Species Driven Restoration – Tumamoc globeberry
Healthy Tumamoc globe berry vine and fruits growing in a creosote on Tumamoc Hill. |
Healthy Globeberry fruit on vine - about the most likely thing for one to notice about the plant. |
If, near the tail-end of the monsoon season, you find yourself walking among the creosotes and acacias, you may notice a small vine twining its way up through their branches to expose a handful of leaves on the shrub’s surface. Then again, you might not. You might pass by and never notice this spindly vine. If you do spot it, it will probably be the subtle color differences that grab your attention—a blue-green vine against the yellow-green creosote or the bright red of their small fruits (that is, if you can catch them before they’re eaten by bird or beast).
Dormant Globeberry fingerling |
Last summer, at our Martin Farm restoration site, we began an effort to reestablish the genetic linkage between the population in the Waterman Mountains and those populations to the east. Pollination for this species is not well understood, however the tiny, non-showy, and relatively unscented flowers make long-distance cross-pollination unlikely. This necessitates a chain of relatively close populations to increase the likelihood of genetic flow. We purchased a flat of 32 tubers, each a year old, from Miles Anderson at Miles' to Go--Cactus and Succulents, about the only nursery in Tucson that sells them. We planted them across the site in a generally linear fashion.
The succulent nature of these tubers makes them a favorite food of many desert mammals, including javelina, ground-squirrels, and jackrabbits. To protect our newly transplanted fingerlings, we planted them in 5-sided cages of hardware cloth, staked deep into the ground. Nothing would be able to bite into them from the sides or top, they have plenty of room to grow (the tubers can get quite large but the largest are smaller than the cage size), and the vines have plenty of space to stretch out. We planted them under the protective shade and vertical structure of creosote bushes. These provide a slight filtering of the sunlight that might reach the tuber, and a lattice for the vines to twine among.
Young globeberry vine growing through cage and up into the creosote bush above. |
...And it's gone. Hole where
globeberry tuber used to be.
|
Given time and financial opportunity we hope to be able to restore more populations across Avra Valley and restore the genetic flow between populations on either side of the valley. If you want to become involved with critical conservation and restoration efforts like this one, please contact us! We’re always looking for more help with ongoing research into the needs of specific species (like our Nestboxes for Urban Birds/Nestbox Experiments – blog coming soon) or optimizing efficiency in restoration techniques (check out pg. 22 of the next issue of the Vermillion Flycatcher).
Finally. if you would like to join the yearly effort
surveying for Tumamoc globeberry plants around Tucson, please contact Frank Reichenbacher – especially important this year as the proposed Southline Transmission Projectgoes within 11 yards of the remnant globeberry population on Tumamoc Hill.
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