Lying between the shady coastal rain-forest environments of the Sunshine Coast and Vancouver Island, stony, dry, sunny Mitlenatch Island is an oddity. Some of the plants I saw were old favourites, like the salal or the stonecrop, but many were like, but not quite like, the ones I'm familiar with just a few kilometres across the water, nor, with the exception of the prickly pear, were they like the dry country plants of the Chilcotin. I kept asking our patient guide, Christine, "What's this? And this?"
On the government list of
rare plants of BC, 8 are found on Mitlenatch Island. Three of these are aquatics, two unusual clovers (
tomcat clover, white-tipped clover). There's Carolina foxtail grass, a subspecies of California broomrape that parasitizes gumweed, and Gardner's yampah, in the carrot family. I don't think I saw any of these, but next time I'll come prepared, knowing what to look for.
In spite of the pictures on the information kiosk and local websites, a few of the plants I saw on Mitlenatch Island were hard to identify. I need help with these:
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It looks like one of the carrot family, Apiaceae, but is missing the fringe at the top of the stem. I should recognize it, but I don't. |
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The information board shows the orchid, Ladies tresses. This is similar, but the florets don't seem to be arranged in a spiral. Another orchid, maybe? |
Update: this could be
Piperia elegans, the hillside rein orchid. Also present on Mitlenatch.
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Christine identified this for me. Indian celery, Lomatium nudicaule. Aka Indian consumption plant. |
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Hooker's onion. The three petals and the flower sheath make this easy to identify. Likes dry places. |
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At least this was easy; common plantain. Grows anywhere. But what is that beautiful, feathery grass behind it? |
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A volunteer in the bottom corner of a failed photo of something else. Saskatoon (serviceberry) flowers, past their sell-by date. The fresh flowers are white, the berries a deep purple-blue, and often delicious, depending, I think, on the soil the shrub grows in. |
(5th in a series of 9 Mitlenatch Island posts.
#1,
#2,
#3,
#4.
#5.
#6,
#7,
#8)
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