Brooks Island Regional Shoreline

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         (352 plants)
Thanks to the East Bay Regional Park District for this list.

    
Alkali Bulrush
Bolboschoenus maritimus
  • CA Bloom Aug - Sep
  • Flat, narrow stems to about four feet tall.
  • Found near the edge of salt water.
  • Widespread in California and around the world.
  • CA native



Flowers dark brown with tan bristles.

Flowers group in the joint of flat stems.

Stands erect with noticeable brown flowers
Alkali Russian Thistle
Salsola soda
  • CA Bloom Jul - Oct
  • Salt tolerant
  • Historically important as a source of soda ash, used to make glass clear.
  • Mostly found in wet areas
  • Not CA native
  • Moderately Invasive


Fleshy thin leaves.

Green or red stems.

Grows to a bit over 2 feet tall, generally in wet areas.
American Vetch
Vicia americana
  • CA Bloom May - Jun
  • Flowers with pink, violet and white parts.
  • Tendrils, modified leaves, allow the plant to climb on other plants.
  • Alternate compound leaves.
  • A widespread understory plant.
  • CA native



Purple pea-like flowers

Alternate compound leaves.

Vine grows to a foot long. One inch pea pods for fruit.
American Vetch (1)
Vicia americana ssp. americana
  • Height 1 - 2 ft.
  • CA Bloom May - Jun
  • Flowers with pink, violet and white parts.
  • Tendrils, modified leaves, allow the plant to climb on others.
  • The vine stem can grow to 4 feet long, but the plant is generally under 2 feet tall.
  • Alternate compound leaves.
  • Widespread understory plant.
  • CA native



Small but bright flowers

Lots of small compound leaflets.

Long thin leaves and purple flowers make this a vetch.
Andean Pampas Grass
Cortaderia jubata

Tall stems (up to 20 feet) and showy tops make this plant stand out.

Many stems join at the root.

Grass stem is hairy. Leaves connect to the stem in a sheath.
Annual June Grass, Bristly Koeleria
Koeleria gerardii
  • CA Bloom Apr - Jul
  • Not CA native




  • Arroyo Lupine
    Lupinus succulentus
    • Grows to 3 ft. on erect, sparsely hairy stems.
    • CA Bloom Feb - May
    • This annual flower produces 6" clusters of purple pea flowers.
    • Wide-tipped leaflets grow on long (2-6") stalks.
    • It is abundant in open or disturbed areas, and is often seeded on road banks.
    • CA native



    Look for radial leaflets that are wider near the tip. Their fleshy top feels rubbery.

    Here's a closeup of the flower. The yellow pistil is just sticking out of the right-hand keel. The left part is the banner.

    Stacks of whorled flowers have white banner spots that turn magenta with age.
    Australian Brass Buttons
    Cotula australis
    • CA Bloom Jan - May
    • A small plant that grows low to the ground.
    • Many tiny flowers form a yellow "Button".
    • Flowers have no petals.
    • Leaves are finely divided.
    • Grows in disturbed places
    • Not CA native



    Small flower head is made up of many tiny petal-less flowers.

    Leaves divide into many little lobes. Grows low to the ground.

    Green phyllaries behind a yellow flower head.
    Australian Fireweed
    Senecio glomeratus
    • CA Bloom Apr - Sep
    • Yellow composite flowers group at the top of a branched 6 foot plant.
    • Leaves are alternate and deeply lobed.
    • Found in disturbed sites below 1,000 feet, generally near the coast.
    • Not CA native
    • Moderately Invasive


    Composite flowers group at the top of the stem. They have no "petals" ( ray flowers).

    Leaves clasp the stem, grow to about 6 inches, and are deeply lobed.

    Grows to 6 feet or so, with lots of flowers near the top of the stem.
    Bearded Clover
    Trifolium barbigerum
    • Height to 1 ft.
    • CA Bloom Feb - May
    • Brown, pink, violet, white flower
    • Irreg petals
    • Alternate leaves
    • CA native




    Bearded Sprangletop
    Leptochloa fusca ssp. fascicularis
  • CA Bloom Jun - Oct
  • CA native




  • Beardless Wild Rye
    Elymus triticoides


    This rye has 2-ranked spikelets that connect directly to the stem. There is space between each alternating spikelet.

