Notes from South of the Border
Volcanic outcrops in the Sierra de Guadalupe, BCS.

This section contains entries about our botanizing in Baja California written for the UC BEE (Oct 2012 to Aug 2021)
and The UC Hive (2022-), monthly newsletters for volunteers and staff of the UC Berkeley Botanical Garden.

Click on any photo for a larger image.

THE HIVE JAN–FEB 2026

Sierra de Guadalupe — November 2025


Mulegé to Arroyo San Miguel, BC

Less than a week after arriving in Mulegé, I was already on my way into the Sierra de Guadalupe west of town. I was excited to be making a trip so early in November because there had been some substantial rain in September and the news was that it was still very green and lush. I have made multiple trips to the region, but most were made late in November or in the spring months, so I was hopeful for an excellent botanizing experience. To read about those previous trips and compare photos from with this trip, see the list below.

The Sierra de Guadalupe is situated within the northern reaches of the Sierra de la Giganta Ecoregion. Elevations range from about 500 feet (278 m) where the foothills begin, to about 3600 feet (c. 1100 m). Standing water in arroyos, seeps and shady pools is common and there is flora and fauna not usually found at lower elevations around the town of H. Mulegé and along the coast.

The Sierras were beautiful, though there was not as much water in the arroyos and it was not as green as I had expected, given the news I’d been hearing. Nonetheless, there were plenty of vines, flowers and clouds of insects, and lots to investigate along the way.


For previous Sierra Guadalupe trips, see: Apr 2013 (San José de Magdalena - SJdM); May 2014 (Pacific route to La Ballena); Jun 2015 (SJdM); Jan 2018 (Arroyo las Chuparrosas in southern valley); Jan 2019a and Jan 2019b (Sierra Zacatecas & Sierra Guadalupe via Pacific route); Jul 2020 (Arroyo San Nicolás & SJdM); May 2021 (SJdM to Mulegé via ex-Misión de Guadalupe); Feb 2024 (Rancho Ingerto, Vado de la Virgencita, the Seep & Rancho El Aguajito); and Feb 2025 (Rancho El Rincón and lichen/bryophyte hunt).

For a full list of this month's plants and other organisms (with family, latín name and common names in both English and Spanish), visit this page.


mapThe map shows the route we took up into the mountains from Mulegé via Arroyo San Patricio to Rancho el Rincon and a previous collection site nearby. The first pass near San Patricio is about 820 ft (250 m) elevation and from there, it's a rollercoaster ride with numerous short grades reaching 1740 ft (530 m). The road was in terrible condition because the grader hadn't yet passed through on this main branch road from Mulege to the Pacific coast. The ranch is approx. 29 miles (47 km) from Hwy 1, and there is an elevation gain of 1410 ft (c. 430 meters). Additional photos of the landscape along this route can be seen in the first section of my July 2020 entry.



Sierra Guadalupe

On the eastern flank of the sierras as we leave the foothills and valley below and make the first grade near San Patricio.

Sierra Guadalupe

Volcanic mesas at the lower elevations (c. 650-820 ft - 200-250 m), near Rancho San Narciso.


Sierra Guadalupe

Lower elevations Near San Narciso.

Sierra Guadalupe

A rocky hillside with lots of very leafy trees, near Rancho el Ingerto.


Coral Vine plant within other plant

While the Coral Vine (Antigonon leptopus) was waning, there were still some plants in bloom.

Coral Vine flowers

The flowers of Coral Vine are very tiny, enclosed within these large showy bracts.


Coyote Melon plant and fruit
Coyote Melon leaves and fruit

I wasn't able to get a good photo of this woody, perennial Coyote Melon vine, (Ibervillea sonorae) so I'm including these images from another occasion. The species is not very abundant but is common and easily overlooked most of the year. The ripe pepos are dark orange-red and have a bitter or sweet, fleshy, dark red pulp. The plant dies back to it's woody branches and stores nutrients in a large, tough, fibrous tuber that can reach the size of football, part of it usually visible above ground.



Ipomoea ternifolia var. leptotoma plant

Triple-leaf Morning-glory (Ipomoea ternifolia var. leptotoma) was blooming heartily on the dry slopes and arroyo bottoms along the way once we entered the Sierras.

