Acmispon glaber is a food consumed by numerous wildlife, providing intake for
hummingbirds, bees,
butterfly larvae, and deer. Among the larvae are the
Acmon blue,
Afranius duskywing,
Avalon scrub hairstreak,
bramble hairstreak,
funereal duskywing,
northern cloudywing, and at one point in time the extinct
Xerces blue. Common plant associates in
chaparral, especially in the transition between coastal chaparral and
coastal sage scrub, include
California sagebrush and
toyon. Landowners seeking to provide a home for reintroducing the
Palos Verdes blue butterfly have been required to have sufficient
Acmispon glaber plants to provide the butterflies with shelter. Adult
Acmispon glaber plants are usually killed by fire due to their thin epidermis and broom-like foliage that burns easily, but the seeds of
Acmispon glaber are scarified by fire and readily germinate in the first rainy season after a fire. For 2 to 3 years after a fire in a
sage scrub habitat, the flora consists primarily of herbaceous annuals and short-lived herbaceous perennials, but after the first 2–3 years,
Acmispon glaber generally becomes dominant, being gradually replaced by long-lived shrubs after 5–10 years post-fire. Due to their seeds' fire adaptation,
Acmispon glaber benefits from
heat scarification in cultivation.
Heat treatment significantly increases germination rate. •
Acmispon glaber var.
brevialatus is
endemic to
California. ==References==