspot. The region is
sensitive: in the U.S., rapid population growth and the
accompanying pressures of increased urbanization and
motorized recreation threaten to fragment and destroy
important wildlands habitats. In Mexico, a land tenure system of
mostly private ranchlands presents challenges to landscape-level
conservation efforts. Nevertheless, this region deserves
preservation—we are working towards that one step at a time.
In Santa Cruz County, Sky Island Alliance has been leading the
campaign to gain Wilderness designation for the Tumacacori
Highlands. Roughly 83,000 acres of the Coronado National
Forest’s Nogales District, the Tumacacori Highlands encompass
the Tumacacori, Atascosa, and Pajarita mountain ranges, as well
as Bear Valley and the Bartolo complex. This is wide-open
country—and it is rugged country. One can hike there all day
and not see another person. One can find year-round water in
small pools and tinajas. One can explore side canyons that open
into boulder-filled bowls. One can climb peaks that offer
expansive views of southern Arizona and northern Mexico.
We have led several hikes in the Tumacacori Highlands for the
Sierra Club and the University of Arizona Ramblers hiking club.
Every time, we find some new little treasure. Every time,
someone sees it for the first time and is amazed by the beauty
above The east side of the Tumacacoris courtesy Mike Quigley.
A Wilderness of Plants by Mike Quigley1
and Drew Milsom2
1
Wilderness Campaign Coordinator, Sky Island Alliance;
2
Senior Lecturer, Department of Physics, University of Arizona.
13. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 13
and wildness. And every time, we are reminded how fortunate
we are to have places like this, and how fragile they are.
In Bartolo Canyon we came across a scour pool of water in the
heat of the day; the fact that it is north-facing kept it in shade
with moss clinging to the spillway rocks. Columbines, with their
cilantro-like leaves and brilliant yellow blooms, covered the
damp earth and reached for the sky.
In Alamo Canyon we have found running water and Fremont
cottonwoods (“alamo” being Spanish for “cottonwood”). In
Ramanote Canyon we have walked beside velvet ash and netleaf
hackberry looking for Chiricahua leopard frogs and attracting
chiggers. In Peñasco Canyon we have found fallen leaves
reminiscent of eastern autumn hiking. In Bear Valley we have
rested under Emory oaks. On Atascosa Peak we have looked
over manzanita and into Mexico.
And there are plants that live in the Tumacacori Highlands that
are rare as well as noteworthy. For example, there are Agave
parviflora (Santa Cruz striped agave)—the smallest species of
agave in Arizona; Coryphantha recurvata (Santa Cruz beehive
cactus); Graptopetalum bartramii (Bartram stonecrop), a nice
little stonecrop. There are Macroptilium supinum (supine bean),
a small member of the pea family with pinkish purple flowers
found in southern Arizona and into Sonora; and Choisya mollis
(Santa Cruz starleaf), a green flowering shrub endemic to the
Tumacacori Highlands.
There are also Abutilon parishii (Pima Indian mallow),
Metastelma mexicanum (Wiggin’s milkweed vine), Pectis
imberbis (Beardless chinch weed)—all Species of Concern.
There are Carex spissa var. ultra (Arizona giant sedge), Laennicia
eriophylla (Woolly fleabane), Penstemon discolor (Catalina
beardtongue), Muhlenbergia dubioides (Box canyon muhly), and
M. xerophila (Weeping muhly)—all species considered sensitive
by the U.S. Forest Service, the last two known only in
southeastern Arizona.
If we are to preserve the native biodiversity of the Sky Island
region, we must protect intact habitat like the Tumacacori
Highlands. The area is predominantly roadless, yet is within an
hour’s drive of more than one million people—and counting.
Wilderness designation by the U.S. Congress is both appropriate
and needed for the Tumacacori Highlands. Wilderness
designation directly restricts motorized and mechanized uses on
public lands—an excellent tool for preserving roadless areas of
the National Forests—and directs the land management agency
to manage the land primarily for its natural characteristics.
When we talk about pretty canyons, rock pools and columbines,
oak grasslands, spectacular views; when we talk about jaguars
and leopard frogs and beehive cacti; we are talking about natural
characteristics, about habitat, about native biodiversity. It’s all
connected; it is all important.
