Plant Species of the Borrego Desert: 2009-2010 Blooms

Most of this page has not been updated since 8 March 2010 due to finding too many lovely blooms; only the plots are being kept up to date through the end of the low desert season in mid-April.

Field of spectacle-pod, Dithyrea californica
Photograph of field of Dithyrea californica in full bloom

Picture taken on 23 February 2010 a few hundred feet past the end of the pavement of DiGiorgio Road, from immediately alongside the road. See also the larger picture showing the evil non-native Asian mustard, Brassica tournefortii, about to put an end to future displays like this here. As recently as 15 years ago, there was no Asian mustard here, and the native wildflower displays were much more extensive.


Table of Contents

Introduction
Rainfall This Season

Annual Germination, Growth and Blooms
     General Requirements for Annual Germination
     Bad Bloom Years Are All The Same; Good Bloom Years Are All Different
     Peak Bloom: What Does That Mean?
     Summary of Annual Germination, Growth and Blooms in 2009-2010

     Detailed Germination, Growth and Bloom Reports From Each Hike
     Pictures From Each Hike

How Long Will An Annual Bloom Last
     General Factors
     Predictions for This Year

Species in Bloom On Each Trip
     Number of Species and Plants in Bloom On Each Trip
     List of Species in Bloom On Each Trip, With Photographs
     Pictorial Gallery of Species in Bloom To Date in 2009-2010, organized by flower color

Links to Other Webpages on Anza-Borrego Desert State Park Blooms


Introduction

The Borrego Desert is the northern part of Anza-Borrego Desert State Park below an elevation of ~3000 feet, named for the Borrego Valley and the town of Borrego Springs (map and expanded definition).

This page gives information about the 2009-2010 bloom for all species in this area, with emphasis on the annuals that are responsible for the widespread showy blooms that appear in some years on the desert floor. The date of the last update to this page is given at the bottom of this page.

For the progress of last year's bloom, see 2008-2009 Blooms.

In addition to specific information about current conditions, this page also gives some general information on what is needed to germinate those annuals, and what is needed to sustain the annual bloom.

The information here is by no means a definitive list to what is blooming at all locations in the Borrego Desert; it only records the species I've seen in bloom on my trips that occur roughly every fourth day. Because the locations change, the numbers of species in bloom, and the number of plants in bloom, cannot usually be directly compared from trip to trip. However, the information here will give the reader an idea of what the bloom is doing in the Borrego Desert.

Note that there is often quite a difference in the annual bloom between the moister canyons west of Borrego Springs and the drier areas around the Badlands. Similarly, even within those canyons on the west, there can be large differences between the north-facing and south-facing slopes, and between canyons with permanent water, like Borrego Palm Canyon, and drier canyons. In the drier areas to the east, there can be large differences between the edges of washes and the middle of washes, and between shady canyons and open areas.

The locations for each hike are in the detailed reports below; more information is sometimes given in Botanical Trail Reports in Chronological Order, which usually includes more information about the bloom on each trip.

Rainfall This Season

Rainfall is the most important determinant of blooms. Rainfall is usually highest on the mountain slopes, especially on the west edge of the Borrego Desert, and falls off dramatically with lower elevation to the east. This occurs whenever our rainfall is mostly orographic. However, when rainfall is from convection, the deserts can at times get more rainfall than the coast. (See Precipitation types.)

In addition to desert stations, I've also given the rainfall from my house in Fallbrook, on the coastal side at 680 feet elevation, to show the large difference in rainfall between the wet side of the mountains and the dry side.

Table 1 gives the storm totals, in inches, as of the last day of each storm. The storm totals were taken from the Weather Service Rainfall Storm Summary, except for Fallbrook and the Borrego Badlands / Ocotillo Wells. Occasionally other stations are missing in that report; if so, totals are taken from the Rainfall Summary Map. Rainfall reports for Ocotillo Wells are reported at here for the month to date.

If a station didn't appear in the summary, or I couldn't find it elsewhere on line, I usually assumed the rainfall total was zero. Although this assumption is probably usually correct, it is not necessarily always valid since missing data plague all rain reports. In a few cases, when it was clear that some rainfall must have been received at those missing stations, I've guesstimated the rainfall.

Note that the total rainfall at the bottom of the table is since 1 October, since rain that falls earlier doesn't germinate the desert annuals (see below). This rainfall total may be different from the rainfall reported by the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park Visitor Center using the normal California rainfall year that begins on 1 July.

Table 1. Rainfall Events Since 1 October 2009

DateFallbrookSan FelipeAgua CalienteBorrego Palm CanyonBorrego SpringsBorrego Badlands /
Ocotillo Wells
13 October 20090.070.000.000.000.000.00
28 November 20090.420.200.080.140.030.00
7 December 20091.931.411.09~1.01.24~1.2
11-13 December 20091.460.5??0.3??0.130.18~0.00
22 December 20090.130.2?0.2?~0.080.08~0.00
18-22 January 20105.24~6.0?~6.0?~5.5?4.891.65
27 January 20100.16~0.0?~0.0?~0.0?0.010.00
6-7 February 20101.730.430.360.07?0.070.18
10 February 20100.470.150.15?0.25?0.250.05
20 February 20100.630.000.000.010.000.00
22 February 20100.240.120.000.000.000.00
27-28 February 20101.461.0?.0.6?~0.49?0.490.?
4-5 March 20100.190.160.15?0.1?0.080.01
 
Total Since 1 October14.37~10.16?~8.97?~7.71?7.32~3.09

The rainfall totals for 5 March 2010 are incomplete for every location except Fallbrook.

The reported rainfall of 0.34 inches for Borrego Palm Canyon on 12/7/09 is unlikely to be correct, since nearly everywhere in San Diego County received an inch of rain or more. Automatic rainfall gauges often get clogged, causing under-reported rainfall, which is probably what happened here. I've replaced it by an estimated 1.0 inches.

On 2/13/10, the Visitor Center billboard reported 6.94 inches of rain, compared to the total above of 6.75 inches from the National Weather Service station in Borrego Springs, and my estimate of 7.12 inches from Borrego Palm Canyon, so my estimate was probably fairly accurate.

On 12/31/09, the rainfall given at the Visitor Center since July 1, 2009 matched closely the Borrego Springs total rainfall given above since there was no monsoonal rain at the Visitor Center in 2009.

