Senin, 14 Desember 2015

Plant of the Month (December) : Pale Spikerush – Eleocharis macrostachya






Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya) in Mother Nature's Backyard 




 


After
four years of drought – and spotty summer rain – our plants are blooming at
unusual times.   As we’ve already
featured many of our December-blooming plants, we’ve chosen a species that
often begins growing in December for
our Plant of the Month.






The
Spikerushes (genus Eleocharis) are a
common component of wetlands throughout the world.  These grass-like plants, members of the Sedge
family (Cyperaceae), have rudimentary
leaves and understated flowers at the tips of upright stalks.   Nearly all are wetland species and some –
like our own Pale spikerush – can even begin growing in shallow water.








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya): new growth

 after winter rains.


 


The
taxonomy of the Spikerushes presents challenges not uncommon in plants with relatively
few relevant characteristics and cosmopolitan (widespread) geographic distributions.    Eleocharis macrostachya grows from
Alaska and Northern Canada, as far East as the Great Plains states, and South
to Mexico and
South America (Argentina,
Colombia and Uruguay)
. 






In
California, it’s a common and widespread member of wetland communities from sea
level to about 8,000 ft. (2500 m.)  It
grows in a
variety of wet places including
marshes, roadside ditches, and along streambanks, lakeshores and rivers.  It also can be seen in seasonal wetlands,
including mountain meadows, vernal pools/marshes and other seasonally flooded
areas.








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya) in vernal marsh

 (Madrona Marsh Preserve).  Taller plants in back are Tules

 and Cattails.  Note how the spikerush grows around the

 edges of the marsh.


 


Known by the common names of Pale spikerush, Common spikerush,  Creeping spike
rush and Wire grass,
Eleocharis macrostachya shares many characteristics with Eleocharis palustris; some specimens
have been included in this and several other Eleocharis species in the past.  
There is widespread morphologic variability within Eleocharis macrostachya, even in California, so future
taxonomic revisions shouldn’t surprise us.


 








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya) in vernal pool:

 Madrona Marsh Preserve, Torrance CA.


 


Pale spikerush is a rush-like
perennial that spreads via rhizomes to form dense mats.  In lowland S. California, seeds germinate –
and plants begin to grow – with the winter rains. The under-water stems are hollow;
stems become pith-filled on land, giving them added stiffness.   The plants can grow either in shallow standing
water or in moist soils, making them useful for seasonally moist areas like
rain gardens and infiltration swales.  The plants continue to grow until the dry days
of summer, when they become dormant and turn a lovely glossy tan.








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya): note stems

 with rudimentary leaves at base.


 


Pale spikerush is 12-18
inches (30-45 cm.) tall.  It can grow as
a single stem, as a tuft-like cluster of stems or as a mat-like ‘sod’.  The stems have very rudimentary leaves (thin,
red-brown sheaths at the base of the stems) and are smooth and upright (see
above).  Stems are pale yellow-green
under water, medium green on land.  This
is a simple, but pretty wetland perennial.








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya) blooming in June:

 Madrona Marsh Preserve, Torrance CA.


 


The flowers of Eleocharis
macrostachya
grow in
purple-brown spikelets at the ends of the stems.  As seen in the photo above, flowering plants
are showy, even though individual flowers are rudimentary.  The spikelets are slender and cylindrical,
somewhat like a flame on a candle, and contain many small flowers, each encased
in a floral scale.  Since the flowers are
wind-pollinated, there’s no need for fancy petals to attract animal pollinators.  Instead, the sexual parts are well-situated
to ensure pollination (see below).  The
seeds are enclosed in a gold-brown achene (capsule with one seed) that drops
from the plant when ripe.








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya): close-up of spikelet.