Oh, one more thing: on the east side of the Tumacacori
Highlands is the Wild Chile Botanical Reserve, created in 1999
to preserve an area where one of the world’s northernmost
population of native chiles—the chiltepin (Capsicum annuum
var. aviculare)—thrives on the rocky slopes and canyons
between desert and mountains. Wiry and fiery, the chiltepin is
the ancestor of modern chiles and has a rich heritage with
Aztec, Spanish, Mexican, and now American people. It is nice to
see conservation efforts focused on plants, and the importance
of plants to human civilization and culture. It is nice to celebrate
and protect what’s important and special about the Sky Island
region we call home. And yes, like jaguars, chiltepins have been
featured on NPR.
from left Closeup of columbine flower courtesy
Jessica Lamberton.Columbines in Bartolo Canyon
courtesy Drew Milsom.
14. 14 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Flagstaff cinquefoil (Potentilla sanguinea, formerly P.
thurberi var. sanguinea), is a showy species endemic to
the area east and south of Flagstaff and currently known
from only a handful of locations. It has been elevated to
species status by Barbara Ertter at UC-Berkeley, and the
species description will be published in a forthcoming
edition of Flora of North America. Natureserve ranks the
taxon (under its previous status as a subspecies) as T1
and N1, critically imperiled, because of extreme rarity or
because of some factor(s) such as very steep declines
making it especially vulnerable to extirpation from the
jurisdiction in which it is found.
The type specimen was collected by D.T. MacDougal in
July 1898 “about Walnut Canyon” at 7,000 ft. It was first
described by Per Axel Rydberg in 1908 as a perennial,
with a thick woody tap-root, a very short caudex and 50-
60 cm tall stems. Interestingly, Rydberg’s description
describes rose-purple petals, which may be simply an
artifact of the drying process, for this former variety of P.
thurberi is distinguished from the other varieties in
possessing petals that are red-orange around the edges and maroon
toward the center. Another defining characteristic is that the lower
pair of leaflets is often offset by a millimeter or two from the others.
Leaflets are green and only sparsely hairy on both sides, with the
teeth often confined to the upper half of the leaflet (P. thurberi is
always toothed toward the base), but some are toothed from the apex
to the base. It flowers mainly from July to September.
The current and past known range of P. sanguinea is defined by a
rough rectangle within Coconino County, from southern Flagstaff
east to Walnut Canyon, south to the Bar M drainage, and west to
Oak Creek Canyon. The natural habitat of this species is currently
unknown due to a paucity of known populations. Existing
documented populations are subject to roadbuilding and road
salting activities, expansion of social trails, automobile traffic and
overcollecting.
Another interesting side note: apparently seeds of this species have
been collected from the wild and then cultivated and sold in the
horticultural trade, for it has been observed growing in various
gardens around Flagstaff. Amateur and professional botanists alike
can greatly assist conservation efforts of this species by searching for
it within and around the known range and determining GPS
locations so that this information can be reported to the Coconino
National Forest and the Arizona Game and Fish Department.
SPOTLIGHT ON A NATIVE PLANT
Flagstaff Cinquefoil
by Judy Springer, Ecological Restoration Institute,
Northern Arizona University
Judith.Springer@nau.edu
Wildflower Posters
in the classrooms!
AZNPS would like to get our wildflower posters into
the classroom! We need you to adopt a school nearest
you, or one that your child attends. Your assignment,
should you choose to accept it, is to (1) send us the
school name and address along with the teacher’s
name so that we can mail the posters (we have two —
Northern Arizona Wildflowers and Sonoran Desert
Wildflowers) with an introductory letter to your
favorite school, and 2) follow up with the teacher(s)
to make sure they got their posters, 3) work with a
chosen teacher who wants to do a class project about
our native plants, letting us know what you are doing.
If you can’t do the last item, then perhaps someone
else can step in? The important first step is to get our
posters distributed! Send information to: Nancy
Zierenberg by email — nzberg4@cox.net — or by
snail mail — AZNPS, POB 41206, Tucson AZ 85717.
And thank you for helping!
15. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 15
Look up while hiking any of our trails, and if you spot a large
untidy nest of sticks high in the branches of a pine, you will
have found the nest of the Abert squirrel, an animal dependent
upon the ponderosas for its whole way of life. Look down and
you will see one of the reasons why. The “crumbs” are left by the
squirrel — chewed up pine cones and, where you see the green
tips of the pines littering the forest floor, little “squirrel snacks,”
— those very small fresh, white twigs, the inner bark upon
which our Abert has been dining! At the base of the giant tree
trunks there are often many scuffle marks showing that Abert
has been busy searching for another favorite food, the “false
truffle, ”a hypogeous mycorrhizal fungus, whose spores pass
through the digestive tract of a mammal and form additional
mycorrhizae with their host plants, the ponderosa pines.
Another important species in the forest and woodland (and
some great specimens occur on and near our trail system) is the
alligator juniper. The cones, or “berries,” taste very sweet when
perfectly ripe, and if the frequent big piles of seed-filled scat are
anything to go by, then we know that coyote has a very sweet
Through my office window I see ponderosa pines (Pinus
ponderosa), alligator junipers (Juniperus deppeana), oaks
(Quercus spp.), Arizona grape (Vitis arizonica), blue skies,
and wispy white clouds as almost the icing on the cake.
There isn’t a workday goes by that I don’t marvel at my
good fortune to work in place like this doing the work
that I do.
The Highlands Center for Natural History is a non-profit
environmental educational organization teaching children
and adults about the natural world so they become wise
caretakers of the land — this land I see outside my
window, and land wherever they happen to live. Our
facility is LEED Certified Gold and is located in Prescott
on an 80-acre piece of the Prescott National Forest within
the Lynx Lake Recreational Area. As Education Director I
do have to tap away on computer keys, gaze endlessly at a
screen, attend meetings, and be professionally serious
some of the time! But the work, and the world, comes
alive for me when I can spend it outside, in the woods,
with kids. Luckily, that happens often, and groups of us
are often found early in the morning disappearing down
any one of a number of trails on our site, never to be seen
again until late in the afternoon.
Our trails traverse a microcosm of the greater Central Arizona
Highlands region and here we are blessed with plants from a
variety of ecosystems and perfect for introducing people to the
complexity and diversity of plants in the Highlands. It’s true, we
don’t have the Sonoran Desert flora, such as ocotillo (Fouqueria
splendens), saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea), creosote bush (Larrea
tridentata) and so on, all of which are within an hour’s drive of
Prescott (towards Bagdad), but we do still have some old,
majestic ponderosa pines scattered throughout the site, in spite
of the Ips bark beetle kill of 2002-2003. Unfortunately those
trees that succumbed to the beetle now lie on the forest floor,
having fallen or been chopped down for the safety of hikers on
the trail, but they still provide wonderful habitat for a myriad of
small critters most people barely take the time to discover. Let’s
face it, nature models the natural forces and cycles of life, and
with the death of those that have lived a good long life there is
now opportunity for the younger pines and other species, such
as wildflowers and grasses, to germinate and fill the gaps
previously occupied by the elder pines.
The Highlands Center
for Natural History
by Fiona Reid1
above Sunflowers and pines.
1
Education Director, The Highlands Center for Natural History,
Prescott, Arizona continued next page
16. 16 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
tooth! But time should be taken by anyone wandering our
trails to sit beneath one of these very old trees. They provide
wonderful shade throughout the year, and the feel of the
solid, reptilian looking bark as one leans against it gives a
sense of permanence and of solidity and of belonging. Not a
bad way to think or feel in this age of fidgety folks who find
it difficult to set roots in one definite place.
Pinyon pines (Pinus edulis) are plentiful although perhaps a
little frail, less lush-looking than the same species found on
other sites, due to the presence of pinyon needle scale. These
little sucking insects are doing well here, unfortunately, and
my personal concern is for the scrub jays that love the pine
nuts and are thus largely responsible for further recruitment
of pinyon pine trees. Less healthy trees means less cones
produced; less cones equals less nuts; less nuts may equal
less scrub jay nut dispersal; less nut dispersal equals less
germination of seeds, equaling less pinyon pines in our
forest. And, perhaps, such is the way and mystery of nature.
