Chapter 3 - Natural Resources - Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton
Chapter 3 - Natural Resources - Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton
Chapter 3 - Natural Resources - Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
Integrated <strong>Natural</strong> <strong>Resources</strong> Management Plan [March 2012 - Update]<br />
State/<br />
Federal<br />
Status<br />
CNPS<br />
List a<br />
CNPS<br />
Threat<br />
Code b<br />
Voucher<br />
Specimen<br />
Species<br />
Nemacaulis<br />
denudata var.<br />
denudata<br />
Coast woolly-heads<br />
Phacelia stellaris<br />
Brand’s phacelia<br />
--/FC 1B 1 Yes<br />
Polygala cornuta<br />
var. fishiae<br />
--/-- 4 3 Yes<br />
Fish’s milkwort<br />
Quercus dumosa<br />
Nuttall’s scrub oak --/-- 1B 1 Yes<br />
Quercus<br />
engelmannii<br />
Engelmann oak<br />
Romneya coulteri<br />
Coulter’s matilija<br />
poppy<br />
Satureja chandleri<br />
San Miguel savory<br />
Viguiera laciniata<br />
San Diego County<br />
viguiera<br />
Viguiera purissimae<br />
Brandegee<br />
La Purisima viguiera<br />
--/-- 1B 2 Yes Coastal dunes<br />
--/-- 4 2 Yes<br />
Typical Habitat/Comments<br />
Coastal dunes, and coastal<br />
scrub<br />
Riparian woodland,<br />
cismontane woodland, and<br />
chaparral<br />
Closed-cone coniferous forest,<br />
chaparral, and CSS/sandy,<br />
clay loam<br />
Chaparral, cismontane<br />
woodland, ,riparian woodland,<br />
and valley and foothill<br />
grassland<br />
--/-- 4 2 Yes CSS, and chaparral<br />
--/-- 1B 2 No<br />
Chaparral, cismontane<br />
woodland, CSS, riparian<br />
woodland, and valley and<br />
foothill grassland/rocky,<br />
gabbroic or metavolcanic<br />
--/-- 4 2 Yes Chaparral and CSS<br />
--/-- 2 3<br />
Coastal bluff and chaparral<br />
(Only known location in the<br />
US, represents a 300-mile<br />
range extension)<br />
Note a: The CNPS list plants on one of 5 “lists” in an effort to categorize degrees of concern. They are described as<br />
follows:<br />
List 1A: Plants Presumed Extinct in California<br />
List 1B: Plants Rare, Threatened, or Endangered in California and Elsewhere<br />
List 2: Plants Rare, Threatened, or Endangered in California, But More Common Elsewhere<br />
List 3: Plants about Which We Need More Information - A Review List<br />
List 4: Plants of Limited Distribution - A Watch List<br />
A Threat Code has extension to the lists indication of the endangerment of the species. The extensions and their<br />
meaning are as follows:<br />
1 – Seriously endangered in California<br />
2 – Fairly endangered in California<br />
3 – Not very endangered in California<br />
3.2.2.3. California State Listed and ESA Candidate Plant Species Known to Occur on <strong>Camp</strong><br />
<strong>Pendleton</strong><br />
Two California listed plant species have been found on <strong>Base</strong>: Thread-leaved brodiaea<br />
(California endangered), and San Diego button-celery (California endangered). Both of<br />
these species are also listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and are further<br />
discussed in Section 3.2.4. and Appendix F.<br />
<strong>Chapter</strong> 3 – <strong>Natural</strong> <strong>Resources</strong> 3-25