Annual Germination, Growth and Blooms

General Requirements for Annual Germination

The timing of rainfall is extremely important for the annual bloom. Rainfall received in the summer and early fall will not germinate the annuals that bloom in February and March. Rainfall received after January will either not germinate those annuals, or will germinate them too late for them to produce a robust bloom in most years. Thus rain must fall in October, November, and/or December in order to germinate the annuals that produce the showy mass displays.

The amount in a single storm is also important. Native annuals require about an inch of rainfall, received over no longer than a period of something like several days, in order to germinate. Our native annuals have learned the hard way that any less rainfall doesn't guarantee enough moisture in the soil for them to produce seeds.

Unfortunately, non-native annuals can germinate on less rainfall, and can sometimes get a head start over our native annuals if we get a first rainfall much less than an inch.

See Predicting Desert Wildflower Blooms - The science behind the spectacle from the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum for information relating to Arizona desert blooms. Many of our annual species respond a bit differently, since we have much less monsoonal rain and more winter rain, but some of our species follow the Arizona rules.

Bad Bloom Years Are All The Same; Good Bloom Years Are All Different

Janice Emily Bowers, with her vast experience in desert blooms, said it best in her book Flowers and Shrubs of the Mojave Desert, 1998, p. 4:

... maybe one in five [springs] will bring a good wildflower display. All bad springs are more or less alike in that wildflowers are scarce or not to be seen, but all good years are different in that no two have the same abundance of flowers or the same combinations of species. This is because different kinds of annual wildflowers have different requirements for germination and growth.

This is just as true for the Borrego and Sonoran Deserts.

Peak Bloom: What Does That Mean?

The term Peak Bloom means different things to different people:

Most of the time, I use the latter definition of Peak Bloom, but I also try to mention when the carpets of flowers are present.

If you are looking for a particular species in bloom, the time of Peak Bloom doesn't matter to you; you want to know only when that species is in bloom. Plant species bloom at different times; it is not possible to see every species in bloom even over the time period of a month.

For example, if you want to see the beautiful blooms of beavertail cactus, Opuntia basilaris, you'll need to come just after the showy annual carpets are finished. If you want to see the beautiful flowers of desert-willow, Chilopsis linearis ssp. arcuata, then you'll need to come here in summer, when few species are blooming except for it.

See observed dates of peak bloom in 2008-2009 for various locations.

These annual species produce the showy carpets of flowers:

Other annuals can produce carpets of flowers, but are either more limited in their distribution, such as Bigelow's monkeyflower, Mimulus bigelovii, or purple mat, Nama demissum; or don't produce such showy displays, such as Fremont pincushion, Chaenactis fremontii (since fields of white don't show up well against the whitish background of the desert soil).

Summary of Annual Germination, Growth and Blooms in 2009-2010

Peak bloom began on the desert floor ~23 February 2010, at elevations of ~1000 feet and below. The first carpet of bloom is now present in many places along Coyote Canyon Road, the white carpet from spectacle-pod, Dithyrea californica. About 75% of the desert annuals have begun blooming, with the rest to follow in the next month. This is the exciting phase of peak bloom, where every trip reveals additional species blooming, and finds fields of bloom from species that only had a few individuals blooming just a week earlier.

The widespread inch of rain on 12/7/09 produced excellent native annual germination west of Borrego Springs, but poor native annual germination in most areas east of Borrego Springs. East of Borrego Springs, including the floor of eastern Clark Valley and Beckman and Fonts Point Wash in the Borrego Badlands, almost 100% of the germinated annuals from the early rains were the non-native Asian mustard, Brassica tournefortii. The January rains caused some native annual germination in those areas, resulting in very small plants as of 2/28/10.

Many of the annuals blooming now are small plants, perhaps because they germinated in December instead of earlier, and / or because the temperatures since then have been cool, without any warm spells until after they started blooming.

The perennials and shrubs are blooming beautifully this year from all the rain.

The following list will record some times of peak bloom in 2010, in order of when peak bloom began (all dates are approximate), defined mostly by the number of plants in bloom:

For comparison, see observed dates of peak bloom in 2008-2009 for various locations.

Detailed Germination, Growth and Bloom Reports From Each Hike

Detailed reports for the last two months are given here; for earlier reports, see Reports from 29 October 2009 to 24 January 2010.

These reports are just summaries of these conditions from each hike.

See also Detailed Germination, Growth and Bloom Reports From Each Hike in 2008-2009.

1/7/10: Hellhole Canyon to Maidenhair Falls. There is excellent annual germination in Hellhole Canyon itself, and decent germination underneath the shrubs on the alluvial plain below. In particular, the Phacelia distans plants are growing robustly, with ~8 good-sized leaves or so on each plant. About ten plants of bladderpod, Isomeris arborea, are in good bloom.

1/10/10: Borrego Badlands: Fonts Point Wash and Beckman Wash. It was almost shocking to see the lack of native annual germination in this area. To a first approximation, the only annuals that have germinated here are those of the non-native Asian mustard, Brassica tournefortii. We only observed a few baby plants of narrow-leaved cryptantha, Cryptantha angustifolia, and a few other native annuals. Worse, even if native annuals germinate later, they will be overwhelmed by the non-native Asian mustard due to its huge head start.

We observed rosettes of 3-4 leaves on several desert lilies, Hesperocallis undulata, but the last leaf reverted to a much-smaller size, indicating that it might be running of our moisture. That doesn't augur well for its good bloom unless we get further rain.

As is often the case, the number of plants in bloom in the Borrego Badlands was way less here than we observed any place else so far this year. We found a grand total of 4 plants in bloom, each a different species.

We also found a single plant on the S22 roadside of Salton milk-vetch, Astragalus crotalariae, with a number of buds.

1/15/10: Hellhole Canyon to beyond Maidenhair Falls. Conditions are much the same as on 1/7/10, with the annuals all a bit bigger.

1/24/10: Hellhole Canyon to beyond Maidenhair Falls. It rained! It rained a lot! This hike was delayed by six days due to a glorious five days of rain.

Hellhole Canyon Creek is flowing quite strongly above the Canyon mouth; water is shooting down Maidenhair Falls; the ground is wet everywhere; and the annuals are looking great. The annuals are no longer little rosettes with a few leaves in many places; they are now forming masses with foliage some distance above the ground.

The widespread ~5 inches of rain here on 18-22 January guarantees a good wildflower display to come at least in this canyon.

The stars of the show today were a few specimens of California fish-hook cactus, Mammillaria dioica, in full bloom along the portion of the trail in the alluvial fan, and the first few plants of desert apricot, Prunus fremontii in bloom (both pix by Mike Crouse).

