Photos / Sounds

What

Oneflower Broomrape (Aphyllon purpureum)

Observer

billhubick

Date

April 25, 2024 03:01 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

bbell

Date

April 23, 2020 01:25 PM PDT

Description

Tiny!

Photos / Sounds

What

Balsam Bird's Foot Trefoil (Hosackia stipularis)

Observer

sorrykb

Date

April 17, 2023 11:21 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Saline Clover (Trifolium hydrophilum)

Observer

silverpeak

Date

April 2024

Photos / Sounds

What

Purple Sanicle (Sanicula bipinnatifida)

Observer

aparrot1

Date

March 13, 2023 11:24 AM PDT

Description

Purple Sanicle (Sanicula bipinnatifida) A.k.a. Shoe Buttons. Native, perennial plant in the Carrot (Apiaceae) family. Leaves are twice pinnatifid and sharply toothed. Flowers are spherical, reddish-purple, with prominently exerted stamens. Peak bloom time: March-April. Fruits are hooked. Indigenous people made an infusion of the leaves for snakebites.

Native American Ethnobotany: A database of plants used as drugs, foods, dyes, fibers, and more, by native Peoples of North America. http://naeb.brit.org/ and http://naeb.brit.org/uses/search/?string=Sanicula+bipinnatifida

Plants of Monterey County: an Illustrated Field Key, 2nd edition, Matthews and Mitchell, 2015, pp. 28-29.

Jepson eFlora https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=43166

Flora of Fort Ord: Monterey County, California, David Styer, 2019, p. 25.

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016, p. 146.

Monterey County Wildflowers– a photographic guide https://montereywildflowers.com/apiaceae-sanicle/

5-minute video of Fort Ord Flora and Fauna, produced by David Styer: https://fortordcleanup.com/archives/2020/natural-treasures-of-fort-ord-90-amazing-photographs/

Oregon Flora https://oregonflora.org/taxa/index.php?taxon=8135

(The) Monterey Pine Forest: Coastal California's Living Legacy, 2nd. ed, The Monterey Pine Forest Watch, 2018. (Excellent book).

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Sanicles (Genus Sanicula). Native, perennial plants in the Carrot (Apiaceae) family. Stems spreading to erect. Leaves simple or compound, ternately, palmately, or pinnately lobed or dissected. Blades orbicular to ovate in outline, margins entire or toothed. Flower heads are small, simple umbels, unlike Tauschia (Umbrellaworts) that have compound umbrels.

Jepson eFlora Key to Sanicles: https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_keys.php?key=10218

Plants of Monterey County: an Illustrated Field Key, 2nd edition, Matthews and Mitchell, 2015, pp. 28-29.

Flora of Fort Ord: Monterey County, California, David Styer, 2019, pp. 25-26.

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016, p. 287.

Monterey County Wildflowers– a photographic guide https://montereywildflowers.com/apiaceae-sanicle/

Oregon Flora https://oregonflora.org/taxa/index.php?taxon=1394

Photos / Sounds

What

Purple Sanicle (Sanicula bipinnatifida)

Observer

mtillett

Date

April 2, 2020

Photos / Sounds

What

Santa Lucia Monkeyflower (Erythranthe hardhamiae)

Observer

arheyman01

Date

May 28, 2023 12:52 PM PDT

Description

Seen only in one small sandy wash, with moderate but not extreme moisture exposure judging from location

Photos / Sounds

What

Contra Costa Goldfields (Lasthenia conjugens)

Observer

aparrot1

Date

May 2022

Description

Contra Costa Goldfields are often seen together with the Hickman’s Popcornflowers along the rim of receding vernal pools on Fort Ord National Monument.

