Appearance
''Ceanothus prostratus'' is a decumbent shrub, generally less than 0.3 meters tall and spreading laterally to up to 3 meters. Its evergreen leaves are oppositely arranged and generally oval in shape with 3-9 sharp teeth along the margins. The inflorescence is umbel-like, with flowers of blue, purple, or lavender that bloom between April and June. Its fruit is small and rounded with horned lobes.Distribution
''Ceanothus prostratus'' is found throughout the Pacific Northwest, ranging through Washington, Oregon, western Idaho, western Nevada, and south into northern California. The southern extent of its natural range is the central Sierra Nevada mountains. Given its elevational range, this plant is also native to many of the other mountain ranges of the Pacific Northwest, including the Klamaths, Siskiyous, Cascades, and Warner Mountains.Habitat
''Ceanothus prostratus'' grows in the understory of mixed conifer forests, from foothills to subalpine areas. It also inhabits open flats and ridges in areas of low chaparral as well as dry interior forest ecosystems. It can be found from elevations ranging between 270–2700 meters above sea level.''Ceanothus prostratus'' is part of the subgenus ''Cerastes'', a clade of ''Ceanothus'' that is generally characterized by traits like opposite leaves, persistent corky stipules, and horned fruits . This subgenus likely began diversifying at the beginning of the Pliocene roughly 6 million years ago, when cool, dry conditions combined with the uplift of the Coast Ranges to create new and diverse habitats. The closest relatives of ''C. prostratus'' within the subgenus ''Cerastes'' are ''Ceanothus pinetorum'' and ''Ceanothus purpureus'', based on a phylogeny produced in a 2011 paper....hieroglyph snipped...''Ceanothus prostratus'' is a common nitrogen-fixing shrub, often found with ''Purshia tridentata''. Together, their combined nitrogen additions to the soil of their habitats may account for 10-60% of annual nitrogen input in those ecosystems. It is also one of only two plants known to be a host for the parasitic plant ''Cuscuta jepsonii'', a dodder which until recently was thought to be extinct but could still be surviving and parasitizing ''C. prostratus'' in northern California....hieroglyph snipped...
''Ceanothus prostratus'' is one of many plants in the region that colonize logged areas, forming brushfields in the wake of timber harvests when more light reaches the ground.
''Ceanothus prostratus'' is present in plant communities alongside species such as ''Abies magnifica'', ''Arctostaphylos patula'', ''Arctostaphylos nevadensis'', ''Pinus albicaulis'', ''Pinus contorta'', ''Pinus Jeffreyi'', ''Pinus ponderosa'', ''Quercus vaccinifolia'', and ''Tsuga mertensiana''....hieroglyph snipped......hieroglyph snipped......hieroglyph snipped...
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