We observed three tiny plants of the first winter annual in bloom, but unfortunately the species was the non-native redstem filaree, Erodium cicutarium.

1/28/10: Borrego Palm Canyon: Palm Grove Loop. The biggest delight of the day was to quite unexpectedly see the rock crossosoma, Crossosoma bigelovii, in beautiful fragrant bloom. The scent was very strong and delightful, and the plants were beautiful, covered with bloom.

The first mats of annual flowers were present, but they were mats that only a serious botanist would notice. They were from the first flowers of curvenut combseed, Pectocarya recurvata, which has a minute flower, just ~1 mm (1/25 inch) across. The other first-flowering mass annual here, hairy-podded pepper-grass, Lepidium lasiocarpum, was already showing its first fruit, along with what passes for flowers in this self-fertilized species.

We spent considerable time verifying all the species on the plant trail guide, to see how many of the species seen in the glorious year of 2005 were present this year. The variation is almost entirely due to annual species, since the perennials and shrubs stick around for a very long time.

Nearly all annual species are present (of course, these were all babies, with few in flower yet). For example, in the first 0.02 mile of the trail, we found 18 annual species present, most in great abundance, with only three winter annual species seen in prior years not in evidence in this short stretch of trail (Lotus strigosus, Perityle emoryi, Camissonia claviformis). The latter two species were found later on the trail. Most surprisingly, one of those 18 annual species, the native Texas filaree, Erodium texanum, had not been seen previously anywhere on this trail in 2003-2005!

It is going to be a good bloom year in the canyons west of Borrego Springs.

1/31/10: Borrego Palm Canyon: Palm Grove Loop and above the first grove. Three new species popped into bloom today: white fiesta flower, Pholistoma membranaceum; cheesebush, Hymenoclea salsola var. salsola; and deerweed, Lotus scoparius var. brevialatus, all represented by one to two plants or a single location. The fiesta flower was quite a surprise, since we saw it at the end of the day on the Alternate Trail, after previously seeing one zillion plants not yet showing any buds. A number of plants in that one location were quite covered with bloom.

Cheesebush is nearly impossible to tell when it is in bloom by eye. What most people think of as the flowers for this species are actually the bracts on the fruit. But the bees know when it is in bloom, so all we had to do to find the plants in bloom was to watch for the bees!

The Asian mustard, Brassica tournefortii, has begun to bloom in mass in several places on surprisingly tiny plants. I would have thought the abundance of rain would have led these plants to delay bloom while they grew more robustly, which is what 99% of the other plants of this species are doing. Keith Haworth speculated that maybe other nutrients were in short supply here, and I speculated that maybe these plants had already decided to begin blooming before the heavy rain of two weeks previously. But perhaps it was some other feature of this location not easily apparent to humans, just like the patch of fiesta flower in bloom.

Overall, we found at least 491 total plants of 28 species in bloom, including four species not seen previously this season so far (the fourth one was common cudweed, Gnaphalium luteo-album, which had clearly been in bloom previously, but we had just not encountered it before this trip).

2/9/10: Borrego Palm Canyon: Palm Grove Loop and above the first grove. Eight new species were found into bloom today, including one of the stars of the annual show, Phacelia distans. See the list below for the complete list of the species found in bloom here. Many cheesebush plants are now in bloom, and some of them are beginning to produce their showy fruit that many mistake for their bloom.

Many of the species in bloom here can be found right at the parking area, which would keep a plant photographer busy for some time without the need for any hiking.

Surprisingly, many of the first annuals blooming now are very small plants, perhaps because they germinated in December instead of earlier.

In the Canyon above the first palm grove, we were pleased to come across five plants of San Jacinto beardtongue, Penstemon clevelandii var. connatus, that had buds just about to pop.

Altogether, we observed over 1,094 plants of 44 species in bloom today.

2/13/10: Little Surprise Canyon, Galleta Meadows, Henderson Canyon Road, Fonts Point Wash. This was primarily a one hour early-morning car trip to quickly survey some major bloom areas prior to a CNPS Orange County Chapter Pilostyles Tour I was leading at 11:00 a.m. At the end of the Pilostyles Tour, we then returned to Henderson Canyon Road and surveyed it more slowly.

I was quite surprised at how few blooms I found. Little Surprise Canyon, up to just a bit beyond the split of the branches, had only five species in bloom, and two of them were non-natives. At Galleta Meadows, I found only three additional species in bloom, and they were very small plants, typical of many of the annuals I've seen in bloom so far this year. These plants clearly germinated too late to grow any bigger.

On Henderson Canyon Road, in the usual hairy desert-sunflower location, beside the huge dominance of the Asian mustard, Brassica tournefortii, there, there were a large number of young plants of hairy desert-sunflower, Geraea canescens. But they were far from bloom. The largest were at least several weeks away from bloom, and there were a large number of very small plants with just a few true leaves that had clearly germinated only in the last several weeks.

The best spot was just west of the Pegleg Monument, where the lowermost slope and base of Coyote Mountain had about ten species in bloom, including the very first flowers of desert star, Monoptilon bellioides; and yellow-head, Trichoptilium incisum; of the year.

Near the Beckman Wash entrance along S22 west of Inspiration Wash, one glorious plant of Salton milk-vetch, Astragalus crotalariae, was in beautiful full bloom, due to the extra early water the road runoff provided.

Fonts Point Wash was nearly devoid of life, let alone blooms. Most of the Pilostyles host plant, dyeweed, Psorothamnus emoryi; along with the burroweed, Ambrosia dumosa; were just beginning to leaf out! No native annuals were present in the wash at all. It is just astounding how this area could look like it was in a severe drought year, despite all the rain of the last two months here.

Overall, this mostly-car-trip found only 535 plants of 21 species in bloom, about half of what we found for both numbers in Borrego Palm Canyon alone four days earlier. However, eight of these species were seen in bloom for the first time by me, since this trip was the first one of mine covering the desert floor for a while.

2/15/10: Borrego Palm Canyon: Palm Grove Loop and above the first grove. Nine new species were found into bloom today, including the first desert dandelion and first desert chicory along the Campground Road. Parish's poppy, Eschscholzia parishii, has now joined small-flowered poppy, Eschscholzia minutiflora, in bloom along the Borrego Palm Canyon Trail. See the list below for the complete list of the species found in bloom here.

We continue to find that the annuals in bloom are very small. A dramatic example is shown by Mike Crouse's picture of hairy-podded pepper-grass, Lepidium lasiocarpum var. lasiocarpum, in bloom and fruit, with the tip of a ball-point pen (~8 mm = ~0.3 inches) alongside it for scale. The entire plant is less than a half inch tall, whereas in good years it is ten times taller.