Link to confirmed observations nearby: flowering https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/169113156 and fruiting with black seeds: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/117937822

Contra Costa Goldfields (Lasthenia conjugens) Rare, native/endemic, annual plant that grows < 40 cm (up to 15 inches) tall in seasonal vernal pools and moist grasslands. It is distinguished by the number of its hairy phyllaries (12–18) that are fused for less than half of their length. It has 6–13 ray flowers. Peak bloom time: March-June. Leaves are linear and entire or occasionally pinnately lobed. It can be found locally in great numbers in vernal pools growing together with Hickman’s Popcornflower (Plagiobothrys chorisianus var. hickmanii), another rare vernal pool plant. Fruit: < 1.5 mm, club-shaped, glabrous.
Conservation Status: 1B.1 in California, US (CNPS).

The back cover of D. Styer's book shows a carpet of Contra Costa Goldfields (Lasthenia conjugens) growing in a drying vernal pool in Butterfly Valley (see key to places in Fort Ord, p. 1.)
Flora of Fort Ord: Monterey County, California, David Styer, 2019, p. 48.

Endangered Species Fact Sheets (species in Monterey County) http://www.elkhornsloughctp.org/factsheet/factsheet.php?SPECIES_ID=92
Excerpt: " Common Names - Contra Costa Goldfields
Family - Asteraceae (Sunflower Family)
Federal Status - federal endangered
(June 1997). Habitat: Vernal pools in areas with marine climatic influence; gen < 125 m. Key Characteristics: Annual herb < 4 dm tall, stems simple or freely branched above, glabrous or +/- hairy; leaves < 8 cm long, linear, entire or pinnately lobed, glabrous; involucre 6–10 mm high, hemispheric to obconic, phyllaries 12–18, fused less than half their length (all other taxa in our region have phyllaries fused > 2/3ds their length); receptacle dome-shaped or obconic, densely hairy; corolla yellow, ray flowers 6–13(18), the rays 5–10 mm, disk flowers many, style tips triangular."

Jepson eFlora https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=3729

Calflora https://www.calflora.org/entry/psearch.html?namesoup=Lasthenia+conjugens&countylist=MNT&plantcomm=any&format=photos&orderby=taxon

CNPS Rare Plant Inventory: https://rareplants.cnps.org/Plants/Details/951

Flora of North America http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Lasthenia_conjugens

Plants of Monterey County: an Illustrated Field Key, 2nd edition, Matthews and Mitchell, 2015, p. 69.

Monterey County Wildflowers https://montereywildflowers.com/asteraceae-sunflower1/

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016, p. 301

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In general:

5-minute video of Fort Ord Flora and Fauna, produced by David Styer: https://fortordcleanup.com/archives/2020/natural-treasures-of-fort-ord-90-amazing-photographs/

Fort Ord A Love Story, Dorothy E. Denning, 2024 (includes 1,000+ color photos)

Endangered Species Fact Sheets (species in Monterey County) http://www.elkhornsloughctp.org/factsheet/

CNPS Rare Plant Inventory: https://rareplants.cnps.org/Home/

Photos / Sounds

What

Transverse Ranges Liveforever (Dudleya cymosa ssp. pumila)

Observer

matzat

Date

April 1, 2016 01:27 PM PDT

Description

Santa Lucia mts.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

kvandevere

Date

January 15, 2024 03:47 PM PST

Photos / Sounds

What

Dwarf Orthocarpus (Triphysaria pusilla)

Observer

aparrot1

Date

April 26, 2023 10:05 AM PDT

Description

Dwarf Orthocarpus (Triphysaria pusilla) COMPARED TO Triphysaria versicolor:

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Dwarf Orthocarpus (Triphysaria pusilla) A.k.a. Dwarf Owl's Clover or Little Owl's Clover. Native, hairy, hemi-parasitic plant in the Orobranchaceae (Broomrape) family that grows up to 20cm (8 inches) tall in grasslands, lawns, pastures, roadsides, edges of vernal pools, and woodlands . The foliage is green, turning reddish-brown. The tiny flowers are almost invisible to the naked eye, but under a hand lens, there is a pouch that is dark red on top with lower lips that are also dark red. Peak bloom time: March-April.

