Tag Archives: San Bruno Mountain Ecological Preserve

Butterflies at Buckeye Canyon

The endangered Callippe Silverspot butterfly at San Bruno Mountain Ecological Preserve. (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

May is a good time to visit San Bruno Mountain Ecological Preserve especially for butterflies!  Today the first butterfly I saw when I walked up the Buckeye Canyon trail was the federally endangered callippe silverspot. The 2.2 inch butterfly was hanging onto a twig in the gusty wind.

The butterfly is hanging on in more ways than one. It used to be  common but it’s disappeared because it’s larval host plant, the annual California golden violet ( Viola pedunculatahas) become rare due to habitat loss. It’s larvae is also very sensitive to pesticides.

California Golden Violets on San Bruno Mountain (photo©Lori Eanes 3/27/20)

The adults live for only 3 weeks in early summer. The females lay eggs on the dying California golden violet plants. The caterpillars hatch and immediately spin a silk pad on the dried up plant. They go into a state of lowered metabolism that lasts through the winter then they wake up in the spring  when the plants come back. They spend several months eating and molting eventually spinning a chrysalis and emerging as adults. If you’re a Bay area resident consider planting some California Golden Violets. Read more about this butterfly on the Sacramento Fish and Wildlife site  or in this Bay Nature story.

The endangered Mission Blue butterfly at San Bruno Mountain Ecological Preserve. (photo©Lori Eanes 5/08/20)

The week before I was excited to see a few tiny, quarter-sized Mission blue butterflies. They are also endangered and found only in the Bay area. Their preferred larval plant is the Silver Bush Lupine which is susceptible to a fungal infection during wet years which led to the the butterfly completely disappearing from Twin Peaks in San Francisco. Luckily a big effort to plant lupine in the neighborhoods surrounding Twin Peaks has helped create enough habitat to  help bring them back.

Silver Lupine on San Bruno Mountain (photo©Lori Eanes 3/27/20)

San Bruno Mountain also has Summer Lupine and Varied Lupine which the butterfly will use if Silver Lupine is not available. The larva live on the lupine and then when the plant dies it will go into diapause (arrested development) In the spring it reawakens, eats and eventually spins a chrysalis and emerges as an adult. Adults live only 6-10 days and they spend most of their time close to lupine plants where they mate and lay eggs. If you live in the Bay area consider planting Siver Bush lupine or other lupines. Read more about the Mission blue butterfly on the Sacramento Fish and Wildlife site on the GGNP Conservancy website 

Common buckeye butterfly (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

I love common buckeye butterflies with their big eyespots. They are found all over North America and prefer open fields and clearings. Northern California  host plants include European plantain, monkey flowers, snapdragon and gerardia.

Variable checkerspot butterfly (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

Another variable checkerspot butterfly (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

I saw many variable checkerspot butterflies on both trips to Buckeye Canyon. This 2″ butterfly is found all over the west from Alaska to Baja California. The larval plants include monkey flower, bee plant, Chinese houses and others.

Boisduval’s blue female butterfly (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

I think this butterfly is a Boisduval’s blue female. They are very similar to mission blues.  They’re very small (7/8-1 1/4″)  and are found from Alaska to Baja California in various North American locations. This butterfly was hanging around lupines and she may have been laying eggs.

Umber skipper butterfly (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

Umber butterflies are found in California, Baja California, southern Arizona and in the highlands of Mexico and Central America. The larva feed on various grasses and have 2-3 broods a year.

California Ringlet (photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

I saw California Ringlets flying everywhere in early May. They rarely landed and when they did they disappeared completely into the dry grass that they perfectly matched. They have 2 broods a year and their larval food is perennial grasses.

The Buckeye trees  of Buckeye Canyon were just beginning to bloom mid-May. The flowers smell a little bit like rubber bands.(photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)Looking up into a Buckeye Tree(photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

The beginning of the Buckeye Canyon Trail.(photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

Western Racer Snake caught mid bite.(photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

A very handsome Western fence lizard(photo©Lori Eanes 5/15/20)

Exploring San Bruno Ecological Preserve

4 miles south of San Francisco is a little gem: a protected habitat rich with biodiversity and history and home to a variety of threatened plants and butterflies. It’s not well known except to locals, and it’s a paradise in the spring after the rains when the wildflowers and butterflies are abundant. You won’t run into many people here  so it’s a safe option if you need a nature break.

If you start the hike to the left of the sign on the fire road you’ll a go up a steep open grassland that’s covered with native wildflowers in the spring.  The Mission Blue, the San Bruno Elfin and the Callipe Silverspot butterflies, all endangered, are found there as well as the threatened Bay Checkerspot butterfly. Native host plants the butterflies need are everywhere including lupines, violets, stonecrops as well as poppies and California endemic central coast iris, and many more.

California golden violet (Viola penduculata), host plant for the endangered Callippe Fritillary butterfly

The Acmon Blue butterfly, not endangered but still pretty cute.

The messiest pollen covered bumble bee ever in a California poppy (Eschscholzia californica)

Checker Lily (Fritillaria affinis)

Threatened Bay Checkerspot caterpillar on English plantain (above left) and the adult butterfly (right) on wild cucumber (Marah fabacea)

The  Bay Checkerspot used to be found on San Bruno Mountain but was extirpated in the 1980s. In 2017 biologists began reintroducing caterpillars after they were found to be able to adapt to non-native English plantain plants. While hiking  in March we saw Bay Checkerspot caterpillars and a butterfly and we even met a woman who was counting them. The butterflies only live about 10 days as adults. Here’s a link to some of the work being done to bring the checkerspot back as well as other restoration work. https://creeksidescience.com/2020/01/

About 2/3 way up the hill we took a narrow trail off to the right that leads into Buckeye Canyon, a woodland thicket of coast live oak, toyon, ceanothus, buckeyes and several endangered manzanitas.

Nearby is the hidden shell mound, an ancient sacred site of the Ohlone people that lived in the area. For thousands of years the Ohlone lived in villages around the eastern base of  San Bruno mountain. Back then the bay came up much closer to the base of the mountain and was rich with shellfish, oysters and fish. The people were hunters and gatherers and they left behind their shell mound which is thought to be thousands of years old. The area, sacred to Indigenous people is a clearing with in the oak woodlands and there are still many shell fragments in the dirt.

A very old barnacle.

The easiest way to find San Bruno Mountain Ecological Reserve is to google Quarry Road in Brisbane and get directions. It will take you right to the Preserve located  just past the intersection of South Hill Rd  on Quarry Rd.

To find out more about the area and all the work that’s being done to save it check out San Bruno Watch website. The website has loads of info, the history, its plants and wildlife, many of it rare or endangered. They work to conserve the land around San Bruno Mountain, and offer guided hikes and education. They even grow local native plants from the mountain for restoration and for sale.