With a strong and chilling mountaintop wind, fog lifting and sun dappled clouds racing by, we explored a very unusual habitat:
Catoctin Greenstone, Eastern Prickly Pear Cacti (Opuntia humifusa) community.
The prickly pear cacti in the larger Albemarle area is typically found on south facing and relatively horizontal rock outcrops. It also gravitates toward outcrops of granite, granulite, and related bedrock. These rocks are high in silica and decay to produce nutrient-poor acidic soils. The prickly pear cacti doesn't seem to mind. In fact, in keeping a tally of prickly pear sites in Albemarle County, all 5 have been on granite or granulite outcrops. Today I witnessed an abrupt shift in that trend.
Montalto reaches to the sky at the north end of Carter's Mountain. It is part of a strip of Virginia land that was preferred by early plantation holders (ie., Madison, Jefferson, Monroe, etc). The bedrock holding up this land (a meta-basalt known as Catoctin Greenstone) decomposes into soil that is very high in nutrients (esp. Calcium). It has a high levels of base cations, which means the soil retains nutrients and makes them available to plants.
The nutrient-rich soils of Montalto produce greater tree diversity here than at any other prickly pear habitat I've observed to date. It is likely that diversity is high in the herbaceous layer as well. (**Note: The site is maintained relatively treeless, and so we surveyed an outcrop in a forested area immediately next to it. Results are below).
Lat/Long.: 37.99949 / -78.464799
Size of the Habitat: The site is roughly 35' x 95' (+/- 5 feet)
Conditions: 50 degrees (going up to near 60) and very windy. The ground is saturated after a night of rain. The prickly pear at this site is unusually dense. I attribute this to the maintained lawn around it, giving it full access to sun, and high-nutrient soils.
Trees and Shrubs (This list was observed at an outcrop area immediately to the SW of the prickly pear habitat. The prickly pear habitat is in a maintained clearing.)
Dominants:
- Chestnut Oak, Quercus prinus
- Virginia Pine, Pinus virginiana
- Honey Locust, Gleditsia triacantho
- Eastern Redbud, Cercis canadensis
- Black Oak, Quercus velutina
- Scarlet Oak, Quercus coccinea
- Black Locust, Robinia pseudoacacia
- Red Cedar, Juniperus virginiana
- Hackberry, Celtis occidentalis
- Pignut Hickory, Carya glabra
- Persimmon, Diospyros virginiana
- White Ash, Fraxinus americana
- Tulip Poplar, Liriodendron tulipifera
- White Oak, Quercus alba
- Eastern Prickly Pear Cactus, Opuntia humifusa
- Coralberry, Symphoricarpos orbiculatus
Non-native flora:
- Japanese Honeysuckle, Lonicera japonica
- Autumn Olive, Elaeagnus umbellata
- Wineberry , Rubus phoenicolasius
- Barberry, Berberis sp.
I recommend the following plants for potential additions to this unique habitat. They are all regional basic outcrop plants (list compiled by Lonnie Murray and Devin Floyd of the Albemarle Natural Heritage Committee):
- cliff stonecrop, Sedum Glaucophyllum
- pale corydalis, Corydalis sempervirens
- Allegheny stonecrop, Hylotelephium telephioides
- wooly lip fern, Cheilanthes lanosa
- small flowered phacelia, Phacelia dubia
- rock spike moss, Selaginella rupestris
- wild pink, Silene carolina
- fameflower, Talinum teretifolium
- woodland stonecrop, Sedum ternatum
- skullcap, Scutellaria integrifolia
- red columbine, Aquilegia canadensis