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Early blooms on Stevens Creek Trail.
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Sept 23, 2011, Molina Basin, Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona
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Orinda, California, United States
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Orinda, California, United States
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Longitude (deg): -1.3. Latitude (deg): 51.0. Longitude (deg/min): 1° 20' W. Latitude (deg/min): 51° 0' N. Vice county name: South Hants. Vice county no.: 11. Country: England. Stage: Bush. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: weather-damaged leaves with dark reddish leaf-spots and die-back. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS400D dSLR + Sigma 50mm 1:1 macro lens.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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Mountain View, California, United States
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Sept 23, 2011, Molina Basin, Santa Catalina Mountains, ArizonaIt is a small sized tree.
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Orinda, California, United States
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New York, New York, United States
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Longitude (deg): -1.3. Latitude (deg): 51.0. Longitude (deg/min): 1° 20' W. Latitude (deg/min): 51° 0' N. Vice county name: South Hants. Vice county no.: 11. Country: England. Stage: Bush. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: weather-damaged leaves with dark reddish leaf-spots and die-back. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS400D dSLR + Sigma 50mm 1:1 macro lens.
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Mountain View, California, United States
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Sept 23, 2011, Molina Basin, Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona
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Orinda, California, United States
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New York, New York, United States
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Orinda, California, United States
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Sept 23, 2011, Molina Basin, Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona
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Oakland, California, United States
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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The silk tassel bush in this region is threatened by plantation forest management practices and fire suppression.
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This beautiful silk tassel bush is an early successional forest species that is dependent upon regular fire for regeneration. Plantation tree farming practices are causing the extirpation of this species along with many formerly widespread species that naturally occur in the early forest environment.
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This beautiful silk tassel bush is an early successional forest species that is dependent upon regular fire for regeneration. Plantation tree farming practices are causing the extirpation of this species along with many formerly widespread species that naturally occur in the early forest environment.