Perennials and shrubs continue to bloom very well; they are the stars of the show this year.

Don't forget the species with beautiful smells, too! We came across several desert mistletoe, Phoradendron californicum, whose delightful fragrance we could smell from one hundred feet away or so. On the Alternate Trail, we smelled one that we couldn't even find. Rock crossosoma, Crossosoma bigelovii; and lotebush, Ziziphus parryi; also produce heady fragrances that make one wish just to hang around them to continue delighting in their fragrance.

2/23/10: Coyote Canyon Road; Alcoholic Pass Trail. The eight days with temperatures above 70° from 12-19 February exploded the annuals into bloom. We found carpets of white along many places of Coyote Canyon Road from spectacle-pod, Dithyrea californica. The other star of the show there is desert lily, Hesperocallis undulata, which has just begun to bloom in earnest there. They are joined by the beginning blooms of the other usual cast members of the annual wildflower show, who will be taking over from spectacle pod in the next few weeks.

Although the spectacle-pod and desert lilies are good-sized plants, many of the other annuals are significantly smaller than normal, due to their late germination. I was shocked to see how small the blooming plants were of Arizona lupine, Lupinus arizonicus, and narrow-leaved cryptantha, Cryptantha angustifolia.

As always, the number of species in bloom at the end of the pavement along DiGiorgio Road is limited; I counted just 14 species in bloom there in a quick survey near the road. (Of course, there are lots of plants of each species!) To find more species, one must explore different habitats.

At the trailhead for the Alcoholic Pass Trail, we found an additional 16 species in bloom, mostly annuals. A hike along the trail found an additional 20 species in bloom, for our total of 50 species in bloom for the day. Altogether, we counted a total of 1,738 plants in bloom, allowing each species to count a maximum of 99 plants toward that total.

Although these numbers fall just a bit short of the more than 60 species per trip, and more than 2000 plants in bloom per trip, I doubt that anyone could tell the difference unless they were counting. Hence for all practical purposes, we are at the start of full bloom at elevations of ~1000 feet here.

We looked for all the species in the plant trail guide for the Alcoholic Pass Trail. Most of course were present this year, but it was surprising that two annuals, abundant last year there, out of 25 total annuals seen near the trailhead, were not to be seen at all, or represented by very few individuals: star gilia, Gilia stellata; and hairy-podded pepper-grass, Lepidium lasiocarpum. Every year is different!

2/28/10: S22 (Montezuma Grade to Imperial County line); Henderson Canyon Road; Palm Wash in Imperial County. Near the bottom of Montezuma Grade, things were a-popping. For the first time, I had a sense that things were coming into good bloom there. The ocotillos were all popping into bloom, the creosote and desert lavender, Hyptis emoryi, were noticeably in bloom, and the brittle bush, Encelia farinosa, were all clearly just about to burst into bloom. At the bottom of the grade the chuparosas were so covered with red flowers that it took me a moment to realize what species they were!

At Henderson Canyon Road, just west of the Pegleg Monument, there were decent displays of sand verbean, Abronia villosa, with some desert lilies and dune primrose, along with hairy desert sunflower, aka desert gold, Geraea canescens, just beginning bloom.

The usual field of Geraea farther west has a smattering of blooms here and there, so this field is starting to pop. It looks like the display there will be much as last year, with some fairly solid patches of Geraea, amidst the overpowering dominant mustard background.

What really surprised me when we stepped out of the car there was how robust the Eremalche exilis plants were this year! As with everything else, there are two (to three) age classes. The oldest plants are HUGE, with zillions of small white blooms on them!

Almost immediately after we headed east on S22 from the east end of Henderson Canyon Road, the annuals (except for mustard) stopped, and the desert looked like it was a very dry year, even though the ground is actually quite full of water.

We then stopped at Coachwhip Canyon / Ella Wash, and I was stunned at the difference from almost exactly one year ago. I took some photographs to show the difference: View of west edge of coachwhip canyon at s22 on 2 March 2009 and View of same spot on 28 February 2010.

Note the complete absence of annuals this year in the area on the left just below the middle of the photograph. Yet notice that the ocotillo in the background has its leaves this year, indicating that the ground is still quite moist there! In 2009, the S22 roadside on the east of the canyon was so full of annuals that it took us about 30-60 minutes to find, photograph and write them all down. This year, it would take less than a minute to find and write down all the annuals at that location.

The difference, again, is that the December rain wasn't quite enough to germinate the annuals here this year, and the January rain came too late to germinate many annuals.

We surveyed for plants along S22 above Palm Wash ~1 miles east of the San Diego County / Imperial County line. There were abundant annuals, but most were extremely small. Once again, there were two age classes of annuals here, with a small number of plants old enough to start blooming.

In Palm Wash itself, we found a similar story. We were surprised, however, to find that the mustard plants were all wilting in one largish area, and it appeared to be because they were out of water.

3/4/10: SR78; Elephant Tree Area just south of Ocotillo Wells. Beginning at around 1500 feet elevation at the Tamarisk Grove Campground, SR78 was lined with plants in bloom from all the usual suspects. The bladderpod, Isomeris, plants were particularly noticeable from the car, covered with yellow blossoms.

The Elephant Tree Area was the star of the show. Perhaps because this area got September rainfall, and hence has additional (autumn) annual species such as Datura discolor not found elsewhere, this area has a huge total number of plants in bloom, using my system where each species contributes no more than 99 plants to the total count.

For the entire trip, including the car trip from the bottom of Sentenac Canyon, we found over 4,357 plants of 81 species in bloom! 16 of those were species recorded in bloom for the first time this year, bringing the count to 172 species in bloom so far this year. There were way too many species in bloom to go through them all here; see Table 4 below for the complete list of species in bloom, with counts of the number of plants for each species.

This is the fourth highest total for the number of species in bloom seen on a single trip since I've been keeping records in the last two years, and the highest total ever (in those two years) for the number of plants in bloom found on a single trip. This shattered the previous record of 3,488 plants in bloom on 3/15/09.

Just in the drive to the trailhead from Split Mountain Road, we commented on how beautiful the common phacelia, Phacelia distans, plants were that are in full bloom underneath many shrubs. Its flowers here are an unusually-beautiful deep rich blue-purple, compared to just the usual blue elsewhere.

At every turn in the trail, we came across new species in bloom.

The desert at full bloom is such a delight!