Link to confirmed observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/157013964

Flora of Fort Ord: Monterey County, California, David Styer, 2019, p. 158.

Jepson eFlora https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=47296

Calflora (with species distribution map) https://www.calflora.org/app/taxon?crn=8133

Flora of North America http://floranorthamerica.org/Triphysaria_pusilla

Plants of Monterey County: an Illustrated Field Key, 2nd edition, Matthews and Mitchell, 2015, pp. 226-227.

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016, p. 111.

Monterey County Wildflowers– a photographic guide https://montereywildflowers.com/orobanchaceae-xcastilleja/

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COMPARED TO (less common)

Yellow-beak False Owl's-Clover (Triphysaria versicolor) A.k.a. Smooth Owl's Clover, or Yellow Owl's Clover, or Yellowbeak Owl's Clover. Native, green- to yellow-brown, generally glabrous, hemi-parasitic plant in the Orobanchaceae (Broomrape) family that grows 10--60 cm (up to 24 inches) tall.
There are 3 subspecies listed on Calflora. (The subspecies Triphysaria versicolor subsp. versicolor grows on Fort Ord) Triphysaria versicolor subsp. versicolor grows in grasslands, vernally moist seeps to dry grassy meadows, headlands, rock outcrops, and coastal prairies. Corolla is white fading to rose-pink with age, beak is white or rose pink, and the plant is purple-dotted. Peak bloom time: March-April.

Flora of Fort Ord: Monterey County, California, David Styer, 2019, p. 158.
(The subspecies Triphysaria versicolor subsp. versicolor grows on Fort Ord)

Link to confirmed observation of Triphysaria versicolor subsp. versicolor nearby: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2833685

Jepson eFlora https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=47297 and
Jepson eFlora Triphysaria versicolor subsp. versicolor https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=53282

Calflora (with Triphysaria versicolor distribution map) https://www.calflora.org/app/taxon?crn=8134
Calflora, Triphysaria versicolor subsp. versicolor https://www.calflora.org/app/taxon?crn=8136

Flora of North America http://floranorthamerica.org/Triphysaria_versicolor_subsp._versicolor

Plants of Monterey County: an Illustrated Field Key, 2nd edition, Matthews and Mitchell, 2015, p. 225.

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016. (species not listed)

Monterey County Wildflowers– a photographic guide https://montereywildflowers.com (species not listed)

Photos / Sounds

What

Oneflower Broomrape (Aphyllon purpureum)

Observer

aparrot1

Date

April 6, 2022 01:19 PM PDT

Description

Each plant had 1 tubular flower at terminal end of 3-4 inch tall pedicel. 4-6 plants observed near Chamise shrubs and other other wildflowers.

Oneflower Broomrape (Aphyllon purpureum) Formerly called Naked Broomrape (Orobanche uniflora). It has a variety of names in different references. It is a native, small, root-parasitic plant in the Broomrape (Orobanchaceae) family that grows 3.5–18cm (up to 7 inches) tall in moist soils. It is parasitic on members of sunflower and saxifrage families. There are no leaves on single stem that bears one purple flower with orange filaments. Peak bloom time: April-July.

Monterey County Wildflowers:
"Naked Broomrape – Aphyllon purpureum (formerly Orobanche uniflora) grows in "moist places, parasitic on members of sunflower and saxifrage families. It is a true parasite, without photosynthetic leaves. It has 1-3 beautiful, small bluish-purple flowers, on pedicels 3–12 cm long. Most of the plant’s stem is underground. This species generally has pale purple (occasionally deep violet) to yellowish flowers. [Note: All native California members of the Orobanche genus have been moved to the Aphyllon genus (see Jepson eFlora Revision 5, December 2017). It is now considered that A. uniflora is not found in California and that California plants previously treated as Orobanche uniflora did not belong to that species.]"
Monterey County Wildflowers https://montereywildflowers.com/orobanchaceae-xcastilleja/

Jepson eFlora with botanical illustration: https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=103312

Calflora https://www.calflora.org/entry/observ.html?track=m#srch=t&lpcli=t&taxon=Aphyllon+purpureum&chk=t&cch=t&cnabh=t&inat=r&cc=MNT and CA distribution: https://www.calflora.org/app/taxon?crn=13529

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016, p. 110.