So into the chaparral and the glory (as I write) of the full
flowering of the manzanita (Arctostaphylus sp.). How sweet the
honey perfume; how natural that fellow animals such as early
hummingbirds and tiny bees also find the perfume enticing, and
nectar so sweet. Although it just occurred to me that the
hummingbird may also be munching on the insects feeding on
the flower. Buckbrush (Ceanothus sp.) is also found along the
trail giving us, at this time of flowering, glimpses of butterflies
alighting on its tiny white flowers. A single patch of Apache
plume (Fallugia paradoxa), a rose by any other name, on Trail
442 near the feeder wash to Lynx Creek surprises the observer
with its pale, fluffy-looking seedheads later in the year. I think
(since it loves full sun) that the patch has grown considerably
since the cutting of a huge old beetle-killed ponderosa pine. In
late summer, the conspicuous rich pink and purple flowers of a
patch of New Mexican locust (Robinia neomexicana) grace an
outdoor bench amphitheater. Cool and shady under the pines,
and close to a natural underground water supply, this little patch
is directly in the run zone of a number of games played by
summer camp children. It doesn’t take them long to learn about
this plant — you could call it perfect experiential education.
The thorns on the plant protect it well from children!
Interspersed along the trail can be found banana yuccas (Yucca
baccata), beargrass (Nolina microcarpa), claret cup cacti
(Echinocereus coccinea), as well as Engelmann’s prickly pear
(Opuntia engelmannii). Of course we have an abundance of the
scrub (Quercus turbinella), Emory (Q. emoryi), and gray oaks
(Q. grisea), with the occasional Gambel oak (Q. gambelii) down
at the creek. Mountain mahogany (Cercocarpus montanus)
needs to be sought out, hiding itself tightly within other
chaparral species. The creek provides us the shade of Arizona
alders (Alnus oblongifolia), both alive and dead, the former for
the shade it affords the creek and the latter, fallen, giving
children many hours of pleasure while building bridges over the
creek. Velvet ash (Fraxinus velutina), wax currant (Ribes
cereum), Arizona black walnut (Juglans major), Arizona grape,
and Arizona rose (Rosa woodsii) are among the other species of
plants to be found along or near the creek. On the way down to
the creek, along Trails 305 and 442, the visitor passes through a
couple of clearings we grandly call our grasslands. Invasive
species of grasses and other forbs and wildflowers make the
most of these sunny, disturbed patches and eventually, when
time and money allow, we hope to restore these to more native,
meadow species. In the meantime we must simply enjoy and
understand the benefits of the many bees and butterflies that the
invasives — the horehound (Marrubium vulgare), poison
hemlock (Conium maculatum), toadflax (Linaria dalmatica),
and white sweet clover (Melilotus alba) — bring to the site. A
perfect world, let alone a perfect natural world, does not exist.
We can boast some of the more common but nonetheless
beautiful native grasses, such as blue grama (Bouteloua gracilis)
and sideoats grama (B. curtipendula), and deergrass
(Muhlenbergia rigens), and as long as we have those I am
content.
This is just a sampling of some of the flora one might expect to
see while wandering our trails. Slow down and enjoy what is
here. Stop and investigate. The world is worth it.
The Highlands Center for
Natural History continued
above Through day camps, family programs, school programs, field
studies, lectures, workshops, and other activities, the Highlands
Center reachs over 10,000 children and adults each year.
17. www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 17
Have you ever been to the Hualapai Reservation? If you have, it
was most likely because you were taking Diamond Creek Road
down to or up from the Colorado River on a river trip. If so, you
might remember what a beautiful road this is geologically, and
what an interesting amount of diversity there is in the plants of
this area.
The Hualapai, who live centered around the town of Peach
Springs on their reservation, are a wonderful and generous tribe
of people. The translation of Hualapai is “People of the Tall
Pine,” and the spread of plants in their traditional area ranges
from ponderosa in high elevations to sagebrush in mid
elevations to ocotillo and other Sonoran desert plants at the
lower elevations by the river. Phyllis Hogan, co-founder and
director of the Arizona Ethnobotanical Research Association
(AERA), has been working with tribal elders such as Lucille
Watahamogie and Malinda Powsky since the 1980s on reviving
the Hualapai ethnobotany. Recently, Carrie Cannon has been
working with those same elders and a whole new generation of
youth to practice some of the traditional ways of harvesting and
preparing plants. The Hualapai Ethnobotany Project has been
sponsoring yearly agave pit roasts (viyal in Hualapai), which was
a main staple food and has a sweet, fermented taste. Skunkbush
sumac (gith’e) berries are fun to harvest and make a sour drink
like lemonade. The Project has been holding traditional feasts,
featuring foods like mesquite flour (na:l) and prickly pear jam
(alav).
