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  SITE PROFILE  
 
 
 
Name: Elephant Tree Forest  

State: US-CA Status: Recognized
Counties: Imperial, San Diego Priority: State
   Criteria: D4i
Site Description:
This tiny natural community of microphyll woodland dominated by Elephant Tree (Bursera microphylla) on the western edge of the Colorado Desert is located entirely within massive Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. Specifically, the habitat is best developed along Alma Wash, which crosses Split Mtn. Rd. south of Hwy. 78. Known to ornithologists only since 1999, it is apparently unique in the state, being the northernmost extension of a plant community otherwise restricted to northwest Mexico.
Ornithological Summary:
This IBA is notable as the sole wintering ground for Gray Vireo in California. This declining species that nests in desert-slope foothills in southern California was thought to winter exclusively outside the state when biologists from the San Diego Museum of Natural History discovered the population here.

Help us learn more about the birds at this IBA! Enter your birding data online at Calfornia eBird! (http://ebird.org/california/)

Conservation Issues:
This site is secure and rarely-visited.
 

 

Citation: National Audubon Society 2009. Important Bird Areas in the U.S.
Available at http://www.audubon.org/bird/iba 11/2009

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