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Quail Ridge Reserve (QRR) overlooking Lake Berryessa in Napa County, CA, is one of the few nearly unscathed natural areas left in the California Coast Ranges. The Reserve's 2000 acres support stands of black oak, blue oak, interior live oak, oracle oak, scrub oak, and valley oak. Trees shade deer trails that wind through native California bunchgrasses--grasses that once flourished on 25 million acres but are rarely seen today. QRR has many magnificent stands of these elegant perennial grasses, with up to 15 different species identified to date. The Reserve is also home to a host of other native plants and animals. The Reserve is comprised of complex biological communities that are increasingly difficult to find anywhere in the state. For this reason, it is of special interest to biologists and ecologists who wish to study still functioning ecosystems, in part to better understand what might be done to restore damaged ones elsewhere. The Reserve is also of interest to educators, from kindergarten through university, who wish their students to experience, first-hand, native California Coast Range habitat. And it is of interest to the general public, as a site not too distant from urban centers in northern California, where people can see the beauty and feel the tranquility of undisturbed California landscapes. The Reserve is one of 36 reserves in the state designated as a natural reserve of the University of California. Link to UC Natural Reserve System.
QRWC s Executive Director, Frank Maurer, has recently played a major role in launching an initiative to have Nassella pulchra more widely known as Purple Needlegrass officially designated as California s State Grass. This took several years of advocacy, education, and finding supporters for the idea. Ultimately, Senator Mike Machado (D-Linden) authored the bill, with support by Lois Wolk in the Assembly, which was signed into law by Governor Schwarzenegger in August of 2004. The law went into effect on January 1, 2005. Why Purple Needlegrass? Here are some reasons:
With the entry of Nassella pulchra into the pantheon, California now has 30 state symbols. Our state is one of 15 to have so honored a native grass. We feel that more states will follow this lead. If your curiosity has been piqued, here are the other state symbols relating to native flora and fauna:
e-mail: frankmaurer41@gmail.com |