    Hollow stems (like straws) connect at solid joints. Leaves are about 1/4" wide and a foot long.

    Prominent blue-green leaves are 4-12" long and grow away from the stem. Found in moist habitats with heavy soils.
    Bee Plant
    Scrophularia californica
    • Height 2 - 4 ft.
    • CA Bloom Feb - May
    • Bee plant is tall, with prominent triangular leaves and tiny brownish-red flowers.
    • Small flowers are less than 1/2" across and have a nectar disk to reward pollinating bees.
    • Opposite leaves have stalks that connect to the stem.
    • Found in moist places below 8,000 feet.
    • CA native



    This view of the flower from below shows two rounded petals on top, two side petals, and one folded out like a tongue.

    A square stem supports large, opposite, toothed leaves. This might make you think "Mint" but it's not.

    Bee Plant grows several feet high with opposite, narrow leaves sticking straight out. Flowers are on horizontal stalks near the top.
    Big Leaf Mistletoe
    Phoradendron leucarpum ssp. macrophyllum
  • Shrub
  • Green flower
  • Tiny petals
  • Opposite leaves
  • CA native




  • Big Scale Balsam Root
    Balsamorhiza macrolepis
  • CA Bloom Mar - Jun
  • Yellow flower
  • Many petals
  • Basal leaves
  • Slopes
  • CA native
  • Endangered (CNPS 1B)




  • Big Tarweed
    Blepharizonia plumosa
  • CA Bloom Jul - Oct
  • CA native
  • Endangered (CNPS 1B)




  • Bioletti Cudweed
    Pseudognaphalium biolettii
    • CA Bloom Jan - May
    • Flowers are white on the outside and yellow on the inside.
    • Alternate leaves are wide at the base and clasp the stem.
    • Leaves and stem are covered with short fine hair, not sticky but sharply scented.
    • Found in coastal chaparral and in mixed evergreens in the foothills.
    • CA native



    Shiny papery phyllaries surround tiny yellow aster flowers.

    Many tiny brown fruits.

    Grows to 3 feet, sometimes woody at the base.
    Bird's Foot Lotus
    Acmispon brachycarpus
    • Height 6 in. - 1 ft.
    • CA Bloom Mar - Jun
    • Yellow flower
    • Pea petals
    • Alternate leaves
    • CA native




    Black Cottonwood
    Populus trichocarpa
    • CA Bloom Feb - Apr
    • A large riparian tree with alternate leaves
    • Leaf stems are round (Fremont Cottonwood's is flattened).
    • Widely distributed in California, except the central valley.
    • CA native



    Leaf tops are glossy dark-green. Undersides are pale. Leaves are long and pointed, with small teeth on the edge.

    Alternating secondary veins connect to a central one.

    Grows near running water. Trunks get very large, and the tree height often exceeds 100 feet.
    Black Mustard
    Brassica nigra
  • CA Bloom Apr - Jul
  • Yellow flower
  • Four petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • Not CA native
  • Moderately Invasive




  • Black Nightshade
    Solanum nigrum
    • CA Bloom Mar - Oct
    • A nightshade, with 5-petaled flowers and a yellow center.
    • This tangled shrub can grow to 4 feet tall.
    • Alternate leaves grow to 3 inches long, with wavy or toothed edges.
    • Common, found in wooded areas and disturbed soil.
    • Not CA native



    Petals recurve back, highlighting the yellow center. This is a pattern for all nightshades.

    Flowers are in small groups, each at the end of its own stalk ( pedicel).

    These immature berries will turn red and then black as they mature.
    Blue Dicks
    Dipterostemon capitatus
    • CA Bloom Feb - Apr
    • Look for a tight bunch of 6-petaled flowers on a single stem, about 1 foot tall.
    • Flowers can be purple, pink or white.
    • This common springtime flower is widespread where there is sun.
    • Compare to Ookow
    • CA native



    A tight bunch of 6-petaled flowers appears at the top of a tall, wavy stalk.

    The centers of the flowers feature a forked, white sheath that surrounds yellow-tipped stamens.