Wendy Hodgson from the Desert Botanical Garden has also
been working, along with the AERA, the Ethnobotany Project,
and the Hualapai Tribe to update their herbarium. There are
some fabulous cacti growing along Diamond Creek road,
including prickly pears, chollas, hedgehogs, fishhooks, and barrel
cacti. Of special interest is Cylindropuntia abysii, a species of
cholla which seems to be a hybrid between two more common
species, and only is found in this area. Next time you are driving
down to the Colorado River from Peach Springs, enjoy the
wonderland of cacti dotting the hillside, and imagine what it was
like centuries ago to survive on only the plants you could find by
foot. We are lucky, through the Hualapai, to have access to this
fabulous botanical goldmine.
ETHNOBOTANY: PEOPLE USING NATIVE PLANTS
Hualapai Ethnobotany
by Jessa Fisher, Flagstaff Chapter member nightbloomingcactus@yahoo.com
above Wendy Hodgson teaches Hualapai youth how to collect and press plants for the Hualapai herbarium.
18. Who’s Who at AZNPS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Suzanne Cash, Director, Secretary
roxiep@msn.com
C. Douglas Green, Director, Phoenix Chapter
President azbotman@yahoo.com
Wendy Hodgson, Director, Education &
Outreach Committee Chair
whodgson@dbg.org
Kendall Kroesen, Director, Membership and
Chapter Development Chair
kkroesen@tucsonaudubon.org
Barbara G. Phillips, Director, President, Editorial
Committee Chair
bgphillips@fs.fed.us
Karen Reichhardt, Director, Yuma Chapter
President
ayekarina52@yahoo.com
Ana Lilia Reina-Guerrero, Director
analilia.reina@yahoo.com
Douglas Ripley, Director, Tucson Chapter
President ripley@powerc.net
Andrew Salywon, Director
asalywon@dbg.org
Arlene Stigen, Director, Treasurer, Finance
Committee Chair arlene@bkpcc.com
Carl Tomoff, Director, Prescott Chapter
President tomoff@northlink.com
Tom Van Devender, Director
yecora4@comcast.net
AZNPS COLLABORATORS
Marilyn Hanson, Website Editor
mfhanson@comcast.net
Julie St. John, The Plant Press Layout Editor
julieDesign@cox.net
Nancy Zierenberg, Outreach & Administrative
Assistant nzberg4@cox.net
Would you like to take a more active role
in protecting Arizona’s native plants?
There are open Board positions — please
contact any of the above board members for
more information on how you can get involved.
You can also contact your local chapter (see
back cover) for local volunteer opportunities.
18 The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY Spring 2010
Workplace Giving to Support
Arizona Native Plant Society
If you work for a government entity, you can make contributions
through your workplace to support Arizona Native Plant Society as part
of the Combined Federal Campaign (AZNPS #38438), and the State
Employees Charitable Campaign. We are also a member group of the
ever-growing Environmental Fund for Arizona (www.efaz.org) which
supports many of our state’s conservation and environmental
organizations (29 member groups). Employees of the federal
government, Arizona state government, some counties, city programs,
and other workplaces can contribute through their workplace giving
programs. If you don’t have a workplace giving program, see the EFAZ
website to find out how we can help get one started. The EFAZ website
lists businesses with campaigns supporting EFAZ organizations, but that
list needs to be expanded in communities throughout the state. Feel free
to contact Laine Seaton, EFAZ Executive Director (laine@efaz.org) with
ideas or suggestions!
above Arizona bluestar (Amsonia grandiflora) is a deciduous perennial found in
southern Arizona along canyons at elevations of 3,900 to 4,500 feet. Flowering in
the spring and summer, it dies back to a woody stem in the winter months. Photo
courtesy Jeannette Hanby and David Bygott (see“A Jewel Called Ruby”on page 1).