Pictures From Each Hike

Most of the pictures in the Pictorial Gallery of Species in Bloom To Date in 2009-2010, organized by flower color, have been taken this year. The date and location of each picture are given in that table.

Most of the rest of my pictures were taken for scientific purposes, and not specifically to show anything about the bloom. However, they may be of interest to people showing some aspects of what the bloom was like on a given date. My pictures are not even on standard webpages; Table 2 gives links to a directory and you have to click on the link for each picture to see it. Scientific names are used almost exclusively for the picture names.

The context for most of these pictures is sometimes given in the botanical reports from each hike.

Table 2. Links to Directories With Pictures From Each Trip

20092010
October 29
November 15
November 19
November 22
November 25
December 1
December 5
December 9
December 15
December 19
December 23
December 27
December 31
January 3
January 7
January 10
January 24
January 28
January 31
February 9
February 13
February 15
February 23
February 28
March 4

See also Pictures From Each Hike in 2008-2009.

How Long Will An Annual Bloom Last

General Factors

Past Rainfall, Future Rainfall, and Heat are the main factors determining how long an annual bloom will last on the desert floor at about 1000 feet elevation:

Predictions for This Year

Peak bloom at elevations of ~1000 feet on the desert floor should continue for at least several weeks, through mid-March. Its end will come whenever the temperatures hit 80° or above for a week or two.

Peak bloom in the canyons to the west of Borrego Springs has just begun, and will probably last through the entire month of March.

Species in Bloom On Each Trip

Number of Species and Plants in Bloom On Each Trip

Five plots are given below; each plot has this year's bloom data as well as last year's bloom data for comparison:

The plots and the table here must be interpreted cautiously, for at least three reasons:

Figure 1. Number of Species in Bloom on Each Trip

Graph showing the number of species found in bloom on each trip for 2008-2009 and 2009-2010

Figure 2. Number of Plants in Bloom on Each Trip

Graph showing the number of individual plants found in bloom on each trip for 2008-2009 and 2009-2010

Figure 3. Cumulative Number of Species Seen in Bloom From All Trips

Graph showing the cumulative number of species found in bloom for trips in 2008-2009 and 2009-2010

Figure 4. Cumulative Number of Annual Species Seen in Bloom From All Trips

Graph showing the cumulative number of annual species found in bloom for trips in 2008-2009 and 2009-2010

Figure 5. Percent of All Species Seen in Bloom From All Trips That Are Annuals

Graph showing the percent of all species cumulatively seen in bloom that are annuals for 2008-2009 and 2009-2010

Table 3 gives the numbers used for the above plots, for the last two months. For earlier numbers, see Numbers from 29 October 2009 to 24 January 2010. The individual observations used to obtain these numbers are in the List of Species in Bloom On Each Trip.

Table 3. Number of Species and Total Number of Plants in Bloom on Each Trip

Number of1/71/101/151/241/281/312/92/132/152/232/283/4
Species11410142328452456505881
Plants100414915137649110995471367171920924357

List of Species in Bloom On Each Trip, With Photographs

Table 4 gives the number of plants observed to be in bloom for each species on each hike, with a maximum value of 99 plants for each species. This maximum value prevents one species from dominating the total plants in bloom, and makes it much easier on me to keep track of the bloom.

Because the hike locations vary, some species will not be present on every hike, so the lack of an entry for a given hike says nothing about whether that species is blooming elsewhere.

The Checklist is sorted first by category, with dicots before monocots, and then by family and scientific name. The Family and Scientific Name are from the Jepson Manual. An asterisk before the Common Name indicates a non-native taxon.

See Plant Family Abbreviations to obtain the full family name from the abbreviations used in the table below.

The Checklist has thumbnail photographs for most of the species, all of which were taken in the Borrego Desert. Clicking on the thumbnail photograph gives a larger version equal in size to the ones at the top of this page.

All the larger versions are also presented in Pictorial Gallery of Species in Bloom To Date in 2009-2010, organized by flower color.

All pictures were taken by myself, with a Sony Point and Shoot T9 camera except the following:

This table gives the number of plants in bloom only in the last two months. Some species thus have no number of plants in bloom listed in this table since they were observed in bloom only on trips prior to that date. For those earlier trips, see list of species seen in bloom from 29 October 2009 to 24 January 2010..

Some species that have bloomed in the Borrego Desert are not listed here, since I never observed them in bloom. Such species are found only in a few locations, and I either never visited those locations or they bloomed in between my visits to their location.

Of course, species that bloom later in the year, and species that do not have flowers (ferns, etc.) are not present in this list, so it is not the equivalent of a plant checklist for the Borrego Desert.

