List of California native plants
California native plants are plants that existed in California prior to the arrival of European explorers and colonists in the late 18th century. California includes parts of at least three phytochoria. The largest is the California Floristic Province, a geographical area that covers most of California, portions of neighboring Oregon, Nevada, and Baja California, and is regarded as a "world hotspot" of biodiversity.
Introduction
In 1993 The Jepson Manual estimated that California was home to 4,693 native species and 1,169 native subspecies or varieties, including 1,416 endemic species. A 2001 study by the California Native Plant Society estimated 6,300 native plants. These estimates continue to change over time.Of California's total plant population, 2,153 species, subspecies, and varieties are endemic and native to California alone, according to the 1993 Jepson Manual study. This botanical diversity stems not only from the size of the state, but also its diverse topographies, climates, and soils. Numerous plant groupings exist in California, and botanists work to structure them into identifiable ecoregions, plant communities, vegetation types, and habitats, and taxonomies.
California native plants include some that have widespread horticultural use. Sometimes the appreciation began outside of California—lupines, California fuchsias, and California poppies were first cultivated in British and European gardens for over a century.
Selected trees
Coniferous trees
Sequoias and redwoods
- Coast redwood - in the fog-shrouded coast ranges.
- Giant sequoia - in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
Pine trees
- Bishop pine : coastal species grown in gardens
- Coulter pine
- Gray pine, ghost pine, or digger pine
- Knobcone pine
- Ponderosa pine : well known in mountains
- Lodgepole pine : used for early construction of buildings and other structures.
- Monterey pine : naturally limited endemic range; widely planted horticulturally around the world
- Limber pine
- Jeffrey pine
- Parry pinyon
- Shore pine
- Sugar pine
- Torrey pine
- Western white pine
- Single-leaf pinyon pine
- Great Basin bristlecone pine : the Methuselah, a 4,700-year-old specimen
- Foxtail pine : endemic to California; 2,000-year-old specimens
Western Cypress
- Arizona cypress
- Baker cypress
- Cuyamaca cypress
- Gowen cypress
- McNab's cypress
- Monterey cypress
- Paiute cypress
- Pygmy cypress
- Santa Cruz cypress
- Sargent's Cypress
- Tecate cypress
Other conifers
- Santa Lucia fir and seven other native Abies species.
- Douglas-fir
- Bigcone Douglas-fir - Central Coast and Santa Susana Mountains.
- California nutmeg
- Incense cedar
- Port Orford cedar-Lawson cypress
- White fir - at high elevations
- Mountain hemlock
- Red fir
- Pacific yew
- Western Juniper
Oak trees
- Valley oak - the largest of the oaks.
- Leather oak - an evergreen shrub endemic to serpentine chaparral.
- Blue oak - in the Central Valley foothills and Coast Ranges.
- California black oak - in the higher hills and mountains.
- Canyon live oak - found mainly in northern mountainous regions.
- Interior live oak in the Central Valley region.
- Island oak - endemic with distinctive large evergreen leaves.
- Engelmann oak - an endangered species with a cool blue-gray cast to the foliage.
- Coast live oak is found in the Coast Ranges, Transverse Ranges, Peninsular Ranges, and along the coast's hills and adjacent interior valleys, and many other habitats and gardens.
Riparian trees
- California sycamore
- White alder
- Quaking aspen
- Fremont cottonwood
- Black cottonwood.
- Arroyo willow.
Other trees and tree-like shrubs
- Tanoak
- California bay laurel
- Madrone
- Toyon
- Bigleaf maple
- Western blue elderberry is found throughout the state, an important host for birds, butterflies, pollinators, and beneficial insects.
- California Buckeye
- Western redbud
- California black walnut
- California hazelnut
Selected shrubs
- Chamise or greasewood
- Service-berry
- Manzanita
- California sagebrush
- Coyote brush
- Calliandra
- California lilacs
- Desert willow
- Flannelbush
- Hollyleaf cherry
- Spicebush
- Bush Anemone
- Bladderpod
- Creosote bush
- Lupines
- Snowberry,
- Huckleberry
- Coffeeberry
- Lemonade berry
- Sugarbush
- Gooseberries and currants
- Sages
Selected desert plants
- California fan palm
- Joshua tree
- Jojoba
- California juniper
- Blue palo verde
- Yellow foothill palo verde
- Single-leaf pinyon
- Fremont cottonwood
- Ocotillo
- Creosote bush
- Indian mallow
- Brittlebush
- Desert agave
- California barrel cactus
- Banana yucca
- Mojave yucca
- Rush milkweed
- Purple desert sand-verbena
- Sacred datura
Selected perennials
Sunny habitats
- California poppy are found in drier places. California poppies are also an annual in many places.