19. Upcoming Issue:
Riparian & Wetland Ecology
Contact The Plant Press Technical Editor, Barbara
Phillips, at bgphillips@fs.fed.us for more information
on contributing articles, illustrations, photos, or book
reviews on this topic… as well as themes you’d like to
see us cover in future issues.
www.aznativeplantsociety.org The Plant Press ARIZONA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY 19
New Women’s Violet tee shirts in the datura design!
These 100% cotton (not pre-shrunk) tees are more
fitted for women, have a scoop neck and shorter
sleeves than the standard datura tees. They are a
lovely violet color, between a light lavender and the
deep purple.
Price is $16 each for members, $18 for non-members,
plus postage. $3 for the first shirt and add $1 per shirt
sent to the same address.
Clearance Sale on our
landscaping booklets!
Originally created by the AZNPS Urban Education
Committee,these booklets flew off the shelves due
to the excitement over new xeric plant offerings
(though some were not native to this country… the
text in the booklets notes that),and due to the very low price we set
to appeal to newcomers in our region.The booklets have done a
great service to AZNPS over the years,keeping us flush with money
to fund our educational projects through the years.We are grateful
to the professional growers,landscapers and other committee
members who developed these useful tools.
There is good growing information in these booklets and we are
urging you to utilize that for formulating your own landscape plans
and adding to them.We also urge that you consider growing our
Arizona Natives instead of some of the suggestions in these
booklets to use non-natives.Our plan is to keep plugging on
production of several good native plant lists that we will eventually
put onto our website to help people with landscape planning.If you
have good photos of natives in habit that you would like to share for
our educational purposes,please email those in reasonable quality
to: nzberg4@cox.net
All booklets are now available for retail sale at $2 each.Wholesalers
can order quantities of 50 or more at $1 each,in any combination.
We pay the postage! The following booklets are still in print:
Sonoran Desert Trees,Desert Shrubs,Desert Grasses,Butterfly
Gardening,and Bird Gardening.
The Plant Press is a
benefit of membership
in the Arizona Native
Plant Society.
Suggestions are welcome
for book reviews, and
articles on plant use,
conservation, habitats,
and invasive species.
We are officially part of Basha's
"Shop & Give" program!
When you shop at any Basha's, AJ’s or Food City,
a percentage or your purchase will come back
to support your favorite Native Plant Society!
It’s simple: At the cash register, tell them to
attribute your purchase to AZNPS
#25053.This is a super easy and
effective way to help AZNPS bring in
extra cash for our important efforts!
Thank you… and thank you Basha’s!
20. New Members
Welcome!
People interested in native plants are
encouraged to become members. People
may join chapters in either Phoenix,
Flagstaff, Prescott, Tucson, Yuma, or may
choose not to be active at a chapter level
and simply support the statewide
organization. For more information,
please write to AZNPS at the address
below, visit the AZNPS website at
www.aznativeplantsociety.org, or
contact one of the people below.
Phoenix Chapter:
C. Douglas Green 480.998.5638
Flagstaff Chapter:
Jessa Fisher 928.814.2644
Prescott Chapter:
Carl Tomoff 928.778.2626
Tucson Chapter:
Doug Ripley 520.212.6077
Yuma Chapter:
Karen Reichhardt 928.317.3245
Membership Form
Name:
_______________________________________________________________
Address:
_______________________________________________________________
City/State/Zip:
_______________________________________________________________
Phone/Email:
_______________________________________________________________
Chapter preferred: J State only J Flagstaff J Phoenix
J Prescott J Tucson J Yuma
Enclosed: J $15 Student J $75 Commercial
J $30 Individual J $100 Plant Lover
J $35 Family l J $500 Patron
J $50 Organization J $1,000 Lifetime
Mail to:
Arizona Native Plant Society
PO Box 41206, Tucson AZ 85717
Arizona Native Plant Society
PO Box 41206
Tucson AZ 85717
www.aznativeplantsociety.org
Nonprofit Org
US Postage
PAID
Tucson, AZ
Permit #690
Address Service Requested