Table 4. List of Species in Bloom On Each Trip

#FAMScientific NamePixCommon Name1/71/101/151/241/281/312/92/132/152/232/283/4
1ACAJusticia californicaPhotograph of flower of Justicia californicachuparosa50 99999999992099 5099
2AMAAmaranthus fimbriatusPhotograph of flower of Amaranthus fimbriatusfringed amaranth            
3ASCAsclepias subulataPhotograph of flower of Asclepias subulatarush milkweed            
4ASCSarcostemma cynanchoides ssp. hartwegiiPhotograph of flower of Sarcostemma cynanchoides ssp. hartwegiiclimbing milkweed            
5ASTAdenophyllum porophylloidesPhotograph of flower of Adenophyllum porophylloidesSan Felipe dogweed  1 1   1  1
6ASTAmbrosia dumosaPhotograph of flower of Ambrosia dumosaburroweed           99
7ASTAmbrosia psilostachyaPhotograph of flower of Ambrosia psilostachyawestern ragweed            
8ASTBaccharis salicifoliaPhotograph of flower of Baccharis salicifoliamule fat2   21      
9ASTBaileya pauciradiataPhotograph of flower of Baileya pauciradiataColorado Desert marigold          1 
10ASTBebbia juncea var. asperaPhotograph of flower of Bebbia juncea var. asperasweetbush5 52153010 101 5
11ASTBrickellia desertorumPhotograph of flower of Brickellia desertorumdesert brickellia            
12ASTCalycoseris wrightiiPhotograph of flower of Calycoseris wrightiiwhite tackstem           5
13ASTChaenactis fremontiiPhotograph of flower of Chaenactis fremontiiFremont pincushion         1  
14ASTChaenactis stevioidesPhotograph of flower of Chaenactis stevioidesdesert pincushion           50
15ASTChrysothamnus paniculatusPhotograph of flower of Chrysothamnus paniculatuspunctate rabbitbrush            
16ASTConyza canadensisPhotograph of flower of Conyza canadensishorseweed            
17ASTDicoria canescensPhotograph of flower of Dicoria canescensdesert dicoria            
18ASTEncelia farinosaPhotograph of flower of Encelia farinosabrittlebush    12151010102099
19ASTEncelia frutescensPhotograph of flower of Encelia frutescensbutton encelia          2 
20ASTEricameria brachylepisPhotograph of flower of Ericameria brachylepisboundary goldenbush    1       
21ASTFilago arizonicaPhotograph of flower of Filago arizonicaArizona herba impia           50
22ASTFilago depressaPhotograph of flower of Filago depressadwarf filago         20 1
23ASTGeraea canescensPhotograph of flower of Geraea canescenshairy desert-sunflower          60 
24ASTGnaphalium luteo-albumPhotograph of flower of Gnaphalium luteo-album*common cudweed     25     
25ASTGutierrezia sarothraePhotograph of flower of Gutierrezia sarothraematchweed     1      
26ASTHymenoclea salsola var. salsolaPhotograph of flower of Hymenoclea salsola var. salsolacheesebush     299 99999999
27ASTIsocoma acradenia var. eremophilaPhotograph of flower of Isocoma acradenia var. eremophilasolitary-leaved alkali goldenbush            
28ASTLepidospartum squamatumPhotograph of flower of Lepidospartum squamatumscale-broom            
29ASTMalacothrix glabrataPhotograph of flower of Malacothrix glabratadesert dandelion        3995099
30ASTMonoptilon bellioidesPhotograph of flower of Monoptilon bellioidesdesert star       1   50
31ASTPalafoxia arida var. aridaPhotograph of flower of Palafoxia arida var. aridadesert needle 1     2 22099
32ASTPectis papposa var. papposaPhotograph of flower of Pectis papposa var. papposachinch-weed            
33ASTPerityle emoryiPhotograph of flower of Perityle emoryiEmory's rock-daisy           30
34ASTPeucephyllum schottiiPhotograph of flower of Peucephyllum schottiipygmy-cedar          1 
35ASTPleurocoronis plurisetaPhotograph of flower of Pleurocoronis plurisetaarrow-leaf          12
36ASTRafinesquia neomexicanaPhotograph of flower of Rafinesquia neomexicanadesert chicory        1205099
37ASTSenecio flaccidus var. monoensisPhotograph of flower of Senecio flaccidus var. monoensisMono ragwort            
38ASTSolidago californicaPhotograph of flower of Solidago californicagoldenrod   1  1     
39ASTStephanomeria exigua ssp. exiguaPhotograph of flower of Stephanomeria exigua ssp. exiguaslender wreathplant            
40ASTStephanomeria pauciflora var. paucifloraPhotograph of flower of Stephanomeria pauciflora var. pauciflorawire-lettuce3           
41ASTTrichoptilium incisumPhotograph of flower of Trichoptilium incisumyellow-head       1   99
42ASTViguiera parishiiPhotograph of flower of Viguiera parishiiParish's viguiera     31 21  
43ASTXylorhiza orcuttiiPhotograph of flower of Xylorhiza orcuttiiOrcutt's woody-aster          5 
44BORAmsinckia menziesii var. intermediaPhotograph of flower of Amsinckia menziesii var. intermediacommon fiddleneck        50   
45BORAmsinckia tessellata var. tessellataPhotograph of flower of Amsinckia tessellata var. tessellatabristly fiddleneck       2  3 
46BORCryptantha angustifoliaPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha angustifolianarrow-leaved cryptantha       5020309999
47BORCryptantha barbigeraPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha barbigerabearded cryptantha         102099
48BORCryptantha costataPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha costataribbed cryptantha          1 
49BORCryptantha decipiensPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha decipiensgravel cryptantha         10  
50BORCryptantha maritimaPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha maritimaGuadalupe cryptantha          9999
51BORCryptantha micranthaPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha micranthapurple-root cryptantha         50  
52BORCryptantha nevadensisPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha nevadensisNevada cryptantha         30  
53BORCryptantha racemosaPhotograph of flower of Cryptantha racemosabushy cryptantha            
54BORHeliotropium curassavicumPhotograph of flower of Heliotropium curassavicumseaside heliotrope            
55BORPectocarya heterocarpaPhotograph of flower of Pectocarya heterocarpachuckwalla pectocarya           99
56BORPectocarya recurvataPhotograph of flower of Pectocarya recurvatacurvenut combseed    9999999999999999
57BORTiquilia palmeriPhotograph of flower of Tiquilia palmeriPalmer's coldenia            
58BORTiquilia plicataPhotograph of flower of Tiquilia plicataplicate coldenia            
59BRABrassica tournefortiiPhotograph of flower of Brassica tournefortii*Asian mustard     50999999999999
60BRADescurainia pinnataPhotograph of flower of Descurainia pinnatawestern tansy-mustard        3102 
61BRADithyrea californicaPhotograph of flower of Dithyrea californicaspectacle-pod       3 9999 