 


Pale spikerush is a very
adaptable plant.  It will grow in just
about any soil, including clays and the sandy, alkali soils along our coast.  It tolerates full sun to fairly shady conditions,
with flowering more reliable in full sun. 
It does need moist soils in winter/spring and can even tolerate seasonal
flooding or shallow standing water, particularly if water levels are allowed to
fluctuate through the year (becoming shallower or dry in summer/fall). 








Rain garden at Mother Nature's Backyard.  Pale spikerush

(Eleocharis macrostachya) is indicated by arrow.


 


Pale spikerush is most
commonly used as a pond/pool plant or in rain gardens, vegetated (infiltration)
swales or bog gardens.  We grow it in our
rain garden and as a grass substitute under our Elderberry tree at Mother
Nature’s Backyard. It does fine with occasional (monthly or twice-monthly) summer
water. When grown in mass (like a turf) it becomes a lovely ‘straw’ groundcover
in late summer/fall.  In fact, spikerush
straw is harvested in some parts of the world.








Alkali heliotrope (Heliotropium curassavicum)  growing through

mulch of Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya)


 


Several points should be
emphasized regarding
Eleocharis macrostachya. 
First, it is a wetland plant that spreads via rhizomes.  In our personal experience, it’s not particularly
aggressive in a fairly dry garden.  But
if you water frequently – and want to limit its spread – then plant it in a
container.  The second issue involves
plant-plant interactions.  Some sources
note that Pale spikerush may inhibit the growth of other plants.   We’ve
not noticed this ourselves and suspect it may be most important when dense Eleocharis ‘turf’ is allowed to dry,
uncut, and release chemicals into the soil.








Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya) straw in summer.


 


That
being said, Eleocharis macrostachya
is a wonderful native for seasonally moist areas.  It’s great for rain gardens and ponds, stabilizing
the soil on banks and slopes.  It is easy
care, requiring only the removal of dead stalks in fall.  It provides food and cover, as well as
nesting materials, for birds and smaller animals.  In days of old, the stems were used for
weaving and dried stems for stuffing pillows and bedding.  Some Native American tribes used the plant as
a medicine to induce vomiting. 






We
love Eleocharis macrostachya as a
reminder of the seasonal wetlands once common in the South Bay.  Spikerushes tie us to the past, providing a
sense of place.  Ironically, our rain
gardens and seasonal swales have become our region’s wetlands.  They are places where the plants of old
continue to thrive, a remnant of the vibrant ecosystems that were once the
heart (and kidneys) of our region.








Mixed groundcover with Pale spikerush (Eleocharis macrostachya), Carex pansa and 

Stachys bullata.


 



 
















For plant
information sheets on other native plants see:
http://nativeplantscsudh.blogspot.com/p/gallery-of-native-plants_17.html













 









 






We
welcome your comments (below).  You can
also send your questions to:
mothernaturesbackyard10@gmail.com


 


 


 

Rabu, 11 November 2015

Plant of the Month (November) : Big (Bracted) Gumplant – Grindelia camporum






Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum)




 


What
an unusual year!   Hot and dry – rains in
summer; it’s no wonder plants are blooming at unexpected times.  Among the species that keep on flowering are
the fall-blooming sunflowers. For example, the Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum) in Mother Nature’s
Garden of Health has bloomed off and on from June to now.






Big
(Bracted) gumplant has many common names, among them California gum plant,
Giant gum plant, Field gumweed, Bracted gumweed, Grindelia, Hardy grindelia,
Rosin weed and Scaly grindelia.   To add
to the confusion, the local variant (formerly known as var. bracteosa) is also known by several
previous scientific names:
Grindelia robusta var. bracteosa and Grindelia
robusta
var. robusta.  At
any rate, we’ll leave it at ‘Big gumplant’, since that name describes it so well.