Ipomoea ternifolia var. leptotoma flowers and leaves

The leaves of this Morning-glory species are filiform, 3-7 lobed and often hard to see. The flowers are about 3-4 cm D with a white tube about the same length. Fruit is a papery capsule.


There was a large group of the following composite species in the arroyo bottom near Rancho el Ingerto and they and the air were alive with butterflies and other insects.

I'm not sure what the species actually is. iNaturalist thinks it's Golden Crownbeard (Verbesina encelioides), which I've collected around town in Mulegé, but the flower heads of the plants here had phyllaries that were short and ovate, rather than long and linear. The flower heads were small, only about 2.5-3 cm D, not 4-5 cm D. Additionally, the lanceolate leaves were generally quite narrow, with larger leaves on plants in the shade.



Shrubby plant

The plants were bushy and about 1-1.5 m high.


flowers of unidentified plant

Flower heads of the unidentified composite.

flowers of unidentified plant

Flower head of the composite with ripening fruit.

Yellow-bordered Flower Bups (beetles)

Yellow-bordered Flower Bups (beetles; Acmaeodera flavomarginata) on the composite flowers.


Texan Crescentspot Butterfly

Texan Crescentspot (Anthanassa texana) on a flower.

Texan Crescentspot Butterfly

A lighter Texan Crescentspot on another flower.


Butterflies feeding on flowers

A Dorantes Long-tail (Cecropterus dorantes subsp. calafia) sups on one floret while a Baja California Metalmark (Apodemia mejicanus) feeds on another above.

Mexican Frittilary butterfly feeding

So many butterflies, this one a new species for me: Mexican Frittilary (Euptoieta hegesia subsp. meridiania).



Mexican Frittilary butterfly feeding

The Mexican Frittilary is smaller than the Gulf Coast Frittilary that I've often seen around Mulegé, especially on Passion Flowers.

Mexican Frittilary butterfly feeding

The Mexican Frittilary lacks both the white spots on its forewings and the checkered effect on the inferior surface of the wings.


And in contrast to my experiences with the Gulf Coast Frittilary (Dione incarnata), this species was quite gregarious, often with 3 or 4 individuals feeding together on a plant. It also wasn´t as skittish around us, allowing me to get up fairly close for photos.

Natural pool in sierras

There was not as much standing water in the pools and road crossings as I had expected.

Natural pool in sierras

There also was not a lot of growth around the edges of any of the pools, possibly due in part to trampling by livestock.


Young sprouts in wet arroyo bed

A wet arroyo bottom where there wasn't any standing water, young Rock Nettle (Eucnide cordata) & other species were sprouting.

natural pool in sierras

The green hills of the Sierra form a backdrop to one of the larger natural pools in the arroyo close to Rancho el Aguajito.


dense vegetation

At higher elevations like here at c. 1410 ft (430 m), the shrubs & trees were green & bushy along the road. On my previous trip it was mostly bare.

hillside plants in sierras

Just one of the picturesque rock outcrops that we passed along the way.


Ivy-leaf Morning-glory

Ivy-leaf Morning-Glory (Ipomoea hederacea) could be seen occasionally, mostly within the shady undergrowth. Stems can reach to 5 m L.

Ivy-leaf Morning-Glory

Corollas were 5-6 cm L. This uncommon species of Morning-glory can be found from the sierra here, around Mulegé & south to the Cape.



Ivy-leaf Morning-Glory

Leaves of the Ivy-leaf Morning-Glory are 3-5 lobed, each lobe with an accumulate tip, and 5-14 cm L.

Ivy-leaf Morning-Glory

Like in other Ipomoea, the capsules walls are thin with membranous placental walls and 1-4 seeds.


Spotted Bullnettle plant

Spotted Bullnettle (Cnidoscolus maculatus) is a BCS endemic. It has a disjunct population N of Ciudad Constitución (about 90-100 miles S of us), explaining why it keeps showing up in only a few places every few years here in the sierras. Don't touch this one!