62BRADraba cuneifoliaPhotograph of flower of Draba cuneifoliawedge-leaved draba           30
63BRAGuillenia lasiophyllaPhotograph of flower of Guillenia lasiophyllaCalifornia mustard        20  99
64BRALepidium lasiocarpum var. lasiocarpumPhotograph of flower of Lepidium lasiocarpum var. lasiocarpumhairy-podded pepper-grass    20  2010 9999
65BRALyrocarpa coulteri var. palmeriPhotograph of flower of Lyrocarpa coulteri var. palmeriCoulter's lyrepod    5      1
66BRASisymbrium irioPhotograph of flower of Sisymbrium irio*London rocket      20 20 99 
67BRAStreptanthella longirostrisPhotograph of flower of Streptanthella longirostrislongbeak streptanthella          10 
68BRAThysanocarpus curvipesPhotograph of flower of Thysanocarpus curvipesfringe-pod        20   
69CACFerocactus cylindraceusPhotograph of flower of Ferocactus cylindraceusCalifornia barrel cactus           30
70CACMammillaria dioicaPhotograph of flower of Mammillaria dioicaCalifornia fish-hook cactus1  3  1 1  20
71CACOpuntia basilaris var. basilarisPhotograph of flower of Opuntia basilaris var. basilarisbeavertail cactus           99
72CACOpuntia echinocarpaPhotograph of flower of Opuntia echinocarpasilver cholla           10
73CACOpuntia ganderiPhotograph of flower of Opuntia ganderiGander's cholla           10
74CAPIsomeris arboreaPhotograph of flower of Isomeris arboreabladderpod10 1010       99
75CARAchyronychia cooperiPhotograph of flower of Achyronychia cooperifrost mat         5  
76CHEAtriplex hymenelytraPhotograph of flower of Atriplex hymenelytradesert holly          1 
77CHEChenopodium muralePhotograph of flower of Chenopodium murale*nettle-leaved goosefoot      10 10  1
78CRACrassula connataPhotograph of flower of Crassula connatapygmy-weed      999999 99 
79CROCrossosoma bigeloviiPhotograph of flower of Crossosoma bigeloviirock crossosoma    41820 20   
80EUPChamaesyce micromeraPhotograph of flower of Chamaesyce micromeraSonoran spurge            
81EUPChamaesyce polycarpaPhotograph of flower of Chamaesyce polycarpasmall-seeded spurge    1   1301099
82EUPChamaesyce setilobaPhotograph of flower of Chamaesyce setilobaYuma spurge           99
83EUPCroton californicusPhotograph of flower of Croton californicusCalifornia croton 1     5 120 
84EUPDitaxis lanceolataPhotograph of flower of Ditaxis lanceolatanarrowleaf ditaxis    11010 2030 99
85EUPDitaxis neomexicanaPhotograph of flower of Ditaxis neomexicanaNew Mexico ditaxis            
86EUPEuphorbia erianthaPhotograph of flower of Euphorbia erianthabeetle spurge            
87FABAcacia greggiiPhotograph of flower of Acacia greggiicatclaw            
88FABAstragalus crotalariaePhotograph of flower of Astragalus crotalariaeSalton milk-vetch       1  1 
89FABDalea mollisPhotograph of flower of Dalea mollissilky dalea           10
90FABDalea mollissimaPhotograph of flower of Dalea mollissimadowny dalea           1
91FABLotus rigidusPhotograph of flower of Lotus rigidusdesert lotus     12 5   
92FABLotus scoparius var. brevialatusPhotograph of flower of Lotus scoparius var. brevialatusshort-winged deerweed     11 2   
93FABLotus strigosusPhotograph of flower of Lotus strigosusstrigose lotus          125
94FABLupinus arizonicusPhotograph of flower of Lupinus arizonicusArizona lupine         505099
95FABProsopis glandulosa var. torreyanaPhotograph of flower of Prosopis glandulosa var. torreyanahoney mesquite    1 1 1   
96FABPsorothamnus emoryiPhotograph of flower of Psorothamnus emoryiEmory's indigo-bush 1          
97FABPsorothamnus schottiiPhotograph of flower of Psorothamnus schottiiindigo bush1 11   1   20
98FOUFouquieria splendens ssp. splendensPhotograph of flower of Fouquieria splendens ssp. splendensocotillo151202055511999999
99GERErodium cicutariumPhotograph of flower of Erodium cicutarium*redstem filaree   3129999999999 
100GERErodium texanumPhotograph of flower of Erodium texanumTexas filaree      3 3 25 
101GRORibes indecorumPhotograph of flower of Ribes indecorumwhite-flowering currant   1        
102HYDEmmenanthe penduliflora var. pendulifloraPhotograph of flower of Emmenanthe penduliflora var. penduliflorawhispering bells        15 30
103HYDEucrypta chrysanthemifolia var. bipinnatifidaPhotograph of flower of Eucrypta chrysanthemifolia var. bipinnatifidaeucrypta         20  
104HYDPhacelia crenulata var. ambiguaPhotograph of flower of Phacelia crenulata var. ambiguaheliotrope phacelia          1 
105HYDPhacelia crenulata var. minutifloraPhotograph of flower of Phacelia crenulata var. minutifloralittle-flowered heliotrope phacelia         10 10
106HYDPhacelia distansPhotograph of flower of Phacelia distanscommon phacelia      30 9999 99
107HYDPhacelia minorPhotograph of flower of Phacelia minorwild canterbury bells      1 3   
108HYDPholistoma membranaceumPhotograph of flower of Pholistoma membranaceumwhite fiesta flower     2099 99   
109KRAKrameria grayiPhotograph of flower of Krameria grayiwhite rhatany           1
110LAMHyptis emoryiPhotograph of flower of Hyptis emoryidesert-lavender5 105999999 99501599
111LAMSalvia columbariaePhotograph of flower of Salvia columbariaechia         2  
112LOAMentzelia affinisPhotograph of flower of Mentzelia affinisyellow blazing star          2 
113LOAPetalonyx thurberi ssp. thurberiPhotograph of flower of Petalonyx thurberi ssp. thurberiThurber's sandpaper-plant            
114MALEremalche exilisPhotograph of flower of Eremalche exiliswhite mallow          99 
115MALEremalche rotundifoliaPhotograph of flower of Eremalche rotundifoliadesert five-spot           2
116MALHibiscus denudatusPhotograph of flower of Hibiscus denudatusrock hibiscus      5 101 50
117MALHorsfordia newberryiPhotograph of flower of Horsfordia newberryiNewberry's velvet mallow            
118MALMalacothamnus aboriginumPhotograph of flower of Malacothamnus aboriginumIndian Valley bush mallow5 11        
119MALMalva parvifloraPhotograph of flower of Malva parviflora*cheeseweed          99 
120NYCAbronia villosa var. villosaPhotograph of flower of Abronia villosa var. villosahairy sand-verbena         509999
121NYCAllionia incarnataPhotograph of flower of Allionia incarnatatrailing four o'clock      1  3299
122NYCBoerhavia intermediaPhotograph of flower of Boerhavia intermediafivewing spiderling            
123NYCBoerhavia wrightiiPhotograph of flower of Boerhavia wrightiiWright's spiderling            
124NYCMirabilis bigelovii var. retrorsaPhotograph of flower of Mirabilis bigelovii var. retrorsawishbone plant      211010 50
