Flora of the Sierra Nevada alpine zone
The flora of the U.S. Sierra Nevada alpine zone is characterized by small, low growing, cushion and mat forming plants that can survive the harsh conditions in the high-altitude alpine zone above the timber line. These flora often occur in alpine fell-fields. The Sierra Nevada alpine zone lacks a dominant plant species that characterizes it, so may or may not be called a vegetation type. But it is found above the subalpine forest, which is the highest in a succession of recognized vegetation types at increasing elevations.
Botanists have ranked the Sierra Nevada alpine zone floral bloom as one of California's foremost wildflower displays, with flowers of fantastic color and abundance. Many of the alpine species are notable for large and showy flowers, which must compete for the pollinators during brief growing seasons. Botanist Philip A. Munz wrote, "These natural rock gardens are spectacular sights when in full flower." Botanist Laird R. Blackwell wrote, "Up here... the flowers seem to glow... perhaps only the flowers of the harsh desert can rival the alpine flowers for intensity."
Over 90% of California's alpine flora are perennial herbs. Annuals are not common. Depending on the elevation used to define its lower boundary, the Sierra Nevada alpine zone may have almost 600 species, about 200 of which are only found here. The flora includes plants that are descended from the plants that survived the glaciation of the last ice age, because they were growing on mountain peaks that stood above the ice sheets like islands.
Environmental conditions influencing flora
The alpine zone, or alpine fell-field, is above the tree line, generally at in the south, and to in the north. The plants are influenced by having to endure long and very cold winters, poor to no soils, constant high winds, intense sunlight, and a short cool and dry growing season in the summer, that lasts only about 6–8 weeks.Winds are strong and constant. The constant wind makes unsheltered areas colder than sheltered spots, depositing snow in some places, while scouring the snow out of other locations. The constant wind increases loss of water from the plants to the atmosphere. Sunlight is intense. Soils are thin and rocky, or absent. Soils are low in moisture. Rainfall is rare. Almost all of the of annual precipitation falls as snow, and growing season can be as short as just days. Annual plants must quickly grow to maturity, and all plants must quickly flower and develop mature seed.
Characteristic growth patterns and physiology
Above the tree line, extreme winds preclude tree-like growth. Constant winds hitting the plants limits their size and flattens their shape. Small size or dwarfism is therefore an adaptive feature to the extremes, and most alpine plants are just a few inches tall. One botanist wrote, "Plants adapt by scrunching down close to the ground where botanists have to crawl around on their bellies with hand lenses to fully appreciate the diversity of life... Plants are mere centimeters tall, forming a mat so dense that it's hard to pick out separate species"., Another noted, "a world of miniature plants only a few inches high... leaves huddle near the ground or contour it with mats or cushions. Typically, the leaves of these plants are waxy or densely hairy - anything to protect them from the wind and intense solar radiation".Alpine plants have many adaptations to aridity and intense sunlight in common with desert plants. Alpine plants often have gray appearance from hairs covering the leaves, which reflect the intense sunlight, and protect from winds that cause high rates of water loss through transpiration. Many Sierra Nevada alpine plants have reddish or whitish leaves to protect them from damage from intense ultraviolet radiation in the alpine zone. Fleshy roots and underground organs store food in the form of starches and sugars, allowing the plant to quickly grow when snow melts. Many plants form flower buds during the summer before the summer that they open, allowing a quick bloom for the short growing season.
Optimal temperatures for physiological processes may be lower than for lower elevation plants, and optimal light intensity for photosynthesis may be higher. Laboratory experiments showed the sierra Nevada alpine flora exhibited characteristic physiological responses. Germination best occurred at temperatures from. In the laboratory, there was strong dormancy control by short photoperiod, compared to lower elevation populations which had dormancy induced by either short or long photoperiods.
Evolutionary history and affinities
The flora has developed relatively recently, on its own, from western American sources. During the glaciation of the last ice age, some peaks stood out above the ice sheet, and thus have a high diversity of pre-ice age alpine plants, an example being the Dana Plateau at Tioga Pass. Half of all the alpine plants found in the Sierra Nevada can be found on the Dana Plateau.Many species also occur in, or have close relatives in, the Cascade Range and Rocky Mountains, e.g., the Penstemons.
A small group of Sierra Nevada alpine plants can found around the world in northern latitudes, which is called. An example is bush cinquefoil, which ranges throughout arctic regions of Alaska, Labrador, and the high mountains of Eurasia.
Diversity and taxa
Broad-leaved, erect perennials constitute about 50% of the species, with perennial graminoid species next at about 21%, and plants growing as mats or cushions at about 11%. Annuals plus woody shrubs total only about 6% of the flora.There are over 500 floral species above, and almost 400 above. Almost 100 species reach elevations of, and more than 25 reach.
