Cupressus nevadensis
Cupressus nevadensis Abrams is one of the rarest cypress species of the New World. Mrs. Leo Polkinghorn was the first to identify a grove of trees growing on Red Hill near Bodfish as different from juniper ( Juniperus californica ), which abounds south of Lake Isabella. She and Mr. Herziger in 1907...
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Zusammenfassung: | Cupressus nevadensis
Abrams
is one of the rarest cypress species of the New World. Mrs.
Leo Polkinghorn
was the first to identify a grove of trees growing on Red Hill near Bodfish as different from juniper (
Juniperus californica
), which abounds south of Lake Isabella. She and Mr.
Herziger
in 1907 sent specimens to
William Dundley
at Standford University. Later these herbarium specimens came to the attention of
LeRoy Abrams
.
Abrams
subsequently visited the Red Hill stand in 1915 and used this colony as the type locality for this cypress species, which he described in 1919. He named it
Cupressus nevadensis
after the Sierra Nevada, because he believed it was the first recorded cypress from the mountain range.
Twisselmann
postulated that
C. nevadensis
is a relic precariously surviving on the western edge of what has once been waste woodland. Fossil
C. nevadensis
was discovered in a Miocene bed in Sand Canyon, only 18 km south of the Back Canyon grove of Piute cypress. Another fossil record shows the more recent desert occurrence of a cypress closely related to
C. arizonica
and
C. nevadensis
. The record was a wood similar to that of
C. nevadensis
found in the region occupied by Piute cypress. It is certainly a reasonable theory that Piute cypress is a remnant of a once widespread complex occurring across the Mojave Desert and that it has been progressively restricted by increasing aridity and associated factors. |
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DOI: | 10.1002/9783527678518.ehg2019006 |