    Long, narrow leaves grow from the base of the plant. Below, the roots connect to food-storing corms.
    Blue Elderberry
    Sambucus mexicana
    • CA Bloom Mar - Jul
    • A large shrub with clusters of white flowers, plus compound leaves indicate an Elderberry.
    • Berries are black but appear blue because of a waxy covering.
    • Grey bark with vertical furrows.
    • Common on stream banks and open places in forests.
    • CA native



    White flat-topped clusters of flowers are easy to spot.

    Berries with a waxy covering makes them look powdery.

    Compound leaves with 5 - 9 toothed leaflets.
    Blue Fescue
    Festuca idahoensis


    Found in dry, open or shady places, Blue Fescue may appear bluer than plants around it.

    Spikelets are about 1/2" long. There's enough room between spikelets to see wavy branches.

    Spikelets are flattish, with 2-ranked florets. They're held close to the stem until mature. Awns are thread-like.
    Blue-Eyed Grass
    Sisyrinchium bellum
    • Height 1 - 2 ft.
    • CA Bloom Mar - May
    • This is not a grass but an iris.
    • At the top of each stem are violet flowers with darker purple lines leading to a yellow center.
    • It's common in open, usually moist areas.
    • CA native. Endemic to the California Floristic Province.



    Beautiful 1/2" wide flowers have blue to violet petals and a golden yellow center to guide pollinators in.

    Leaves are grass-like, narrow with parallel veins.

    The ovary is below the flower and, if pollinated, develops into a capsule-like fruit.
    Bog Yellowcress
    Rorippa palustris ssp. palustris
  • CA Bloom Apr - Jun
  • Yellow flower
  • Four petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • Box Elder
    Acer negundo
    • Height 25 - 66 ft.
    • CA Bloom Feb - Mar
    • Opposite leaves
    • Streambanks
    • CA native




    Branched Indian Clover
    Trifolium dichotomum
  • CA Bloom Mar - May
  • Black, brown, pink, white flower
  • Irreg petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • Branching Phacelia
    Phacelia ramosissima
  • CA Bloom May - Aug
  • Violet, white flower
  • Five petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • Coastal
  • CA native




  • Brass Buttons
    Cotula coronopifolia
  • CA Bloom May - Oct
  • Green, yellow flower
  • Tiny petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • Not CA native
  • Somewhat Invasive




  • Brewer's Ragwort
    Packera breweri
  • CA Bloom Apr - May
  • Yellow flower
  • Many petals
  • Alternate, basal leaves
  • Slopes
  • CA native




  • Brewer's Rock Cress
    Boechera breweri
  • CA Bloom Feb - May
  • Violet flower
  • Four petals
  • Alternate, basal leaves
  • Slopes
  • CA native




  • Brewer's Rockcress
    Boechera breweri ssp. breweri
  • CA Bloom Feb - May
  • Violet flower
  • Four petals
  • Alternate, basal leaves
  • CA native




  • Brewer's Saltbrush
    Atriplex lentiformis
  • CA Bloom Jun - Jul
  • Yellow flower
  • Tiny petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • Coastal salt-marsh
  • CA native




  • Bristly Linanthus
    Leptosiphon aureus
  • CA Bloom Mar - Jun
  • Pink, white, yellow flower
  • Five petals
  • Opposite leaves
  • CA native
  • Uncommon (CNPS 4)




  • Bristly Ox-Tongue
    Helminthotheca echioides
    • Height to 7 ft.
    • CA Bloom Jun - Dec
    • A tall dandelion-like flower, covered in bristles.
    • Leaves have large bumps on them.
    • Lots of seed in the fall - you'll see it blowing in the air.
    • Not CA native.
    • Somewhat Invasive


    Leaves have stiff bristles and bumps, giving it its name. Dandelion-like flowers top each branch.

    Dandelion-like flowers are surrounded by distinctive, triangular, upward pointing, bristly green bracts.

    Plants are tall, with many branches.
    Brittle Leaf Manzanita
    Arctostaphylos crustacea ssp. crustacea
    • Height 3 - 10 ft.
    • CA Bloom Jan - Mar
    • Leaves stick out from the hairy stem.
    • Alternate leaves dark green above, and light green below.
    • Big bunches of tiny flowers, hanging down from stalk-like pedicels.
    • Fruit is red and spherical with flat spot. Not sticky.
    • CA native



    Leaves are relatively big (2" long). Flowers are tiny in large bunches.