Six plant families encompass more than 50% of the alpine zone species. The sunflower family is represented by about 55 species, there are almost 40 species from the grass family, the mustard family has 34 species, and sedges have over 30 species represented.
The largest genus is Carex, the "true sedge", with about 50 species above, followed by Draba in the mustard family, then Lupinus in the legume family with about 10 species.
Almost 70 species can be found in both subalpine and alpine habitats. Over 25% range from the alpine zone all the way to foothill habitats below. Nine species are only found in the alpine zone above.
In a transectional study running from the desert near Bishop, California, to Piute Pass, perennials dominated, but also present were several annual species. Annuals are also rare in other alpine floras, including arctic.
Transpiration rates are of importance in determining local distribution patterns of flora of the Sierra Nevada alpine zone.
Annuals
Annuals plus woody shrubs constitute only about 6% of the number of Sierra Nevada alpine floral species.Sierra gentian, in the gentian family , is an erect or sprawling annual or perennial, growing in wet meadows from elevation.
Toothed owl's clover is not a true clover, but is in the broomrape family.
Low growing pussypaws, in the purslane family , usually grows in damp, partially shaded areas, and can be found up to as high as elevation. It grows in a basal rosette, radiating leaf bearing and flower-head bearing stems that hug the ground. When the ground warms, the stems lying on the ground rise, to a steep angle, lifting the flower heads.
Perennials
Characteristic perennials are low growing, small, and may be erect or form mats or cushions. Broad-leaved, erect perennials constitute 50% of the diversity of Sierra Nevada alpine species, with mats and cushions 11%.Swamp onion is a perennial bulb in the onion family found in alpine wetlands to. The low-growing head of flowers of red sierra onion appears to sit on the ground.
In the carrot family , Clemen's mountain parsley forms a dense mat of tiny plants with tiny leave that might cover several square yards the area like a blanket. Sierra podistera is compact, stemless, and found only above the timberline to.
Sunflower family perennials include western snakeroot, an erect perennial to subshrub in the sunflower family that is found up to. Flat-topped pussytoes is a small, mat-forming perennial herb, spreading via a tangled network of stolons. In the same genus are rosy pussytoes and the mat forming Alpine Everlasting. Alpine aster stems may be lying on the ground or erect, and can be found up to elevations. Dusty maidens, also called pincushion plant, is a sunflower family plant with cobwebby stems, and leaves and stems like a miniaturized version of its cousin, dusty maidens. Yellow rabbitbrush grows on dry, open slopes to, and Parry's rabbitbrush on mountainsides and flats to.
Alpine fleabanes, or daisies, are sunflower family members. They include dwarf mountain fleabane, or cut-leaf daisy, typifies the dwarfed growth pattern of the alpine zone, with disproportionately large flower heads compared to body size. It grows as a mat or cushion on rocky slopes, talus, and rock ledges, to elevation. Also growing to elevation is the shorter rambling fleabane, which grows in talus and only gets tall. dwarf daisy,, grows from a woody taproot as a compact, cushion forming plant that can be found on rocky slopes and flats from. It provides some of the most vivid color in the alpine zone, with flowers sometimes blooming in such profusion that they cover the leaves and rocky sloes and flats below. Glacial daisy grows to, often in large colonies. Alpine daisy, or loose daisy grows in rocky scree and in rock crevices, from to as high as.
Golden yarrow, or wooly sunflower, found to, is not a true yarrow, but another member of the sunflower family, and is sometimes an annual. Prickly hawkweed is hairy and grows in rocky places and crevices. Foul smelling alpine gold occurs only on talus, and rocky peaks as high as. It is unusually "tall" for an alpine zone plant, with stems reaching. At higher eleveations above the timber line, is a dwarf variety of pumice hulsea growing to.
Anderson's mountain crown is another sunflower family erect perennial, found below. Alpine rock butterweed is found on dry rocky slopes to. Alpine flames, or alpine golden-star, is closely related to whitestem goldenbush, and grows from a basal rosette to. It is less well adapted to harsh alpine conditions than some other alpine zone plants, having relatively large leaves that are mostly hairless, and correspondingly is found growing in more protected sites, such as grassy meadows. Silky raillardella has fleshy leaves covered in silvery-white hairs on stems lying on the ground, and grows to or. Argenta" means "silvery', in reference to the leaves. "Dwarf mountain butterweed has stems lying on the rocky ground and grows to. Northern goldenrod grows to elevation, and has narrow leaves. Stemless goldenweed is mat-forming.
The borage family has the genus Oreocarya, with plants similar in appearance such as low cryptantha, a relatively small, hairy perrential with dense, leafy stems from a woody base found up to. Sierra forget-me-not is found at even higher elevations, to, and is adapted to rigors of dry winds by being covered with long, stiff, bristly hairs. Timberline phacelia grows to. Streamside bluebells grow in shaded, moist areas to.