California Caltrop flower and fruit

There were numerous signs of California Caltrop (Kallstroemia californica), a prostrate annual, covering the ground, but very few plants that still had flowers and leaves. Above the 6 mm D flower, a small, club-shaped fruit can be seen.


Wild Fig tree

A Wild Fig (Ficus petiolaris) clinging to a volcanic cliff, its roots wedged into cracks, seemingly melded to the rock surface. This tree is easily 5-6 m H.

Slimjim bean leaves and flower

The annual Slimjim bean (Phaseolus filiformis) vine could be seen growing within many different plants along our route, starting just outside town.


Baja California Wild-Petunia

Baja California Wild Petunia (Ruellia californica subsp. californica) is the only subsp. found at both lower elevations near Mulegé & here in the Sierras. It ranges from Bahia de los Angeles to just S of Loreto.

Baja California Wild-Petunia

The leaves of this shrubby Wild Peturnia are densely covered with gland-tipped hairs. The entire plant is tacky with a strong, skunk-like odor. The pale to dark purple, 4.5-5 cm D flowers have a whitish tube.


Peninsular Wild-Petunia

In contrast, R. c. subsp. peninsularis (pictured above) is at its northernmost range here in the Sierra de Guadalupe. It is found southward in the Sierra la Giganta and all the way to the Cape.

Peninsular Baja California Wild-Petunia

The branchlets, leaves and inflorescences of R.c. subsp. peninsularis are glabrous but glutinous and, as is seen here, the flowers are a deeper violet-purple. The plant has a mild skunky odor.


Vegetation on hillside at collection site

Hillside at the moss/lichen/fern collection site that I visited in both November 2023 and 2024. There was quite a lot of groundcover, with many herbs in flower.

California Rock Daisy

One of those herbs was this California Rock Daisy (Perityle californica). There were many plants, as can be seen in the previous photo.


Arizona Wrightwort

A pleasant surprise was this uncommon perennial shrub, Arizona Wrightwort (Carlowrightia arizonica) in flower. The flower is c. 2.5 cm W and has 2 fused upper petals with a yellow and purple central spot, 2 lateral petals, and a lower keeled petal.

Purple scalystem

Purple scalystem (Elytraria imbricata) is a small, caulescent perennial herb to 50 cm H. This one is c. 20 cm H. The tubular, bilabiate flowers emerge from within imbricate bracts & are 2.5-5 mm L. The 5 lobed-limb is c. 5-6 mm D.


Dwarf Ayenia plant

Dwarf Ayenia (Ayenia insulicola) is a rare, native species found from the Sierra Guadalupe to the Cape and in N. Mexico as far south as tropical America.

Dwarf Ayenia fruit

There were no flowers but the fruits of this Dwarf Ayenia are c. 6 mm D with c. 1 mm L papillae. See this image of the flower on iNaturalista.


Balloon vine plant

Balloon vine (Cardiospermum corindum) is a perennial woody vine that was abundant along our route. It uses its strong tendrils to climb up into trees & shrubs, often forming a dense blanket of vines.

Balloon vine leaves, fruit and seed

The 3-sided, papery capsules hang in clusters from trees & shrubs & resemble tiny Chinese lanterns. The black, globose seed seen here is c. 5 mm D & has a pale heart-shaped area around the attachment scar.


Felt-leaf Bush

Felt-leaf Bush (Iresine alternifolia) is a shrub native to the central peninsula. Visible here are the flower buds, their calyces covered with long white hairs.

Felt-leaf Bush

There is an occasional open yellow flower c. 3 mm D. In fruit, the plant has a very wooly appearance. The leaves are pubescent and velvety.


Yuca plant growing on cliff

Yuca (Merremia aurea) is the vine that appears to be growing both up & down this cliff. The twining, woody vine can reach well over 5 m L and be very aggressive when it climbs into and on top of shrubs and trees.

Yuca vine growing on cliff

Leaves are palmate and the yellow campanulate flowers are 3-8 cm L. No flowers here, but I saw a single flower earlier as we crossed an arroyo. More common in the hills & arroyos around Loreto, southward to the Cape.


Bladder Mallow leaves

Bladder Mallow (Herissantia crispa) is a common perennial herb in much of the central and southern peninsula.

