A rare chance to visit a unique California habitat
These unique landlocked dunes -- created tens of thousands of years ago when coastal dunes were uplifted away from the ocean as the Santa Cruz Mountains were formed -- gradually became biological "islands" surrounded by mixed evergreen and redwood forests. The rounded, almost bald-looking domes, which scientists call sand parklands, are home to about 90 species of plants; two of them are listed as endangered by the federal government.
Many of the species are distinctive either as relics from another age or because they have adapted uniquely to the isolated environment. McCabe pointed to a variety of ponderosa pine that grows only on the sand parklands; it's different enough from its Sierra Nevada cousins that some botanists consider it a separate species. McCabe believes it is a remnant of coastal ponderosa pine forests that disappeared thousands of years ago as the local climate and geography changed.
Other plant and animal species have adapted more dramatically. McCabe's favorite adaptive example is the caterpillar of the rare Smith's blue butterfly, which feeds on a rare naked-stem buckwheat found in this area. Several sand-parkland inhabitants, including silverleaf manzanita, the Mount Hermon June beetle, and the wallflower McCabe pointed out, are found nowhere else in the world.
Years of sand mining in the mountains have reduced undisturbed sand-parkland habitat from some 500 acres to about 50, most of which are on a 35-acre knoll called South Ridge. County officials and local environmental groups have agreed to purchase the property for $3.2 million; they have until July 1, 1998, to raise the money.
The 1 1/2-mile walk climbs through oak woodlands to the heart of a sandy ridge that, by April, should be yellow with poppies and wallflowers and speckled with blooms of lupine and coyote mint. Docents will explain local plant relationships and ongoing sand-parkland research. From the top of the ridge, you'll get a sweeping cross-valley view that includes the scarred, working sandpits of Kaiser and Lone Star quarries and the balding dome of South Ridge. The free hikes are scheduled for I
By Jeff Phillips
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Photo omitted: caption Walkers on these former coastal dunes
encounter rare and variant plant species (at left, a uniquely adapted
California poppy).