Slagbert;
Thanks for the photo of the elusive silvery phacelia!
Yes, absoluteamento, the beach trail stays; it's location shifts here and there in the routing of the golf holes. BTW, the beach trail is the most heavily used trail in the resort trail system. Much of it is on Bullards State Park property, where we have an agreement to maintain the trail.
Steve Lang; The culprit in the silvery phacelia story is twofold; habitat loss (roads, structures, damage by off-road vehicles), but perhaps most significantly severe encroachment by European Beachgrass, gorse, and broom. The native dunal plant communities evolved, and thrive, in relatively open sand, which was the condition before the agressive, sand binding, beachgrass was introduced. The beachgrass does such a good job holding the sand in place that the sand movement is halted, the natives are choked out, and over time an organic component develops in the sand profile, allowing species such as gorse, broom, shore pine, etc., to dominate.
The restoration work that is envisioned in the Preserve course proposal seeks to reverse that....to eliminate the beachgrass and non-natives, and allow open sand to exist, in areas surrounding the green/tee complexes, and to encourage, by several methods, the redevelopement of the native plant communities..
Hope this helps!
Tom