Lyonothamnus is
endemic to the
Channel Islands of California, where it grows in the
chaparral and oak woodlands of the rocky coastal canyons. This is a tree growing up to tall with peeling reddish gray or brown bark. The evergreen leaves are shiny, dark green with lighter undersides, and borne on short
petioles. The two subspecies have different leaf shapes. The
inflorescence is a cluster of woolly white flowers with many short, whiskery
stamens. The fruit is a pair of hard
follicles. In natural populations on the islands the tree grows in distinct groves.
Isozyme analysis has determined that each grove is a
clonal colony in the landscape. Each ironwood clone, or genet, is a group of genetically identical individuals comprising a dozen to several hundred tree trunks, or ramets. Later studies with DNA (RAPD) analysis also found that the trees are clonal.
Conservation Because island ironwoods are clonal there are fewer genetic individuals on each island. Isolated clones in the steep rugged terrain can influence cross pollination. Limited cross pollination may be a reason for low seed production/viability observed in natural populations on the island. Genetic integrity of each island’s population of
Lyonothamnus floribundus is important. Care must be used by island resource managers to protect the genetic integrity of natural populations by prohibiting introduction of
Lyonothamnus from other islands and/or the mainland (nursery stock). Two introductions of
L. f. ssp.
aspleniifolius have occurred on Santa Catalina Island and pose a threat to the native
L. f. ssp.
floribundus populations. ==Systematics==