There is even debate about whether Grindelia
camporum
deserves its
own taxon. Some advocate lumping it with several other California gumplants
into the broader
Grindelia hirsutula 
Hook. & Arn.   The
Integrated
Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)
lumps; the USDA Plants Database, Jepson Manual and
Calflora still accord it species status. 
For this posting, we’ll side with the splitters.  We’ve grown both Grindelia camporum and G.
hirsutula
in the garden.  And while
they have their similarities, the two (at least those available in the local
horticultural trade) look and behave somewhat differently in the garden.






Big gum plant is native to North, Central and
Southern California as well as Baja California, Mexico.  In Southern California it grows along the
coast, in the Coastal and Transverse Ranges, and in the Peninsular Ranges of
California and Baja California.  Locally,
it grows in the Santa Monica Mountains and once did in the seasonal wetlands
near Long Beach, the Dominguez Hills and the Palos Verdes Peninsula (including the
San Pedro/Los Angeles Harbor area).






Big gum plant grows most often in seasonally moist
areas: along roadsides, in arroyos and washes, along seasonal streams/wetlands and
other places that get a little extra winter water.  It’s a member of several lower elevation
plant communities, including the
chaparral
and coastal sage scrub, occurring at elevations from near sea level to about
4000 feet (1200 m.).  The local soils are
primarily alluvial – either sandy or clay – and may be saline and alkaline
along the coast. 








Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum): a robust

 perennial/sub-shrub


 


Grindelia camporum is a drought-deciduous, herbaceous
perennial or part-woody sub-shrub.  It quickly
grows to 2-4 feet (about 1 m.) tall and about as wide. It spreads via both
rhizomes and seed, and will fill in bare patches in the garden.   It has stout, erect stems that become woody
at the base with age.






The
entire plant has a robust appearance; if you need a more delicate appearing
gumplant, try Grindelia hirsutula.  Young stems are quite erect, but they tend to
lean as the season progresses.  The stems
are thick – almost succulent – and are smooth and somewhat sticky with resinous
secretions.


 








Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum) - foliage


 


The
leaves are medium green, alternate and clasp the stem.  They are thick, leathery and quite sticky.
Foliage and flowers all have a strong, distinctive, resin-like aroma.  You’ll get to know this fragrance well as you
handle the plants.  We like the scent,
but some probably don’t; smell the plant before purchasing it.   The basal leaves are largest (to 6 or 7
inches), oblong and usually sharply toothed. 
Leaves become smaller – and more elongated – further up the stem. 


 








Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum): mature and

 immature floral heads


 


Many
gardeners love Big gumplant because of the flowers.  A member of the Sunflower family, Grindelia camporum produces flowers in
typical ‘sunflower heads’.  The flower
heads are of medium size (one to 1 ½ inches across), with about 25 bright
yellow ray flowers (the ‘petals’) and numerous yellow disk flowers in the
center.  The flowers are decorative as
only sunflowers can be.


 




Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum): white 'gum' covers

 immature flowers


 


Several
floral characteristics differentiate the Grindelias from other sunflowers.  First, they produce a gummy white substance
that likely protects immature flowers from disease/predation. You can see the
gum in the picture above; it disappears as the flowers mature.   This
‘gum’ was reportedly chewed by children as a gum substitute in previous
eras.  We’ve tried it and concluded it
was probably chewed for pleasure only by pretty desperate kids!  It was
chewed as a medicinal gum (more on that below).










Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum): note distinctive phyllaries


 


The
second unusual feature of Gumplant flowers are the green bracts surrounding the
flower head – the phyllaries.  These are particularly showy in the Gumplants,
and can sometimes be used to distinguish between gumplant species.  The
phyllaries
of Big gumplant are flattened at the base, but cylindrical and hooked at the
tip (see photo above).  The phyllaries
bend out in this species, forming a distinctive ‘cup’ below the flower head.
 








Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum) spreads via rhizomes.

 Here it's re-sprouting after pruning


 


Big gumplant begins blooming in late spring (May) and can continue
well into the fall (October or even November this year).  In drier local gardens – and in the wild –
this species often loses its leaves and even dies back entirely in summer.  If rains occur in summer or early fall, the
plants may green up and bloom again in fall. 
That’s what they did in our garden this year.