Flora of North America http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Orobanche_uniflora_subsp._occidentalis

Photos / Sounds

What

Shortstyle Draba (Draba brachystylis)

Observer

zharkikh

Date

June 11, 2011 11:52 AM MDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Plummer's Mariposa Lily (Calochortus plummerae)

Observer

bbell

Date

June 24, 2018 07:49 AM PDT

Description

Along Glendora Ridge trail near Sunset peak

Photos / Sounds

What

Redflower Buckwheat (Eriogonum grande)

Observer

bbell

Date

July 13, 2018 04:22 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Common Beargrass (Xerophyllum tenax)

Observer

morgib

Date

May 20, 2023 09:45 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Gnome Plant (Hemitomes congestum)

Observer

jujuuubeee

Date

May 27, 2023 01:09 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Aquatic Pygmyweed (Crassula aquatica)

Observer

arheyman01

Date

May 4, 2023 04:08 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Western Pearlflower (Heterocodon rariflorum)

Observer

aparrot1

Date

May 3, 2023 10:26 AM PDT

Description

Western Pearlflower (Heterocodon rariflorum) Native, small, annual, rare plant in the Bellflower (Campanulaceae) family that grows in open areas at chaparral edges in seasonally wet soil. It is the only species in the genus Heterocodon. Stems are, thin, 5-30 cm long, simple, or branched from base, 4-angled, and sparsely hairy. Sepals are widely triangular, leaf-like, toothed, and 2-4 mm wide. Corolla is cylindric, tube is white to pale blue, lobes are purplish-blue. Peak bloom time: May. David Styer says he first discovered this plant on Fort Ord in 2016, and has only seen it in bloom one spring in 2017, and never since.

Flora of Fort Ord: Monterey County, California, David Styer, 2019, p. 82.

Jepson eFlora https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=28069

Plants of Monterey County: an Illustrated Field Key, 2nd edition, Matthews and Mitchell, 2015, pp. 120-121.

Monterey County Wildflowers: a Field Guide, Yeager and Mitchell, 2016 (species not listed)

Monterey County Wildflowers– a photographic guide (species not listed)

Photos / Sounds

What

Creamcups (Platystemon californicus)

Observer

arheyman01

Date

May 4, 2023 11:49 AM PDT

Description

Is this the normal fruit? Bizarre

Photos / Sounds

What

Clay Mariposa Lily (Calochortus argillosus)

Observer

masonrcole

Date

June 8, 2022 10:33 AM PDT

Description

Hillside full of them! In an intact patch of stipa grassland with several other native forbs (t. laxa, wyethia angustifolia, chlorogalum pomeridianum, hemizonia congesta lutescens, etc), surrounded by invasive s and ATV scars

Photos / Sounds

What

Golden Yarrow (Eriophyllum confertiflorum)

Date

March 29, 2023 11:45 AM PDT

Description

Maybe jepsonii?

Photos / Sounds

Observer

mtillett

Date

March 6, 2023 01:12 PM PST

Photos / Sounds

What

Milkweeds (Genus Asclepias)

Observer

ronvanderhoff

Date

June 26, 2022 03:02 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Mariposa Lilies (Genus Calochortus)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 20, 2019 06:35 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Mariposa Lilies (Genus Calochortus)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 20, 2019 06:49 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Gray's Anemone (Anemonoides grayi)

Observer

bbell

Date

April 2, 2022 12:38 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Woollyfruit Desertparsley (Lomatium dasycarpum)

Observer

bbell

Date

January 26, 2019 05:09 PM PST

Photos / Sounds

What

White-tipped Clover (Trifolium variegatum)

