Dave BrooksUnder muggy skies Saturday, dozens of...
Dave Brooks
Under muggy skies Saturday, dozens of people descended on the Bolsa
Chica mesa to participate in a restoration project to return native
plant species to the coastal wetlands.
In a little under three hours, more than 400 species of black
sage, coastal sage, California buckwheat and coastal sunflower were
dispersed throughout a four-acre stretch of the Bolsa Chica. The
event was an attempt to bring back part of the natural history of the
wetlands that had been destroyed by foreign invasive plant species.
The program was also an opportunity to familiarize the public with
the benefits of native plants.
“There used to be the thought that these were high maintenance
plants, but that’s no longer true,” said Kim Kolpin of the Bolsa
Chica Stewards, a branch of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust. “They’re
actually very easy for anyone to grow and can stay green all year.”
In the wild, native plant restoration can be helpful in bringing
back habitats for plants and animals choked out by more invasive
plants. Species like the black mustard plant and wild radish are
believed to have been brought over by European explorers and slowly
spread through the ecosystem.
Many of these foreign plants strangle out native species with
aggressive root structures that absorb disproportionate amounts of
precious nutrients. As native plants begin to diminish, so do the
habitats for insects, birds and small mammals, resulting in further
losses up the food chain.
“It really effects the entire ecosystem,” said Mike Evans of the
Tree of Life Nursery, which supplied most of the plants for
Saturday’s restoration.
State law requires that restoration on public land include only
native species, but Evans said the real battle is implementing native
species into urban and suburban development.
“It’s going to be the responsibility of planners and landscapers
in the future not to provide us with small individual landscapes, but
with untouched open spaces that reflect California’s natural
history,” he said. “The idea is to get closer to nature in our living
environment; to create areas where species can come right in and live
with us.”
With so much of Huntington Beach already developed, Evans said
city planners have to promote the use of native plants whenever it
can.
That’s easy, City Council candidate and native plant advocate
Steve Ray said, because many local species are relatively inexpensive
to maintain.
“One of the nice things about native plants is the small amount of
water they require,” he said, noting that many species accustomed to
Orange County have evolved to meet the demands of arid desert
climate.
“Once they’ve taken root, you never have to water them again,” he
said. “They can live on whatever nature provides.”
Ray and dozens of volunteers have spent about two years creating
seven separate native habitat zones at the Shipley Nature Center. The
project sits on part of the city’s central park and is just one way
Huntington Beach officials can promote native plant species.
The city also has several ordinances that encourage use of native
plants. Huntington Beach Landscaping Director Chuck Davis said that
while the city doesn’t require developers to use native species, he
can control the amount of water they are able to use. The result is
that many people turn to native plants because of their water
consumption rate.
“That’s what it’s all about, encouraging local people to actively
do their part to sustain their environment,” Evans said. “To restore
the ecosystem so that we can all live together.”
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at dave.brooks@latimes.com.
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