User:Purplecal225/Fremontodendron californicum/Bibliography

You will be compiling your bibliography and creating an outline of the changes you will make in this sandbox.

Outline of proposed changes
Click on the edit button to draft your outline. - add more detail about taxonomic section of Malvaceae family and fremontodendron genus from UCJEPS

- elaborate on unabridged synonyms to taxonomic detail (subsp. californicum, subsp. crassifolium, subsp. napense, subsp. obispoense

- elaborate on specific distribution( north coast ranges), (south california ranges), (sierra nevada), (SF bay) from UCJEPS

- include that the variability of the fremontodendron californicum is also influenced by habitat from UCJEPS

- add more photos (via https://calphotos.berkeley.edu/cgi/img_query?where-lifeform=any&rel-taxon=contains&where-taxon=Fremontodendron+californicum&rel-namesoup=matchphrase&where-namesoup=&rel-location=matchphrase&where-location=&rel-county=eq&where-county=any&rel-state=eq&where-state=any&rel-country=eq&where-country=any&where-collectn=any&rel-photographer=contains&where-photographer=&rel-kwid=equals&where-kwid=&max_rows=24) to describe physical characteristics. Include detailed descriptions to be more accessible.

- EX OF IMAGE DETAILS ON LEAVES: describe the qualities of the leaves (fuzzy, silk hair)

- elaborate on traditional native american medicine

CITE JEPSON eFLORA (AUTHORED BY Robert E. Preston, R. David Whetstone, and T.A Atkinson

FROM: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7296748/

- specifiy that medicinal use was traditionally used by Native Americans during the mission period but due to modern medicine, it is used less in post-mission period

- add Knowledge Exchange during the Mission Period since the Fremontodendron californicum was a medicinal plant exchanged by natives and spanish.

FROM UCSC ARBORETUM: ethnobotanical uses

- texture on leaf hairs is irritating

- found in oak and pine woodlands

- elaborate on medicinal uses: Indian tribes (Mono, Yokut, Washoe, Paiute) used the flexible wood to make animal traps, spears, hoops, etc.

- Native American tribes had practical uses for it by pruning and burning for controlling the material

- plant thrives in dry/rocky slopes