Observer

bbell

Date

April 2021

Description

Wetland habitat

Photos / Sounds

What

Small-headed Clover (Trifolium microcephalum)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 6, 2022 11:15 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Cochimí Liveforever (Dudleya cochimiana)

Observer

twainwright

Date

March 11, 2020 09:45 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Santa Lucia Fir (Abies bracteata)

Observer

bbell

Date

March 18, 2020 02:20 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Sonora Pass Monkeyflower (Erythranthe howaldiae)

Observer

matsonburger

Date

June 16, 2021 11:53 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Sonora Pass Monkeyflower (Erythranthe howaldiae)

Observer

tmessick

Date

June 9, 2022 01:54 PM PDT

Description

Growing in dense mats of moss over granite slopes. Type locality, beside SR108 at about 8180 feet (2493 m), Sierra Nevada, Mono County, California.

Photos / Sounds

What

Roughleaf Aster (Eurybia radulina)

Observer

morgib

Date

July 16, 2022 10:13 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Butterworth's Buckwheat (Eriogonum butterworthianum)

Observer

annienzelll

Date

July 2022

Photos / Sounds

What

Lupines (Genus Lupinus)

Observer

rosymopkins

Date

April 3, 2021 05:12 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Lupines (Genus Lupinus)

Observer

bbell

Date

April 20, 2019 11:27 AM PDT

Description

Appears to be phenotypic mutation/color morph of L. bicolor. Small patch of 10-20 individuals here all with this coloration.

Photos / Sounds

What

Tufted Poppy (Eschscholzia caespitosa)

Observer

bbell

Date

April 27, 2020 02:19 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Orca (Orcinus orca)

Observer

billhubick

Date

November 28, 2021 03:37 PM PST

Description

Pod viewed from Point Pinos. My first from shore. Addy and Juni got to see them via spotting scope.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

bbell

Date

July 16, 2021 11:04 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Common Beargrass (Xerophyllum tenax)

Observer

helen9

Date

August 6, 2016 10:40 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Lupines (Genus Lupinus)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 25, 2019 10:25 AM PDT

Description

Appears to be L. arboreus and L. variicolor hybrid. Both species found nearby.

Photos / Sounds

What

Hartweg's Umbrellawort (Tauschia hartwegii)

Observer

bbell

Date

March 21, 2020 03:31 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Narrowleaf Queen Poppy (Hesperomecon linearis)

Observer

bbell

Date

March 18, 2019 02:42 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Clay Mariposa Lily (Calochortus argillosus)

Observer

passiflora4

Date

May 20, 2018 07:24 PM PDT

Description

Appears to be the southern form of Calochortus argillosus, 100 miles north of its recorded range of the San Luis Obispo vicinity.

Photos / Sounds

What

Greater Yellowthroat Gilia (Gilia tenuiflora)

Observer

davidbenterou

Date

April 2019

Description

Growing in coastal dunes. Matches t. ssp. Arenaria, except white petals

Photos / Sounds

What

Chaparral Gilia (Gilia angelensis)

Observer

joemiller

Date

April 26, 2018 04:20 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Long-tailed Weasel (Neogale frenata)

Observer

ldjaffe

Date

April 11, 2008

Photos / Sounds

What

Sierra Nevada Yellow-legged Frog (Rana sierrae)

Observer

bbell

Place

Private

Description

Remote lake near 10,000ft, observed at least 15 individuals at this site. If anyone is studying this critically endangered frog, contact me for location details and data.

Photos / Sounds

What

Western Columbine (Aquilegia formosa)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 2, 2016 11:23 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

California Fetid Adderstongue (Scoliopus bigelovii)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 5, 2016 11:10 AM PDT

Description

Patch of 15-20 individuals on east facing slope in gulch between heller drive and Kerr hall

Photos / Sounds

What

California Peony (Paeonia californica)

Observer

bbell

Date

May 14, 2016 01:46 PM PDT