The gumplants, like sunflowers in general, are insect
pollinated.  They attract a wide range of
pollinating insects including native bees, European honeybees, pollinator flies/wasps
and butterflies.   In general, gumplants
are good all-round insect plants; many gardeners use them for just that
reason.   The seeds are small and
distributed by wind – if not eaten by hungry birds.  The plants may move around the garden via new
seedlings planted by Mother Nature.


 





Metallic Green Been on Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum)







 In our gardens, Big gumplant looks good for 4-5 years, then either
dies out or is ready to be replaced. 
Fortunately, it is easy to propagate from seed.  Collect fresh, dry seed in summer; plant in
recycled nursery containers in late fall, and you’ll have replacement plants by
next spring.  Remember to just barely
cover the seeds with potting soil – they need light to germinate.








Seeds of Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum) can be collected

 when dry.


 


You can also easily propagate from stem cuttings in summer.  Just stick 12 inch, semi-woody cuttings into
one-gallon pots (we stick up to 6 per pot; insert about 6 inches deep). Keep
the soil moist, then wait for the cuttings to leaf out and produce roots.  Not all will take, but at least several should
do well.






Grindelia camporum is a facultative wetland plant in
California; it usually grows at wetland margins or other seasonally moist areas.  So, this plant needs good winter/spring rains
to establish and succeed.  If Mother
Nature doesn’t provide, you’ll have to do the honors.  Once established, Big gumplant plant is quite
drought tolerant.  If you don’t mind the
summer die-back, water only occasionally (or not at all).  You can
get by with watering it once or twice a month in very well-drained soils.  In clays, summer water appears to decrease
the plant’s life-span.






Big
gumplant tolerates a wide range of soil textures.  We’ve grown it at both extremes; the only
difference is the need to limit summer water in the clays.  Plants even tolerate the salty, alkali soils
sometimes found right along the coast. 
They like full sun and will become leggy otherwise. 










And
they look better if cut back to about 12-15 inches when they go dormant.  Some cut them back in summer (they do look a
little ratty); others wait to prune in fall. 
Those in moister, colder climates (where gumplants are winter-dormant)
may want to cut back in early spring. 
That’s really all the management these plants need.


 




Two native Longhorned Bees on Big gumplant

 (Grindelia camporum)


 




Big
gumplant is routinely planted in habitat gardens in western Los Angeles County.
It provides nectar/pollen for insects and seeds for the birds.   It looks great with other local water-wise
natives including the bunch grasses, sub-shrubs (particularly the native
Buckwheats and Salvias) and larger chaparral shrubs.  Just remember, this is a large,
robust-appearing plant - place accordingly.  The cheerful yellow flowers and fresh scent
make it a nice addition to many gardens.  The flowers contrast beautifully with the
spring penstemons and fall asters.  Some
gardeners even grow Big gumplant in their herb or medicinal garden.


 










Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum): 'El Rincon' garden,

South Coast Botanic Garden


 






The
Grindelias, and Grindelia camporum in
particular, have a long history of use as medicinal plants.  In fact the genus name honors David
Hieronymous Grindel (1776-1836), a German pharmacologist, physician and
professor of botany at Riga, Estonia.  Native Californians traditionally used Big
gumplant both externally (as a poultice or infusion) and internally (as an
infusion - or gum chewed as a remedy for sore throat). 






A
poultice made from fresh flowers and/or foliage or an infusion of the dried plant
is applied to skin rashes, minor burns, eczema, dermatitis and other superficial
skin conditions. This external use – along with appropriate antibiotic creams
if needed – may provide relief by numbing the nerve ends. We’ll discuss how to
make and use poultices later this month. 






