This is the blog for "Walking Biology" (BIOLOGY CS 25) in the College of Creative Studies at the University of California Santa Barbara. Postings are made by both the instructor and students in the class.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Friday, May 16, 2008
Devereux Slough
You can read more about the Northern Mockingbird at this site from Cornell U., as well as any birding field guide.
I found several lovely poems and haiku inspired specifically by this vocal arteest. A couple to share here:
This one from mon@rch nature blog
Mockingbird at night
would disturb the universe
and sing forever
And this one from a wonderful site called tinywords.com (“fresh haiku, delivered daily”)
first night of summer ...neither the mockingbird
nor I can sleep
copyright 2000.06.23 by gK
Perhaps you’ll be inspired to write your own nature haiku…
Ok, back to biology. The Devereux Slough is part of UCSB’s Coal Oil Point Reserve – another gem in the UC Natural Reserve System, described in a previous post. In the heart of the reserve, Devereux Slough is a seasonally flooded tidal lagoon that dries out in the summer to form salt flats and hypersaline ponds and channels.
We talked about estuaries (where a river meets the sea); a slough is a type of estuary formed at the outlet of a stream and other freshwater inputs to the ocean, and as a seasonally flooded lagoon, it is influenced by both tidal/sea and freshwater inputs.
Sloughs (and other estuaries such as bays & salt marshes) serve important ecological functions including: acting as nurseries for juvenile marine and terrestrial species, protecting shorelines from flooding and erosion (remember New Orleans), improving run-off quality by filtering nitrate and pollutants out of water, providing habitat for rare species and foraging grounds for migratory birds. BIG JOB!!
Unfortunately many sloughs and other coastal wetlands, being flat and conveniently located, well at the coast, have been filled in and built on. The sites of our
“The Goleta and Devereux Sloughs
The Goleta and Devereux sloughs were once part of a single large lagoon that sent arms of seawater as far north as Hollister Avenue almost to Lake Los Carneros. In the winter of 1861/62 a catastrophic storm filled the once navigable Goleta Slough changing it from a deepwater bay to a salt flat estuary by depositing as much as 10 to 14 feet of sediment. While the slough may eventually have returned to a deepwater bay, human intervention sealed its fate. A whale oil refinery was built there in 1879 and increased agricultural operations and related community development in the
Lit cited: Tompkins, Walter. 1976.
This USGS map from 1903 shows the extent of the
Walking along the edge of the slough we saw the plant that occupies the most area at the interface of water and land – pickleweed, Salicornia virginica. Though it’s not particularly tolerant of complete inundation it does have a wide tolerance for salinity levels from low salinity to extremely high, making it well suited for this zone in the marsh. Pickleweed is a halophyte, meaning that it can survive and grow in highly saline environments. I mentioned that salt in high concentrations is highly toxic to a plant, so how does pickleweed do it?
Plant that live in saline environments must have some kind of mechanism that allows it to filter out or excrete the salt from the leaves or remove it from the cells. In pickleweed some salt is filtered out at the roots by tiny sodium-potassium pumps within the cell membrane. However, there’s still a lot of salt that “leaks” into the plant. So, pickleweed has pumps within each cell that move the salt into vacuoles where it is stored. The green tissue of the plant has many large cells holding massive amounts of salt in interior vacuoles. That’s why, if you were curious (brave? crazy?) enough to taste this plant you’d have found it to be very salty, like pickles. That's how the plant got the name pickleweed. A bit further “upslope” from the pickleweed we saw one of the other salt marsh dominants, Alkali heath (Frankenia salina), and then
Thanks to
spittle
At the freshwater pond – often overlooked by visitors to the slough – we saw very different plants and animals. No halophytes, but instead lots of tule (Scirpus californicus), which provides important habitat structure for all sorts of birds, including the red-winged blackbirds we saw there. (Our book - "An Island Called California" has a great chapter, entitled, "Red-Winged Blackbird" that you should read.) Tule also was important to the native Americans, as a source for making homes, baskets, and mats. You can learn how to weave your own tule mat to sleep on if you’d like.
One more thing I wanted to post information about – the beautiful metallic green beetles we saw on some of the coyote bushes was, the appropriately named, Coyote bush beetle (Trirhabda luteocincta). This species is a Chrysomelid, or leaf beetle. From the COPR insect sheet: “As their common name suggests, leaf beetles eat plants. Most are colorful, conspicuous beetles, frequently restricted in their feeding to one or a few similar plant species.… Trirhabda luteucinete, is abundant in the spring time and can be seen, as adult or larvae, on coyote brush, its host plant.”
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Photos: Terrestrial plants & pollinators (SB Botanic Garden)
Here is a slideshow with photos from our fifth field trip to the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden to check out terrestrial plants and pollinators.
Santa Barbara Botanic Garden
The Botanic Garden was beautiful! This is a fantastic site to view native plants of California – all in one convenient and accessible setting. In addition to enjoying the scenery, our goal was to view plants and pollinators and talk about the relationships between them.
There is lots of good and reader-friendly information on pollination syndromes to follow-up if you are interested. A couple sites on the web are here:
There is lots of good and reader-friendly information on pollination syndromes to follow-up if you are interested. A couple sites on the web are here:
from Wikipedia
from theUS Forest Service
from the
One of the plants we saw was the chaparral yucca, Yucca whipplei (we also saw these on our first field trip - up to E. Camino Cielo). As we predicted from the floral characters, this plant is indeed moth-pollinated. Similar to other yuccas, this one has an interesting life history, in that it flowers only once in its life time – after it has reached six or seven years old - produces seeds and then dies. Pollination in yuccas is almost always completely dependent on a single moth, which is almost always heavily dependent on its particular yucca species for development of its larvae. For the chaparral yucca, the moth species is Tegeticula maculata, which deposits its eggs into the yucca flowers ovules while also pollinating the flower. Read more about it here at Wayne ’s Word.
A stunning flowering shrub that I hadn’t seen before was Carpenteria californica – tree anemone. This species is native to the foothills of the western side of the Sierra Nevada Mountains (Fresco County ). I saw bumblebees visiting the flowers; perhaps they were attracted to the bright yellow stamens. This photo is from http://www.laspilitas.com/
I highly recommend visiting the Botanic Garden throughout the year to take advantage of the opportunity to see flowering in all our native flora!
Directions to the SB Botanic Garden
Thursday, May 1, 2008
Arroyo Hondo and our class
I really like the bridges at Arroyo Hondo. The concrete one was built in 1918 as part of the original highway (more details from some road enthusiasts). The culvert that goes underneath the bridges (a picture from when I visited a while ago) is steelhead trout habitat.
The beach had zillions of sea anemones, both underwater (waving around and greenish from algae) and hanging out on the rocks (closed up and camouflaged with sand). We weren't sure why some of them had white spots in their tentacles.
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