Author: Scott Bowler | Published: November 14, 2024 | Category: Species Spotlight
This article originally appeared in The Source Weekly on November 13, 2024.
The many uses and attributes of an overlooked high desert plant
By day, southern Oregon’s Owyhee Canyonlands stuns visitors with its colorful rock formations, vibrant wildflowers and bountiful wildlife species. But at night, when darkness falls over the rock spires and canyon walls illuminated only by the glow of starlight, the shadows of bats silently flittering through the air is a truly delightful sight. Although fabled as ominous creatures belonging to a particular hallowed eve, bats are integral to ecosystems worldwide. Bats can eat as much as their body weight in insects each night, controlling invertebrate populations. They’re also responsible for pollinating plants and dispersing seeds and nutrients in their excrement; a valuable fertilizer for plant growth. So impressive are these small creatures that the storied naturalist William Henry Hudson declared bats “a very wonderful creature, one of Nature’s triumphs and masterpieces.”
My head is crooked upward more often in autumn, my eye drawn toward vibrant trees. But when I venture to look down, I see beautiful crunchy, fallen leaves and one of the most abundant and obvious plants blooming throughout Oregon’s high desert in fall: the rubber, or gray, rabbitbrush.
Gray rabbitbrush, or Ericameria nauseosa, is a tough, but rather delicate looking, multi-stemmed shrubby plant, covered in long, thin, grayish-green leaves. But come autumn, you’ll find it seasonally topped with abundant sprays of vibrant yellow flowers. Practically glowing along sidewalks and riversides, plants are typically about 24 inches tall, with five to 30 stems in a cluster. Plant appearances vary a good deal due to growing conditions and location, with additional variability coming from the many varieties and sub-species.
Commonly referred to as chamisa elsewhere in the arid West, gray rabbitbrush are members of the huge and diverse Aster/Asteracea family, as is sagebrush and other members of the dryland plant community. However, the Ericameria genus is a recent reclassification, so you or your older botany book may know it by its former designation, Chrysothamnus.
By whatever name, gray rabbitbrush is ubiquitous throughout high desert landscapes, and it is quite attractive when in bloom. However, it’s often overlooked. Associated with the “typical” dryland community of big sagebrush, Great Basin wild rye, and various bunch grasses, it thrives in many soil types and at a range of moisture levels. Most notably, it’s tolerant of disturbances that harm other fragile native desert vegetation likegrazing, vehicles and fire. It’s not uncommon to see long stretches of highways, backroads, fence lines and building sites with thick stands of gray rabbitbrush, noticeable especially now because of the abundant bright yellow flower clusters.
Gray rabbitbrush is heavily utilized by a great many bee, wasp, beetle, moth and butterfly species feeding on its nectar and pollen into the late October blooming period when most other plants are bloomed out. Rabbitbrush is only lightly and occasionally used by vertebrate herbivores during the summer. However, in winter its remaining foliage can provide vital forage when other more desirable plants are depleted or buried in snow. Native animals who utilize rabbitbrush include deer, elk and pronghorn for browsing, jack rabbit who find protective shelter in dense stands, several species of birds foraging and sheltering in it, and lizards hunting in the litter.
In addition to the animal and insects who utilize the plant, Native peoples made—and many still make—medicinal tea, chewing gum and bright yellow dye from the flowers, as do contemporary wool artisans. It’s even reported that some Indigenous communities bake leaves into their cornbread to help it lighten up and rise. It’s suspected that the leaves, like some other gray arid land plants and juniper berries, host yeasts contributing to this phenomenon.
Gray rabbitbrush also makes for an easy and pretty landscape plant because it’s tough, water thrifty, deep rooted and reasonably well behaved. The plant can re-sprout from the base if mowed or burned, and while rabbitbrush readily spreads from small, airborne seeds, it’s pretty easy to weed out unwanted extras. The quick growth contributes leaf litter quickly, adding valuable nutrients to soils and enriching the habitat for other plant species to follow.
Lastly, gray rabbitbrush, also know as rubber rabbitbrush, was indeed named for some natural rubber compounds it contains. The plant has been occasionally considered as a source of rubber, especially during the two world wars. Recent research has investigated its suitability as a substitute for latex in surgical gloves and even as a source of bio-fuels, since the plant contains many volatile compounds.
All in all, grey rabbitbrush is a fascinating, and vital, member of high desert plant communities. The native shrub promotes healthy habitats for high desert wildlife and insects, and it makes for a colorful addition to autumn’s seasonal display. Learn more about what makes a healthy high desert and how to care for desert lands, waters and wildlife at ONDA.org.
— Scott Bowler is a retired science educator and volunteer with Oregon Natural Desert Association, a conservation organization that protects and restores Oregon’s high desert public lands, waters and wildlife.