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San Ysidro Mountains

Mountain range in southern San Diego County, California

San Ysidro Mountains

Summary

Mountain range in southern San Diego County, California

FieldValue
<!-- * Heading * -->nameSan Ysidro Mountains
other_nameOtay Mountains
etymology
photo{{Photomontage
photo1aCerro San Isidro desde el Cerro Colorado (cropped).jpg
photo2aOtay Mountain.jpg
textThe Cerro San Isidro (top) and Otay Mountain (bottom)
size220
spacing1
positioncentre
border0
colorwhite
rangePeninsular Ranges
border
range_coordinates
elevation_ft3568
elevation_ref
area_mi2
biomeCalifornia chaparral and woodlands
mapCalifornia
map_captionlocation of San Ysidro Mountains in California
country
state
district
topo_mapOtay Mountain
topo_makerUSGS

The San Ysidro Mountains are a mountain range in southern San Diego County, California, and Baja California, Mexico. The mountains are a rugged coastal foothill range of the Peninsular Ranges system. Major peaks include the highest summit of the range, Otay Mountain, and the Cerro San Isidro which forms the southern extrusion of the range on the Mexican side of the border. The majority of the range is within the Otay Mountain Wilderness area, in the United States.

Geography

The San Ysidro Mountains are towards the top of this image. On the upper center of the image, the neighborhood of Valle Imperial can be seen reaching into the Cerro San Isidro.

Lying only 13 to inland from the Pacific Ocean, this mountain range rises out of the coastal plain of San Diego and Tijuana until it reaches a maximum height of 3,568 ft on the summit of Otay Mountain. On the western side of the mountain lies Lower Otay Lake and Otay Mesa, with Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility and other detention centers and law enforcement properties lying on the southwest slope of the mountain. On the eastern flank, Mine Canyon and Marron Valley separate the San Ysidro Mountains from Tecate Peak (Kuuchamaa).

Cerro San Isidro

The Cerro San Isidro, located in Tijuana, is separated from the rest of the range by the border fence and the Rio Alamar, and forms the southern portion of the mountains. The summit of the Cerro San Isidro reaches approximately 2,750 ft, and supports many of the same endemic and rare plants found on Otay Mountain. A colonia of Tijuana, Valle Imperial, stretches across the western slope of the mountain.

On December 31, 2014, a rare snowfall event blanketed the Cerro San Isidro after low temperatures of 4 C.

Ecology

The native vegetation of the San Ysidro Mountains represents the coastal sage scrub of the California coastal sage and chaparral ecoregion (western faces); and plants of the California montane chaparral and woodlands ecoregion (inland). The San Ysidro Mountains are one of the few locations the rare Tecate Cypress (Cupressus forbesii) is found. This tree was once abundant in the higher elevations of the range as well as in its canyons. The San Ysidro Mountains were deforested of living foliage by wildfires in 2003 and 2007. Cupressus forbesii is a fire ecology dependent species, and there has been some evidence of regrowth starting.

References

References

  1. {{cite ngs
  2. {{cite gnis
  3. "South County Segment - San Diego County MSCP Subarea Plan". San Diego County.
  4. Todd, Victoria R.. (1988). "Mineral Resources of the Southern Otay Mountain and Western Otay Mountain Wilderness Study Areas, San Diego County, California". U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin.
  5. Clark, Kevin B.. (January 2009). "The Threatened Biological Resources of Jesus Maria Mesa, Mexico". California Native Plant Society Conservation Conference.
  6. (1 January 2015). "Sorprende nevada en Este de Tij".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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