From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
California oak woodland is a plant community found throughout the California chaparral and
woodlands ecoregion
of California and
northwestern Baja California. Oak woodland is
widespread at lower elevations in coastal California, interior
valleys of the Coast Ranges, and in a ring around the California Central Valley grasslands. The
dominant trees are oaks, interspersed with other broadleaf and coniferous
trees, with an understory of grasses, herbs, geophytes, and shrubs.
Oak savannas occur where the oaks are more widely
spaced.
The Oak woodlands of Southern California and coastal Northern
California are dominated by Coast Live Oak
(Quercus agrifolia), but also include Valley
Oak (Q. lobata), California Black
Oak (Q. kelloggii), Canyon live oak
(Q. chrysolepis), and other California oaks. The foothill
oak woodlands around the Central Valley are
dominated by Blue Oak (Q. douglasii) and Digger
Pine (Pinus sabiniana).
California oak woodland
communities
- Oregon Oak woodland is found in Northern
California's Klamath-Siskiyou,
Northern Coast Ranges, and
southern Cascade
Range, these woodlands are composed primarily of Oregon
Oak (Quercus garryana), Interior Live Oak
(Q. wislizenii), and Coast Live Oak, together with
California Black Oak, Canyon Oak, Blue Oak, Pacific Madrone
(Arbutus menziesii), California Bay
(Umbellularia californica), Incense Cedar
(Calocedrus decurrens), Coast Douglas Fir
(Pseudtsuga menziesii), and Ponderosa Pine (Pinus
ponderosa).
- Blue Oak woodland is found in the inner coast
ranges and the Sierra Nevada foothills, surrounding the Central Valley.[1] Primary
species are Blue Oak and Interior Live Oak
(or on west facing slopes facing the exterior ranges, particularly
in Contra Costa and Alameda counties, Coast Live Oak takes
Interior Live Oak's place), together with Valley Oak, Canyon Oak,
California Scrub Oak (Q.
berberidifolia), Gray
Pine, California Buckeye (Aesculus
californica), and Western Redbud
(Cercis occidentalis).
- Coast Live Oak woodland is widespread in
northern and southern California, and is dominated by Coast Live Oak, together with California
Buckeye, Pacific Madrone, California Bay, and California Walnut (Juglans
californica).
- Valley Oak woodland is found in the interior
valleys of northern and central California, and is dominated by
Valley Oak and Coast Live Oak, together with Gray Pine and Coulter Pine (Pinus
coulteri).
- Island Oak woodland is found on the California
Channel Islands, and is made up primarily of Island
Oak (Q. tomentella) and Coast Live Oak, together with
Canyon Oak, MacDonald Oak (Q. berberidifolia hybridized
with Valley or other oaks), Catalina Ironwood (Lyonothamnus
lyonii), and Bishop
Pine (Pinus muricata).
- Engelmann Oak woodland is found in a few
locations in the northern Peninsular Ranges of southern
California, including the Santa Rosa Plateau. It consists
mostly of Engelmann Oak (Q. engelmanii),
together with Coast Live Oak.
Status and
future of California oak woodlands
Blue oak woodlands cover about 2,939,000 acres
(11,890 km2) of the state, and of this area about
79%, or 2,322,000 acres (9,400 km2), shows no
evidence of past cutting of trees.[2]
Recent research by the University of Arkansas Tree-Ring
Laboratory has studied several unlogged stands of Blue Oak
woodlands, and suggests that the state may harbor over
500,000 acres (2,000 km2) of such old growth forests. This would make
California's oak woodlands some of the most extensive old growth
forests left in the state. However, most oaks of full tree size are
more than one hundred years old, and few saplings are ever
produced, because cattle often tear the plants to pieces.[3]
The Oaks 2040 survey estimates that
750,000 acres (3,000 km2) of California oak
woodlands are seriously threatened by 2040 as a burgeoning state
population makes ever more use of the wildland. This
comprehensive survey includes oak woodland maps and inventory data
for the ten oak types found in California. By evaluating this new
information against current State of California economic growth
projections, the location and extent of oak woodlands most at risk
of development are identified.
Examples
of occurrence
The headwaters area of Yulupa Creek in Annadel State
Park is cited as one of the best examples of California oak
woodlands.[4] Much of
this woodland is a relatively pristine ecosystem with considerable biodiversity. An
unusual characteristic of this Annadel forest is the high content
of undisturbed prehistoric bunch grass understory, testifying to the absence of
historic grazing or other agriculture.
See also
References
- ^
C. Michael Hogan (2008) Blue Oak: Quercus
douglasii, GlobalTwitcher.com, ed. N. Stromberg
- ^ Christensen, Glenn A.;
Campbell, Sally J.; Fried, Jeremy S. (2008), California’s forest
resources, 2001–2005: five-year Forest Inventory and Analysis
report, United States Forest
Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, pp. 40–46,
Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-763, http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/publications/gtr763/
- ^ Stahle, David. "Ancient Blue Oak Woodlands of California".
University of Arkansas Tree-Ring Laboratory. http://www.uark.edu/blueoak/. Retrieved
2008-11-10.
- ^
Annadel State Park
facts
General
Bibliography
- Dallman, Peter R. (1998). Plant Life in the World's
Mediterranean Climates. California Native Plant
Society–University of California Press; Berkeley.
- Gaman, Tom and Firman, Jeffrey (2006). Oaks 2040: The
Status and Future of Oaks in California. Published by the
California Oak Foundation, Oakland.
- Pavlik, Bruce M., Pamela C. Muick, Sharon G. Johnson,and
Marjorie Popper (1991). Oaks of California. Cachuma Press
and the California Oak Foundation; Los
Olivos, California.
- Schoenherr, Allan A. (1992). A Natural History of
California. University of California Press; Berkeley.
External
links