A Joshua Tree in the lower Black Rock Canyon. |
Joshua Tree National Park was the
final NPS stop on my April loop through the Southwest. The park straddles the
border of the Mojave and Sonoran deserts, the former encompassing the northern
part of the park and extending up to Death Valley ,
and the latter desert encompassing the southern portion of the park.
Arriving after dark after driving
through Kingman, AZ, Mojave National Preserve, and a short segment of old Route
66, I camped in the north central part of the park at the Indian Cove Campground. It was not crowded and a lovely spot, encircled about by the large fractured
boulders that are one of the common landscape features of Joshua Tree. The
morning light revealed all of the flowers present near my campsite, especially
yellow patches of Desert Senna. The area looked like a tended garden with rocks
and the lovely flora.
Packing up camp, I drove to the
northwest corner of the park for a hike up Black Rock Canyon .
There is another campground at the trailhead with a series of trails that
radiate to the east and south. The canyon is initially wide, sandy, and full of
the other iconic feature of the park: Joshua Trees (Yucca brevifolia). I saw (and heard) several quail in this area
including a pair or two. The birds quickly scurried to and fro over the ground,
not at all interested in getting close to a human.
Quail at Black Rock Canyon. |
With some elevation gain heading
along the trail to the south, the valleys grew narrower and rockier, and new
woody species and more flowers became evident. I first noticed juniper, then
pines (Pinus monophylla) and oaks.
Joshua Trees were still present, as was the related but shorter species, Mojave
yucca (Y. shidigera).
There were many flowers in bloom,
including orange desert mallow (Sphaeralcea
ambigua), the common desert dandelion (Malacothrix
glabrata), bladderpod (Peritoma
arborea), and Wallace’s woolly daisy (Eriophyllum
wallacei), a tiny yellow aster found in sand along the edges of the trails.
I also observed vines and fruits of wild cucumber, a plant not uncommon in the
chaparral of coastal California ,
with its spiked fruits shaped like kiwis. The fruits in this area were
particularly large and seemed to be among the largest I’ve ever seen of this
species.
Many cacti were in bloom with
their very showy flowers. The beavertail (Opuntia
basilaris) had large flowers with concentric layers of ruffled pink petals.
There were similarly-colored flowers on the hedgehog cactus (Echinocereus engelmannii) and red blooms
on the related E. mojavensis. The
flowers of the beavertail had a sweet, perhaps fruity, smell that seemed
familiar but I could make the association in my mind.
Blooming cacti. Left: Opuntia basilaris (beavertail cactus). Center: Echinocereus engelmannii. Right: E. mojavensis. |
The Black Rock Canyon
area had an interesting assortment of wildlife too: the quail previously
mentioned, many flying insects, chipmunk, and lizard. I had to pass a swarm of
bees on the trail that was congregating around the tiniest of water holes
seeping from a rock.
More desert fauna. The bees at right were congregating around a very tiny water seep from a desert rock. |
I am still learning about the
differences among the various deserts of the Southwest. The Mojave is the
smallest and driest of these deserts (MacKay 2013). Various maps show somewhat
different boundaries between the southwest deserts, but basically the Mojave Desert
stretches from Joshua Tree NP in the south to the Landcaster area in the west, Death Valley National Park
in the north, and the southern tip of Nevada
and northwest corner of Arizona
to the east (Pavlik 2008, Mackay 2013). To the north of the Mojave is the
cooler desert of the Great Basin that encompasses most of Nevada ,
while to the south and east is the Sonoran
Desert that stretches south into the
Baja and Sonoran regions of northern Mexico .
Two perspectives on the geographic extent of the Mojave Desert and nearby deserts in the US Southwest. My travels through the Southwest took me through the Great Basin, Colorado Plateau, Arizona/New Mexico Plateau, and Mojave Desert. Base maps from the USGS and EPA; in the public domain. |
Sunrise at the Indian Cove Campground. |
Some characteristic species can
help guide one through the various deserts of the region. The Joshua Trees are
indicative of the Mojave, occurring in places from NW Arizona to Joshua Tree to
the high desert north of Los Angeles .
The Sonoran desert has the iconic saguaro cactus (not seen on my trip) and the
wonderful ocotillo with its flaming branch tips of red flowers. I did not see
ocotillo in the northern part of Joshua Tree (which is Mojave territory), but
saw it in abundance at the southern end of the park on a previous trip (that
area is Sonoran territory). Interestingly, I also saw a population along
Interstate 40 south of Kingman ,
AZ.
The Mojave
Desert has a high diversity of plant species (>2600), a wide
range of elevations which provides for a diversity of habitats, and a rate of
plant endemism of about 25% (MacKay 2013). Mackay (2013) suggests the area may
be under-explored botanically, with the possibility of future plant
discoveries.
References
MacKay P. 2013. Mojave
Desert Wildflowers. 2nd ed. Rowman & Littlefield
Pavlik BM. 2008. The California
Deserts. An Ecological Rediscovery. University
of California Press, Berkeley , CA .
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