All of us in Oregon are a part of this too..We share many natives...including almost all trees, shrubs.. california is such a diverse area...as is Oregon...
Thank u so much for the información..I live un Tj.and I've been going up the hill AND bringing all kinds of seeds AND shrubs, to add them in my Litle native garden😌unfortunatelly here people choose ornamental plants,AND care about our local environments😔
Interestingly despite having 5 needles per fascicle torrey pine isn't closely related to our other 5 needle pines in socal (like sugar pine and limber pine) but is thought to be most closely related to the group that contains gray pine, coulter pine, and jeffrey pine which are all 3 needle pines
Thanks for the video, very interesting. The phrase “I’m making you learn” felt out of place. Also the reference to conservation efforts “beginning” in 1900 seems conceptually archaic to me. Seems there was a way of living that did not existentially threaten entire species which evolved into a way of living that does do that. “Conservation” was the natural result of the former. Contemporary usage of the word has a ring of doublespeak.
i definitely wonder if it is a good thing that some plants go extinct, as they may be very weak plants that have genetics very prone to disease and death. it may be cruel to keep these plants alive if they are simply born to live impossibly difficult lives, whereas plants with better genetics could live happier on the same soil
Thanks for taking the time explaining in more detail, each plant 🙌
Thanks for the informative, clearly forthrightly presented CA native lecture. You are always welcome in my living room!
All of us in Oregon are a part of this too..We share many natives...including almost all trees, shrubs.. california is such a diverse area...as is Oregon...
I remember learning about manzanita trees at a summer camp I've been going to for years. They're one of my favorite trees ❤
That was very interesting, thank you! Greetings from Germany
Thank u so much for the información..I live un Tj.and I've been going up the hill AND bringing all kinds of seeds AND shrubs, to add them in my Litle native garden😌unfortunatelly here people choose ornamental plants,AND care about our local environments😔
Thank you for this lecture!
Thank You cheers from Pennsylvania Blessings 👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🙏🙏🙏
Fantastic video! Thank you!
Interestingly despite having 5 needles per fascicle torrey pine isn't closely related to our other 5 needle pines in socal (like sugar pine and limber pine) but is thought to be most closely related to the group that contains gray pine, coulter pine, and jeffrey pine which are all 3 needle pines
Great presentation thank you
Regarding Cercis occidentalis...it does grow in this state also...difficult to get seed to germinate...GREAT PLANT both states...
Thank You
Thanks for the video, very interesting.
The phrase “I’m making you learn” felt out of place.
Also the reference to conservation efforts “beginning” in 1900 seems conceptually archaic to me. Seems there was a way of living that did not existentially threaten entire species which evolved into a way of living that does do that. “Conservation” was the natural result of the former. Contemporary usage of the word has a ring of doublespeak.
i definitely wonder if it is a good thing that some plants go extinct, as they may be very weak plants that have genetics very prone to disease and death. it may be cruel to keep these plants alive if they are simply born to live impossibly difficult lives, whereas plants with better genetics could live happier on the same soil
Thank you