- Douglas iris and 'Pacific Coast' hybrids
- Monkeyflower e.g.: Mimulus aurantiacus, Mimulus guttatus, Mimulus cardinalis and cultivars.
- Columbine
- Coyote mint
- Buckwheats,,
Shady habitats
- Western wild ginger
- Pacific bleeding-heart
- Island coral bells
- Canyon coral bells
- Heucherella
- Threeleaf foamflower
- Redwood sorrel
Ferns
- Polypody ferns, e.g.: Polypodium californicum
- Native sword ferns, e.g.: Polystichum munitum
- Giant chain fern
- Goldback ferns
- Wood ferns, e.g.: Dryopteris arguta
- Maidenhair ferns e.g.: Adiantum jordanii
Selected bulbs
- Ithuriel's spear
- Meadow onion
- Goldenstars
- Brodiaeas
- Blue dicks-ookow : one of the most common native bulb species throughout California; found in grassland and dry meadow habitats
- Mariposa lilies : available from reputable horticultural sources; taking from the wild is illegal and is resulting in significant declines of some species from over collecting.
Selected annuals and wildflowers
- Baby blue eyes
- Blazing star
- California poppy
- Chinese houses
- Elegant clarkia
- Farewell-to-spring
- Meadowfoam
- Miner's lettuce
- Tarweed
- Wind poppy
Selected vines
- Dutchman's pipe vine
- Morning glory
- Chaparral clematis
- Western virgin's bower
- Calabazilla
- Wild cucumber-manroot
- Cucamonga manroot-bigroot
- California wild grape
- Desert wild grape
Selected grasses
- Purple three-awn
- Blue grama
- California fescue
- Idaho fescue
- Red fescue
- Junegrass
- Giant wildrye
- California melic
- Deer grass
- Purple needlegrass : The state grass of California
- Indian ricegrass
- Pine bluegrass
- Sedges —
- Rushes —
- Western blue-eyed grass and yellow-eyed-grass.
Selected succulents
- Chalk lettuce - garden-plant
- Coast dudleya -
- Canyon live-forever - garden-plant
- Fingertips - garden-plant
- Giant chalk dudleya, Britton's dudleya - garden-plant
- Lanceleaf liveforever - garden-plant
- Broadleaf stonecrop - San Bruno elfin butterfly host plant.
- Coast sedum
- Feather River stonecrop -
- Red Mountain stonecrop -
- Roseflower stonecrop
- Sierra stonecrop
Environmental challenges
California also has 1,023 species of non-native plants, some now problematic invasive species such as yellow starthistle, that were introduced during the Spanish colonization, the California Gold Rush, and subsequent immigrations and import trading of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.
Books: flora
- A California Flora and Supplement, Philip A. Munz and David D. Keck, UC Press
- Grasses in California, Beecher Crampton, UC Press
- The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California, James C. Hickman, UC Press
- The Jepson Desert Manual: Vascular Plants of Southeastern California, Bruce Baldwin, UC Press
- Oaks of California, Bruce M. Pavlik, Pamela Muick, Sharon Johnson, Cachuma Press
- Plants of the San Francisco Bay Region: Mendocino to Monterey, Linda Beidleman, Eugene Kozloff, UC Press
Books: gardening/landscaping
- Landscape Plants for California Gardens, Bob Perry, Land Design Publishing
- California Native Plants for the Garden, Carol Bornstein, David Fross, and Bart O'Brien, Cachuma Press
- California Native Trees and Shrubs, Lee W. Lenz, Rancho Santa Ana
- Ceanothus, David Fross and Dieter Wilken, Timber Press
- Complete Guide to Native Perennials of California, Glenn Keator, Chronicle Books
- Complete Guide to Native Shrubs of California, Glenn Keator, Chronicle Books
- Designing California Native Gardens: The Plant Community Approach to Artful, Ecological Gardens, Glenn Keator and Alrie Middlebrook, UC Press
- Growing California Native Plants, Marjorie Schmidt, UC Press
- Native Landscaping From El Paso to L.A., Sally Wasowski and Andy Wasowski, McGraw-Hill
- Native Plants for California Gardens, Lee W. Lenz, Day Printing Corp.
- Native Treasures: Gardening with the Plants of California, M. Nevin Smith, UC Press