Big
gumplant has also been used as an infusion (tea) and tincture to treat
conditions associated with excess respiratory mucous: bronchitis, coughs and
bronchial asthma.  It was used as a
homeopathic medicine in the U.S. and Europe until the 1960’s, when the U.S. FDA
required such products be formally tested for safety and efficacy.






While
Grindelia tinctures can still be purchased on-line, the needed clinical trials
have yet to be conducted.  Several
smaller studies suggest that this medicinal should be used with caution, and should
not be used at all by patients who are pregnant or breast-feeding, or have
kidney disease, hypertension or heart conditions
.  Those aged 55 and older need be particularly
careful,
since kidney function decreases with age, and many of the
active chemicals are excreted in the urine.






Grindelia camporum produces a wide range of plant
chemicals including
grindelane diterpenoids, balsamic resin, volatile oils, other
terpenoids, saponins and many others. 
The exact modes of action for most of these chemicals are currently
unknown.  However, Grindelia camporum extracts appear to slow heart rate, decrease
mucous production, and decrease inflammation both by blocking nerve endings and
possibly acting as an antibiotic.  






Future
research may support a role for this plant (or specific chemicals) in the
treatment of asthma and other conditions. 
But for now, if you choose to take this medicine internally, do so with proper
caution.
   Some combination of the chemicals is known to
interact with common medications for hypertension (high blood pressure), with
diuretics, and possibly with other medications.  You should never use this medicine without
first consulting your doctor
.   To
read more about Big gumplant as a medicinal, see references 1-4, below.  For more on making tinctures see:
http://mother-natures-backyard.blogspot.com/2015/10/garden-of-health-making-tincture-for.html






In
addition to its medicinal properties, Grindelia
camporum
produces other potentially useful chemicals.  The resin (diterpene resin acids) produced by
the foliage glands has qualities similar to wood rosin, a product with many
manufacturing uses (adhesives, rubber, coatings, textile sizing, dyes and more).
 The Grindelic resins are currently being
evaluated as cost-effective wood rosin substitutes.  And if you are a natural dyer, the flowers
and foliage produce lovely, color-fast yellow and green dyes. For more on
natural dyes see:
http://mother-natures-backyard.blogspot.com/2012/10/solar-dyeing-with-native-plant-trimmings.html






In
summary, Big gumplant is a robust perennial sunflower with excellent habitat
value.  It is easy to grow, requiring
little care and not much water.  The
flowers are lovely and attract a parade of interesting insects. The blooms are particularly
attractive when contrasted with the purple flowers of the Salvias.  The plants have useful properties, including
use as medicinals and dye plants.  We
hope you’ll consider Big gumplant when you need a local sub-shrub.







Big gumplant (Grindelia camporum) in spring garden:

Madrona Marsh Nature Center, Torrance  CA


















For plant
information sheets on other native plants see:
http://nativeplantscsudh.blogspot.com/p/gallery-of-native-plants_17.html






_______________________________________________







  1. http://www.livingnaturally.com/ns/DisplayMonograph.asp?StoreID=E32FA6C399AB4C99897032581851D45D&DocID=bottomline-gumweed



  2. http://www.thehealthierlife.co.uk/natural-health-articles/lung-problems/grindelia-camporum-relief-chest-infections-00646/



  3. http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/life-science/nutrition-research/learning-center/plant-profiler/grindelia-squarrosa.html



  4. http://www.herbalremedies.com/grindelia-information.html













 









 






We
welcome your comments (below).  You can
also send your questions to:
mothernaturesbackyard10@gmail.com




 


 


 

Minggu, 08 November 2015

November 2015 Native Plant Sale - CSU Dominguez Hills










The Fall, 2015 CSUDH Native Plant Sale will be held Friday, November 13th and Saturday, November 14th.  The sale features locally native (and some other CA native) plants, including a large selection of plants for rain gardens, ponds and containers.  The plants are grown on campus, and donations support greenhouse and restoration activities in the South Bay.   Reasonable prices - easy parking.


 


Kamis, 05 November 2015

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