    Early flower development shows red bracts. Leaves of ssp. crustacea have almost no hair on the bottom.

    Look for a prominent burl at the base of the plant.
    Broadfruit Bur Reed
    Sparganium eurycarpum
  • CA Bloom Jun - Jul
  • Black, brown, green, pink, white, yellow flower
  • Tiny petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • Brome Fescue
    Festuca bromoides


    Brome Fescue is a short grass with small spikelets that turn a straw-like color as they age. Fescue is Latin for "straw".

    Each floret produces an awn about the length of the rest of the spikelet.

    The inflorescence is densely populated with spikelets on short stalks. Spikelets and awns point sideways as they mature, giving a tangled appearance.
    Brownie Thistle
    Cirsium quercetorum
    • CA Bloom May - July
    • Grasslands and brushy slopes near the coast.
    • Brown flower color.
    • Grows low to the ground.
    • Puckered, spiny leaves on the ground.
    • Found only in CA



    Brown flower color.

    Leaves puckered, with long spines

    Grows low to the ground.
    Bulbous Blue Grass
    Poa bulbosa
    • Perennial 6-24"
    • Inflorescence branched 1-4"
    • No awns
    • CA Bloom May - Jun
    • Stems have a bulbous section at their base that can break off to form a new plant.
    • Some plants have bi-sexual florets. Others have aerial bulblets that are self pollinated.
    • Not CA native



    Most California plants have self-pollinated aerial bulblets with shoots already growing out of them.

    The base of the stem also has bulblets that divide to create new plants.

    This weedy bluegrass can dominate roadsides, overgrazed pastures and other disturbed areas.
    Bull Mallow
    Malva nicaeensis
  • CA Bloom Mar - May
  • Pink, violet, white flower
  • Five petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • Disturbed
  • Not CA native




  • Bull Thistle
    Cirsium vulgare
    • CA Bloom June - Sept
    • This thistle has spiny everything.
    • A pear-shaped spiny base supports a 2-inch-tall purple flower.
    • Dead flowers with many spines stay on the plant for a long time.
    • Bull Thistle is common in disturbed areas.
    • Not CA native.
    • Moderately Invasive


    A fairly thin pear-shaped spiny bulge below flower is a good way to distinguish this species.

    Bull Thistle has big spines all the way up the stem, on the leaves, and around the flower.

    Here is a basal rosette of thick, toothed leaves.
    Bur Reed
    Sparganium eurycarpum var. greenei
  • CA Bloom Jun - Jul
  • Black, brown, green, pink, white, yellow flower
  • Tiny petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • California Aster
    Symphyotrichum chilense
  • CA Bloom Jul - Aug
  • Blue, pink, violet, white flower
  • Many petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • California Aster (1)
    Corethrogyne filaginifolia
  • CA Bloom Jun - Oct
  • Pink, violet, white flower
  • Many petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • Dunes coastal
  • CA native




  • California Blackberry
    Rubus ursinus
    • Height 3 - 6 ft.
    • CA Bloom Feb - May
    • This shrub forms an impenetrable thicket of branches, full of narrow prickles.
    • You'll notice bright white flowers with many stamens.
    • Found in canyons, coastal stream banks and disturbed areas
    • CA native



    Separate petals, with green leafy sepals in between. This male flower has many stamens.

    Prickles are short, narrow, and plentiful. Himalayan Blackberry has wider, longer, and less densely-packed prickles.

    Red fruit turns black with maturity. Leaves in 3s, coarsely toothed, are hairy and have spines. Veins are indented on the leaves.
    California Buckeye
    Aesculus californica
    • Height 12 - 40 ft.
    • CA Bloom May - Jul
    • Buckeye trees are conspicuous from afar; pale green leaves in early spring, full of flowers in early summer, and bare-branched well before other trees lose their leaves in the fall.
    • Each aromatic flower has 4 pink or white petals and long stamens.
    • The fruit resembles a buck's eye - brown and about 2 inches across.
    • CA native



    Buckeye trees become covered with columns of sweet-smelling flowers.

    5-part compound leaves are palmate (shaped like a hand). Leaf edges are finely-toothed. Leaves bud in early February, well before flowering.

