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manner. Of special significance is that some forest segments away from the golf course construction area <br /> still contain dead and dying trees which contribute greatly to the overall worth of this site as a viable <br /> wildlife habitat. Thus, Brovelli Woods appears to have entered an early stage of "old forest" age, <br /> thereby providing far more nesting, denning, and feeding opportunities for wildlife than could an early <br /> or middle-aged woodland. <br /> The third segment of the woodland habitat can best be defined as riparian woodland occurring within the <br /> broader foothill woodland plant community as described by Munz, 1965. In addition to the trees of the <br /> foothill woodland proper it contains Fremont cottonwood(Populus fremondi), willow (Salix sp.), and <br /> shrubs, such as elderberry (Sambucus sp.), wild rose (Rosa californica), poison oak (Rhus <br /> toxicodendron),blackberry (Rubes sp.), and wild grape (Vids california) (Figures 4.7-7& 4.7-10). In <br /> many river edge areas the wild grape forms massive lianas which completely cover some of the small <br /> and medium size trees. It is this extensive grape vine growth with its "Tarzan swing" vines that imparts <br /> a jungle-like appearance to this classic remnant of valley riparian woodland. Only a few other preserved <br /> mature riparian woodland segments, such as Caswell State Park in southern San Joaquin County,equal <br /> that present along the Mokelumne River in Brovelli Woods. <br /> Valley Grassland <br /> The non-wooded areas of the project site originally supported a complex of bunch grass species. After <br /> a century of heavy grazing, these have been replaced by a wide variety of introduced grass and forb <br /> species such as wild oat (Avenafatua), Italian rye (Lolium multiflorum), ripgut brome (Bromus mollis), <br /> filaree (Erodium malacoides),wild mustard (Brassica sp.), and wild radish (Raphanus sp). Presently, <br /> grazing pressure appears only moderate,and in some areas a relatively thick grass mat has formed which <br /> in turn promotes many grassland rodent species. <br /> Invertebrates, Fish and Wildlife <br /> Invertebrates <br /> Among the thousands of invertebrate species that occupy the project site, two species whose geographic <br /> ranges include this area are becoming very scarce. One is the federal-listed threatened valley elderberry <br /> longhorn beetle (Desmocerus californicus dimorphus). This is one of the numerous host plant specific <br /> insects whose larva, a large grub, feeds only on elderberry bushes. These larva eat the soft pulp of the <br /> elderberry cane and after metamorphosing emerge as adults through relatively large holes in the bush <br /> stems. Although the winged adults or burrowing larva may occasionally be located, it is the presence <br /> of the adult emergence holes which is the most reliable indicator of this species' presence in an <br /> elderberry stand. An examination of randomly selected branches of each large elderberry bush <br /> encountered in the late spring survey of the riparian portion of Brovelli Woods did not reveal any of these <br /> holes. <br /> The vernal pool fairy shrimp (Branchinecta lynchi)is presently under consideration for federal protective <br /> listing. They are larger than most zooplankton species and easy to differentiate from common freshwater <br /> species such as daphnia or cyclops because of their miniature shrimp-like appearance and their <br /> characteristic of swimming on their backs with appendages extended towards the water surface. Weekly <br /> hauls between March 15 and May 15, 1992,with a #20 mesh plankton net through the deeper portions <br /> of the project site's vernal pools produced no invertebrates exhibiting these characteristics. <br /> 10 <br />