The mustard family has broad-seeded rock-cress growing to. Lemmon's draba,, is hairy and mat forming, and covered in clusters of lemon yellow flowers that may look like patches of lichens from a distance, since it grows in rock crevices and rock ledges. Its leaves are hairy, but are greener than the typical gray wooly leaves of many alpine plants. Western wallflower, a biennial or short-lived perennial,grows to, and is also found in most other plant communities.
Pink family member nuttall's sandwort ) is a ground hugging mat with short, needle like leaves. Sargent's campion is found in rock crevices to or.
Rosy sedum, in the stonecrop family , has fleshy, moisture retaining leaves. Also fleshy is western roseroot, found up to in moist, rocky places. Its stems grow in such profusion that it appears to be a shrub, but it is not since it is not woody.
The legume family includes balloon milkvetch, a spreading or erect perennial with papery balloon like seedpods, filled with air. The mat forming perennial or subshrub, Brewer's lupine, is well adapted to the alpine zone, low growing, with hairy silver leaves that reflect the intense alpine sunlight and trap air to reduce the drying effects of constant winds. Alpine lupine, or dwarf lupine, has several semi-prostrate stems. Carpet clover is found in moist, grassy places up to. King's clover grows on open slopes.
Explorer's gentian, in the gentian family , is one of the more conspicuous moist alpine meadow flowers, with deep blue bell-shaped flowers, and found as high as, in meadows and on stream banks. Alpine gentian is a late bloomer of the alpine zone, sometimes to early fall, growing from a basal rosette with stems lying on the ground, and occurring in moist meadows as high as.
Fireweed, in the evening primrose family , is named for its flaming color. Glaucus willow herb found up to. Rock fringe grows on dry slopes, nestles in crevices and peaks out from behind the rocks, and forms mats that sprawl across flats and edges of boulders, forming an apparent bright fringe on the edge of moist rocky ledges. Growing to is diffuse gayophytum.
Ladies Tresses is a sweetly fragrant orchid family member with a spiral of flowers.
Lemmon's paintbrush, in the broomrape family , is found in alipine meadows or dry, rocky places to. Dwarf alpine Indian paintbrush grows in dry alpine barrens to, exhibiting the small size characteristic of alpine flora, with several short erect stems typically less than, rarely reaching. Little elephants head grows as short as and to elevations of. Elephant's head is as short as and can be found up to.
The poppy family has steer's head and few-flowered bleeding heart, each growing to.
In the alpine zone, the lopseed family has an occasional mat-forming primrose monkeyflower, which has been found in a wide range of elevations, from.
In the plantain family , Torrey's few-eyed Mary can be found as high as. Davidson's penstemon, or creeping penstemon, is a perennial spreading mat, with several spreading flower stems. The tubular blossoms are longer than the stems of the dwarfed plant that supports them. can be as small as, but usually forms mats to, ranging to elevation. John Muir's favorite wildflower, mountain pride, "carpets granite slopes with brilliant pink flowers". Showy penstemon ) is a spreading perennial. American alpine speedwell is an erect perennial that grows near moist streambanks and lakeshores from an underground stem.
Phlox family perennials include dwarf phlox, or cushion phlox, which forms dense cushions plant with tiny branchlets only long, tiny leaves only long and well adapted to resist the high winds, and flowers forming a nearly solid floral blanket of the underlying plant. Spreading phlox is a matted perennial with sprawling stems. At very high-elevations is sky pilot, which has tightly pinnate leaves similar to mousetail, and can be found growing on talus and rocky outcrops on lofty peaks to. "With its dramatic beauty", sky pilot is "thought to be one of the finest and most beautiful Sierra wildflowers". Showy polemonium grows in most Sierra Nevada habitats, and has tightly pinnate leaves with leaflets reminiscent in appearance to the armored tail of a stagasaurus dinosaur.
Buckwheat family perennials include lady's thumb, a perennial growing from a contorted rhizome. Butterballs, or oval-leaved buckwheat, has leaves that cluster very tightly forming almost impenetrable mats or cushions on sandy or gravelly flats and in rocky soils, and grows to or elevation. Frosted wild buckwheat is densely covered with white hairs so as to appear "frosted", and grows to elevation. Lobb's wild buckwheat, growing to, is sprawling and grows from a thick, woody stem, with flower stalks lying on the ground.
Another buckwheat family member found growing in 13 named varieties, from the desert floor all the way up to, is naked stemmed eriogonum. There are also alpine zone varieties of the perennial to shrub sulfur flower, or sulfur buckwheat, that can be found up to to elevation. Alpine sorrel grows in crevices in cliffs and other rocky places to. It is unusual among alpine plants in that it has leaves that are relatively large, broad, and hairless.