Bladder Mallow fruit

The leaves are velvety soft and the inflated, papery fruit about 2 cm D. A schizocarp, the fruit has 10 to 12 sections (mericarps).




Bladder Mallow flower

This photo is of a previous sighting of Bladder Mallow from the Cape region. The flower is c. 1.5 cm diameter, each of the white to yellowish petals 5-7 mm L.

Peninsular Barrel Cactus

I think this Penninsular Barrel Cactus (Ferocactus peninsulae var. peninsulae) is about a third fatter than it was when I saw it last May.


Back at Rancho el Rincón, I was wandering around taking photos when I came across a large wet patch where some gray water was flowing out across the ground. There were clouds of butterflies swirling in the air and every so often 15 or 20 of them would land on the wet spot and line up to drink and ingest minerals from the soil.

Sulphur butterflies
Sulphur Butterflies

In the close-ups above, there are three sulfur butterfly species: the tiny Mimosa Yellow (Eurema nise subsp. nelphe), the large Mexican Yellow (Eurema mexicana subsp. mexicana) with linear marks and a pointy rear end; and the Marcellina Sulphur (Phoebis sennae subsp. marcellina), the large central one with rounded wings and prominent circular spots .

There are at least two individuals of the second species here that have very different markings. The wings of one only has very small black inner corners of the forewings. The other has a very striking black pattern on the upper surface of both wings. It was difficult to capture these patterns because of how fast this butterfly flaps its wings and then lands with its wings closed. I found out later that I got images of them all on video as well as a few still shots when the camera was set to take rapid bursts.

Mexican Sulphur Butterfly

Mexican Sulphur (Eurema mexicana subsp. mexicana).

Mexican Sulphur butterfly

Mexican Sulphur (Eurema mexicana subsp. mexicana).


Along with all of the sulfurs, I also saw a Blackened Bluewing (Myscelia cyananthe subsp. streckeri) flitting about, but I wasn't able to get a good photo. However, I did post this photo on iNaturalist of one individual I saw on a later foray around Mulegé.

The last butterfly species, another new one for me for the day, was the Empress Leilia (Asterocampa leilia). This butterfly has a lighter brown inferior surface with striking eye markings and is much more ruddy brown or orange above. It was perched on the roof of the buggy and seemed completely oblivious to my presence as I got my phone incredibly close to it. As it walked up and down, it slowly pumped its wings open and closed, as if showing off just for me.



The Empress Leilia butterfly

The Empress Leilia (Asterocampa leilia).

The Empress Leilia butterfly

The Empress Leilia (Asterocampa leilia).


 

Green hillsides in the Sierra

It was getting late when we started back down the hill for home. The change in lighting showed just how green some of the hillsides were.

Green hills and mesas in the sierras

What looked dry and more stark on our way up in full sun now shows more tonal variation.


What a wonderful trip and an amazing butterfly-filled day. All along the way up into the mountains, butterflies were keeping pace with us in the buggy. Then there were all of the butterflies and bugs near Rancho el Ingerto as well as the clouds of butterflies at Rancho el Rincón. On the way home, I was already thinking about my next outing within a short walking distance from my place and couldn't wait to see what was blooming and who was feeding on the flowers.

I hope you enjoyed this issue. Until next time, hasta pronto...see you soon.

Debra Valov — Curatorial Volunteer


For a full inventory list of this month's plants (family, latin name and common names in both English and Spanish as well as links to photos from previous posts or my iNaturalist observations), visit this page.


References and Literature Cited

Rebman, J. P., J. Gibson, and K. Rich, (2016). Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Baja California, Mexico. Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History, No. 45, 15 November 2016. San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, CA. Full text available online.

Rebman, J. P and Roberts, N. C. (2012). Baja California Plant Field Guide. San Diego, CA: Sunbelt Publications. Descriptions and distribution.

Valov, D. (2020). An Annotated Checklist of the Vascular Plants of Mulegé, Baja California, Mexico. Madroño 67(3), 115-160, (23 December 2020). https://doi.org/10.3120/0024-9637-67.3.115

Wiggins, I. L. (1980). The Flora of Baja California. Stanford University Press. Keys and descriptions.


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