    Trees in the open form a dome shape, often growing 40 feet tall and 40 feet wide. They can live 250 years.
    California Bulrush
    Schoenoplectus californicus
  • CA Bloom May - Jun
  • Freshwater-marsh
  • CA native




  • California Burclover
    Medicago polymorpha
    • CA Bloom Feb - Jun
    • This is not a true clover but rather a close relative of Alfalfa, in the Medicago genus.
    • Look for slender-toothed stipules that encircle the stem where stalks meet it.
    • Not CA native
    • Somewhat Invasive


    3 or 4 yellow pea flowers cluster at the end of a long stalk. Leaflets have serrated edges.

    Burclover tends to run along the ground. The 3 clover-like leaflets are separate from one another. Flowers, fruits and leaves are on stalks.

    Pollinated ovules enlarge into tightly coiled pea pods with burs that stick out. The burs catch on passing animals, distributing the seeds to new areas.
    California Cottonrose
    Logfia filaginoides
  • CA Bloom Mar - Jun
  • Green flower
  • Tiny petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • California Cudweed
    Pseudognaphalium californicum


    Each tiny pineapple-shaped flower head is wrapped in white papery phyllaries and contains over 100 minute yellow flowers.

    Leaves are narrow and pointed, growing to 4 inches long. They're smaller higher on the stem.

    Branching stems grow erect, each topped with whitish flower heads.
    California Four O'clock
    Mirabilis laevis var. crassifolia
  • CA Bloom Dec - Jun
  • Pink, white flower
  • Five petals
  • Opposite leaves
  • CA native




  • California Goldenrod
    Solidago velutina ssp. californica
  • CA Bloom Jul - Oct
  • Yellow flower
  • Many petals
  • Alternate leaves
  • CA native




  • California Hazelnut
    Corylus cornuta ssp. californica
    • CA Bloom Jan - Mar
    • This shrub has open branching, and grows to 10 feet.
    • Leaves are soft, alternate, and deeply veined.
    • The stem changes direction at each leaf node.
    • Found on stream banks and slopes
    • CA native



    Soft fuzzy leaves have toothed edges. Veins are indented. Leaves fall off in the winter.

    The flower matures to a hazelnut, protected by a hard shell and fuzzy sheath.

    Male catkins form in the fall and last until spring.
    California Honeysuckle
    Lonicera hispidula
    • CA Bloom Apr - Jul
    • This is a woody vine that can climb 30 feet into trees. You'll notice them hanging down from branches.
    • Vines end in pink trumpet flowers whose lips fold back to reveal long stamens.
    • Common in canyons, stream sides and woodlands, especially near the coast.
    • CA native. Endemic to the California Floristic Province.



    Vines end in pink flowers, full of nectar (thus, Honeysuckle). Hummingbird and bees pollinate the flowers in their search for the nectar.

    Pollinated flowers turn into bright-red translucent berries.

    Leaves near the flower wrap around the stem. Leaves further down are opposite.
    California Horkelia
    Horkelia californica var. californica
  • CA Bloom Apr - Jul
  • White flower
  • Five petals
  • Alternate, basal leaves
  • CA native




  • California Lomatium
    Lomatium californicum
    • CA Bloom Mar - Apr
    • Green-yellow flowers and celery leaves are distinctive.
    • Grows to 4 feet tall
    • Found on open grassy slopes to 6,000 feet
    • CA native



    Flowers in bunches, starting green and becoming bright yellow.

    Divided blue-green leaves. They resemble common celery leaves in appearance and taste.

    A spreading plant, can grow to 4 feet tall.
    California Mustard
    Caulanthus lasiophyllus
    • CA Bloom Mar - Jun
    • Flowers with 4 widely-separated petals mark this as a Mustard Family plant.
    • It's smaller in stature than our vigorous non-native mustards.
    • CA native



    Compared to our non-native mustards, California Mustard has fewer, smaller, generally white flowers.

    Seed pods are quite narrow and long.

    The whole plant gives a linear apearance.
    California Oatgrass
    Danthonia californica


    This bunch grass has flat leaves, about 8" long. Flowering stems arch outwards from the plant center.

    Only 3-6 spikelets in a short inflorescence (about 2"). Branches are flexible and longer than the spikelets.

    Mature spikelets open up, with glumes longer than individual florets. There are 3-8 florets per spikelet.