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Big Sagebrush
Big Sagebrush6 locationsPlant
.: FOTG :.
Jul 11 2023
Smith Lake Trail #023
Featured Detail Photo mini map Featured Full Photo.: The_Eagle :.
May 19 2012
AZT 42 & 43
ID1716  URL
Magnoliophyta - Flowering plant
FamilyAsteraceae - Compositae: aster, daisy, sunflower
Elevation2000 - 7000
Prime BloomGreen
BloomsSummer - Late Fall
Images Bing, Google
Similar Species

Artemisia tridentata

Sagebrush is a coarse, hardy silvery-grey bush with yellow flowers and grows in arid sections of the western United States and Western Canada. It is the primary vegetation across vast areas of the Great Basin desert. Along rivers or in other relatively wet areas, sagebrush can grow as tall as 3 m (10 feet), but is more typically 1–2 m tall.

Sagebrush has a strong pungent fragrance, especially when wet, which is not unlike common sage. It is, however, unrelated to common sage and has a bitter taste. It is thought that this odor serves to discourage browsing.

Sagebrush leaves are wedge-shaped 1–4 cm long and 0.3–1 cm broad, and are attached to the branch by the narrow end. The outer and wider end is generally divided into three lobes (although leaves with two or four lobes are not uncommon), hence the scientific name tridentata. The leaves are covered with fine silvery hairs, which are thought to keep the leaf cool and minimize water loss. Most of the leaves are carried year-round, as sagebrush tends to grow in areas where winter precipitation is greater than summer precipitation.

Sagebrush flowers in the late summer or early fall. The flowers are yellow and are carried in long, slender clusters. When reproduced in this fashion the plant is considered to produce seedlings. The other way in which Big Sagebrush reproduces is through sprouts. Sprouts come up through the ground from underground Rhizome. The sprouts are an extension of the parental plant while seedlings are completely individualistic to any other plant. Among these two strategies, the seedlings need more moisture for germination and early survival. This is due to the sprouts being connected to already healthy and associated plants while the new seedlings will start anew.

Sagebrush is not fire-tolerant and relies on wind-blown seeds from outside the burned area for re-establishment. This is in contrast to many of the other plants which share its habitat, such as Rabbitbrush, Ephedra and bunchgrasses, which can root-sprout after a fire. Cheatgrass has invaded much of the sagebrush habitat, and if left unchecked could possibly create a fire cycle that is too frequent to allow sagebrush to re-establish itself.

In the Great Basin, sagebrush is the dominant plant life in the Upper Sonoran and Boreal life zones, and is the primary understory species in the Transitional zone between them. Prior to heavy grazing by cattle and sheep of these areas, sagebrush is thought to have been less dominant, and perennial grasses more common. In the Lower Sonoran life zone, sagebrush is generally replaced by shadscale or greasewood

Sagebrush is the state flower of Nevada.

Sagebrush (especially Big Sage) is a prominent plant in Western America, providing habitat for a variety of species. During Western expansion of America the shrub has seen man made disturbance. This is usually due to the cattle industry burning large areas of Sage to make way for grazing. Due to large periods of time where Big Sage was the primary shrub, many species have become adapted to this habitat. The burning of the shrubs leads to habitat loss of many species and as a study from Wambolt et al. suggest, it can be very detrimental to the ecosystem as a whole. After ecosystem disturbance from fire, the preliminary species to take the place of the Big Sage is Cheatgrass. The grass usually will out compete the native species of grasses as well as Sage seedlings/sprouts. The presence of livestock grazing has actually been suggested to alleviate Cheatgrass stress on the ecosystem, since this grass is a more preferable feed for cattle. It also has been shown that low amounts of grazing after fire disturbance non-disruptive for herbaceous communities.

Some species have been encroaching on Big Sagebrush habitat. It has been found that in the Warner Mountains in California the White Fur(Abies concolor) has been out competing Big Sagebrush. In this case it seems that over grazing of sheep is responsible, especially in this region. Other factors that may relate are climactic change and fire disturbance.

Source: Wikipedia
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