125NYCMirabilis tenuilobaPhotograph of flower of Mirabilis tenuilobaslender-lobed four o'clock    1510 1  2
126ONACamissonia boothii ssp. condensataPhotograph of flower of Camissonia boothii ssp. condensataBooth's desert primrose       2  2099
127ONACamissonia californicaPhotograph of flower of Camissonia californicaCalifornia suncup         50102
128ONACamissonia cardiophylla ssp. cardiophyllaPhotograph of flower of Camissonia cardiophylla ssp. cardiophyllaheartleaf sun-cup            
129ONACamissonia claviformis ssp. peirsoniiPhotograph of flower of Camissonia claviformis ssp. peirsoniibrown-eyed primrose      2 1509999
130ONACamissonia pallida ssp. pallidaPhotograph of flower of Camissonia pallida ssp. pallidapale sun-cup      1101011 
131ONACamissonia refractaPhotograph of flower of Camissonia refractanarrow-leaf sun-cup           99
132ONAEpilobium canum ssp. latifoliumPhotograph of flower of Epilobium canum ssp. latifoliummountain California-fuchsia            
133ONAEpilobium ciliatum ssp. ciliatumPhotograph of flower of Epilobium ciliatum ssp. ciliatumwillowherb            
134ONAOenothera deltoides ssp. deltoidesPhotograph of flower of Oenothera deltoides ssp. deltoidesdune primrose         1030 
135ONAOenothera elata ssp. hirsutissimaPhotograph of flower of Oenothera elata ssp. hirsutissimaHooker's evening-primrose      2 1   
136OROOrobanche cooperiPhotograph of flower of Orobanche cooperiCooper's broom-rape           1
137PAPEschscholzia minutiflora ssp. minutifloraPhotograph of flower of Eschscholzia minutiflora ssp. minutiflorasmall-flowered poppy      1 5099699
138PAPEschscholzia parishiiPhotograph of flower of Eschscholzia parishiiParish's poppy        520199
139PLAPlantago ovataPhotograph of flower of Plantago ovatadesert plantain       5 205099
140PLAPlatanus racemosaPhotograph of flower of Platanus racemosawestern sycamore            
141POLGilia stellataPhotograph of flower of Gilia stellatastar gilia           2
142POLChorizanthe rigidaPhotograph of flower of Chorizanthe rigidadevil's spineflower           1
143POLEriogonum elongatum var. elongatumPhotograph of flower of Eriogonum elongatum var. elongatumlong-stemmed buckwheat            
144POLEriogonum fasciculatum var. polifoliumPhotograph of flower of Eriogonum fasciculatum var. polifoliumCalifornia buckwheat        1   
145POLEriogonum inflatumPhotograph of flower of Eriogonum inflatumdesert trumpet3   212  112
146POLEriogonum thomasiiPhotograph of flower of Eriogonum thomasiiThomas' buckwheat          21
147POLEriogonum wrightii var. nodosumPhotograph of flower of Eriogonum wrightii var. nodosumWright's buckwheat  11111     
148POLPterostegia drymarioidesPhotograph of flower of Pterostegia drymarioidesthreadstem           2
149RESOligomeris linifoliaPhotograph of flower of Oligomeris linifolianarrowleaf oligomeris          31
150RHAZiziphus parryi var. parryiPhotograph of flower of Ziziphus parryi var. parryilotebush      15 5   
151ROSPrunus fremontiiPhotograph of flower of Prunus fremontiidesert apricot   3  101010   
152SALSalix exiguaPhotograph of flower of Salix exiguanarrowleaf willow    115 20   
153SCRMimulus bigelovii var. bigeloviiPhotograph of flower of Mimulus bigelovii var. bigeloviiBigelow's monkeyflower         10 20
154SCRMimulus cardinalisPhotograph of flower of Mimulus cardinalisscarlet monkeyflower            
155SCRMohavea confertifloraPhotograph of flower of Mohavea confertifloraghost flower           10
156SCRPenstemon clevelandii var. connatusPhotograph of flower of Penstemon clevelandii var. connatusSan Jacinto beardtongue        1   
157SIMSimmondsia chinensisPhotograph of flower of Simmondsia chinensisjojoba         20 99
158SOLDatura discolorPhotograph of flower of Datura discolordesert thornapple           70
159SOLDatura wrightiiPhotograph of flower of Datura wrightiisacred datura            
160SOLLycium andersoniiPhotograph of flower of Lycium andersoniiAnderson's desert-thorn    425 5   
161SOLNicotiana obtusifoliaPhotograph of flower of Nicotiana obtusifoliadesert tobacco     11 1 22
162SOLPhysalis crassifoliaPhotograph of flower of Physalis crassifoliathick-leaved ground cherry        1  30
163SOLSolanum douglasiiPhotograph of flower of Solanum douglasiiwhite nightshade     12 1   
164TAMTamarix ramosissimaPhotograph of flower of Tamarix ramosissima*saltcedar          1 
165VISPhoradendron californicumPhotograph of flower of Phoradendron californicumdesert mistletoe    223 2  2
166ZYGFagonia laevisPhotograph of flower of Fagonia laevisCalifornia fagonia       5 50  
167ZYGFagonia pachyacanthaPhotograph of flower of Fagonia pachyacanthasticky fagonia           2
168ZYGLarrea tridentataPhotograph of flower of Larrea tridentatacreosote bush     2111105099
169LILAgave desertiPhotograph of flower of Agave desertidesert agave  11    1  10
170LILHesperocallis undulataPhotograph of flower of Hesperocallis undulatadesert lily         2060 
171POAAristida adscensionisPhotograph of flower of Aristida adscensionissix-weeks three-awn          599
172POABouteloua aristidoides var. aristidoidesPhotograph of flower of Bouteloua aristidoides var. aristidoidesneedle grama           99
173POABouteloua barbata var. barbataPhotograph of flower of Bouteloua barbata var. barbatasix-weeks grama           10
174POAPennisetum setaceumPhotograph of flower of Pennisetum setaceum*fountain grass    103099 99   
175POAPleuraphis rigidaPhotograph of flower of Pleuraphis rigidabig galleta      1 253020
176POASchismus barbatusPhotograph of flower of Schismus barbatus*Mediterranean schismus         991020

Links to Other Webpages, etc. on Anza-Borrego Desert State Park Blooms

Anza-Borrego Desert Wildflowers: Where and When to Look and latest report (usually from Bill Sullivan) from the Anza-Borrego Desert Natural History Association.

Anza-Borrego Desert State Park official site, with wildflower information on it. Click on the link near the bottom for the Flower Update and Map, which might be updated weekly.

DesertUSA Anza-Borrego Desert State Park Wildflower Reports For 2010

Carol Leigh's California Wildflower Hotsheet

Anza-Borrego Foundation and Institute Wildflowers and their Anza-Borrego Desert State Park Wildflower Hotline: (760)767-4684. "Information on this recording is updated regularly."

Theodore Payne Wildflower Hotline (Reports begin on 5 March 2010)


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Copyright © 2008-2010 by Tom Chester.
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Comments and feedback: Tom Chester
Updated 8 March 2010.