The primrose family has the alpine shooting star, also found at lower elevation zones, and found near stream and lake sides. Also sierra primrose,, considered by photographers to be one of the most spectacular alpine flowers, forms large mats around rocks and is covered with rose petals, similar to rock fringe. It tends to grow on north facing slopes were there is moisture from melting snow.
In the purslane family is dwarf lewisia, or alpine lewisia, considered by some to be "one of the most beautiful and intriguing of the alpine floral treats", is found in higher elevation basins and slopes, from all the way up to. Botanist Laird Blackwell describes the growth pattern of its fleshy leaves and colonies as "its basal leaves form amazing patterns on the ground like many-armed starfish reaching for the sky... this is a plant that begs for a long look and close examination regardless of where it happens to be in its blooming cycle."
The buttercup family has Drummond's anemone, a showy perennial. Alpine columbine, or sierra yellow columbine, "among the most spectacular eastern sierra flowers", grows as a or smaller cushion, to. Unlike lower elevations, which are pollinated by hummingbirds that do not reach alpine elevations, alpine columbine is pollinated by moths, so are upright and totally ultraviolet reflecting white. Mountain larkspur grows in wet meadows to. High mountain larkspur grows among willows and rocks along creeks, also up to elevation. Buttercups are among the earliest blooming of the alpine zone. Water plantain buttercup grows in wet meadows and banks up to, elevation. Alpine buttercup, or Eschscholtz's buttercup can be found in rocky areas and meadows up to or elevation. Alpine buttercup is conspicuous with its bright lemon yellow flowers, which contrast with their rock environment.
Gordon's Ivesia is in the rose family , growing to elevations of. It has intricate leaves growing from a basal rosette, which are pinnately divided into 10-20 pairs of opposite, tiny lobed leaflets, creating the appearance of a nest of green centipedes.
Club-moss is not a moss, but a low growing perennial, with erect, but sprawling stems, growing in the crevices of rock ledges and in wet meadows. Mousetail ivesia has long silvery leaves, and grows on gravels and ridges to. Mousetail is a tiny herbaceous perennial. Sibbaldia grows to.
Pink heuchera, in the saxifrage family , is found in dry, rocky places, to. Grass of Parnassus forms small patches of flowers up to. Alpine saxifrage grows in wet, rocky flats and grassy meadows, in the lower alpine zone to. Pygmy saxifrage forms small tufts high, and grows in damp, shaded places under overhanging rocks, and is found from as "low" as, to over''.
Perennial grasslike plants
Perennial grasslike plants constitute 21% of the Sierra Nevada alpine species.A characteristic grass family is squirreltail. Timberline bluegrass grows in the Central and Southern Sierra Nevada from.
Sierra sedge, in the sedge family , grows on gravelly and rocky slopes up to. A characteristic sedge family member is alpine sedge.
Parry's rush of the rush family grows in dry, rocky places to.
Shrubs
Shrubs tend to be small, and low growing to cope with high wind conditions and dense snowcovering, forming mats and cushions. Woody shrubs together with annuals constitute only about 6% of the number of Sierra Nevada alpine floral species.Whitestem goldenbush is a compact woody-based shrub in the sunflower family , grows on open rocky slopes to.
In the heath family , white mountain heather is tall, tiny-leaved, densely branching shrub growing on rocky ledges and in crevices up to elevations of. Swamp laurel is a low, branching, mat-forming evergreen shrub that grows in boggy alpine meadows or at the edge of water, up to.
Also in the heath family is purple mountain heather, a low-growing, highly branched, multistemmed, evergreen shrub found in moist rocky places up to about or. Dwarf bilberry, or sierra bilberry, is a tufted, low growing woody plant that make a red and gold carpet around alpine lakes in the fall. The western Labrador teas, are not for tea, but are a poisonous, rigidly branched evergreen shrubs with fragrant white flowers, growing in moist places up to.
Mountain goosberry, in the gooseberry family, can be found as high as.
Cliffbush is in the mock-orange family , and can be found to.
White globe gilia, or ballhead gilia>, in the phlox family grows in mats to. Granite gilia, or prickly phlox is a aromatic, hairy subshrub, having leaves with needle like lobes adapted to the alpine climate, that grows in a sprawling manner to elevations of.
Sierra primrose is in the primrose family , and is a sprawling, low growing subshrub found under overhanging rocks, and reaching only.
Creambush, rose family member is a shrub found to elevations of. Alpine Drummond's cinquefoil, with smaller densely white-hairy leaves than less well adapted varieties growing below the alpine zone, grows to. Bush cinquefoil is found around the world in northern latitudes, and in the alpine zone is dwarf shrub found in moist places up to or elevation.
The mat forming Rocky Mountain willow, in the willow family , grows to only. Arctic willow is tiny, creeping, prostrate, and mat forming. Snow willow occurs in alpine cirques in Mono County, CA.