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Threatened by fire, iconic Joshua trees battle for survival

At the peak of summer, the iconic Joshua trees rise from a dusty landscape in California’s Mojave National Preserve. The spiky Joshua tree evokes strong reactions: weird, unique, whimsical. It’s also a plant at risk.

The calm quiet of the desert belies its dangerous, unrelenting heat. In the northeast corner of the vast Mojave preserve, that heat fed the York wildfire that started July 28 and has scorched more than 93,000 acres of prime Joshua tree habitat. Scientists are still assessing the damage, but the York Fire was twice the size of one from three years ago that killed more than a million Joshua trees. The trees grow nowhere else on the planet but in Southern California and part of Nevada.

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Wildfires are threatening to devastate the iconic Joshua trees, found in only one spot on Earth. Efforts are underway to experiment with saving the beloved plant.

Experts, through trial and error, are trying to ensure the plant’s long-term survival, says Sierra Willoughby, supervisory park ranger for the Mojave preserve. “Trying to go in there as human beings to replant things can be really tough here. … There’s no guidebook about how to restore a Joshua tree forest. It’s something that you have to experiment with.”

The longevity of the beloved trees, which typically live 100 to 200 years, brings peace to local artist Shari Elf. “I think about all of the decades or ages they’ve been through, witnessing all of us, and me, and my little petty problems. And they’ve seen it all. They stand tall and strong.”

In California’s Mojave National Preserve at the peak of summer, the desert’s iconic Joshua trees rise from a dusty landscape. The spiky Joshua tree evokes strong reactions: weird, unique, whimsical – and more often than not, a reference to Dr. Seuss. It’s also a plant at risk.

The calm quiet of the desert belies its dangerous, unrelenting heat. In the northeast corner of the vast Mojave preserve, that heat fed the York wildfire that started July 28 and, two weeks later, had scorched more than 93,000 acres of prime Joshua tree habitat. Scientists are still assessing the damage, but the York Fire was twice the size of one from three years ago that killed more than a million Joshua trees. The trees grow nowhere else on the planet but here in Southern California and part of Nevada.

“The unfortunate thing is that Joshua trees are very susceptible to fire,” says Sasha Travaglio, a spokesperson for the National Park Service, which oversees Joshua Tree National Park and the nearby preserve, which actually holds many more trees than the beloved park. The plant’s pulpy trunk is fast fuel for flames, “and so usually when they burn, they do die.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Wildfires are threatening to devastate the iconic Joshua trees, found in only one spot on Earth. Efforts are underway to experiment with saving the beloved plant.

One massive event, like the York Fire for instance, could mean the plant’s devastation. But there’s hope in efforts to keep that from happening.

Experts, through trial and error, are trying to ensure the plant’s long-term survival, says Sierra Willoughby, supervisory park ranger for the Mojave preserve. “Trying to go in there as human beings to replant things can be really tough here. … There’s no guidebook about how to restore a Joshua tree forest. It’s something that you have to experiment with.”

Ali Martin/The Christian Science Monitor

Supervisory park ranger Sierra Willoughby points out features of the eastern Joshua tree, Aug. 8, 2023, inside the Mojave National Preserve in California.

A distinctive plant

The Joshua tree, which is actually a yucca plant, is wholly unique to the high deserts of Southern California and part of Nevada. The Mojave preserve’s 1.6 million acres nestle up against the Nevada border, and span three of North America’s four major deserts. The eastern Joshua tree that grows in the preserve is distinct from its western cousin, which lives farther south in Joshua Tree National Park.

This is where Bob Oviedo picnics in the desert sun of Joshua Tree National Park with his two small dogs. “It’s amazing that there’s so much growth here in the desert, with the heat that we have here,” says Mr. Oviiedo, who lives about 45 minutes away in Palm Desert. He stopped in the park after a work trip nearby.

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