CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE:
FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
"CLIMATE CHANGE THREATENS ICONIC
JOSHUA TREES"
Only four units of the entire 417-part
system of national parks, monuments, seashores and historical sites carry the
names of remarkable plants and trees. California hosts three of these –
Redwood, Sequoia and Joshua Tree national parks.
But by the end of this century, there
could be little reason for the Joshua Tree National Park just east of Palm
Springs and the Coachella Valley. That’s because its namesake cactus-like
namesake shows signs of gradually dying
out due to changes in the local climate.
This appears true despite denials of
man-made climate change coming regularly from President Trump and the men he’s
put in charge of agencies charged with protecting threatened plants, animals
and fish, the Department of the Interior and the Environmental Protection
Agency. (Joshua trees don’t yet have formally endangered status.)
The latest moves from these agencies
indicate they will become even more enviro-skeptical than they’ve been in their
first several months working for Trump: In mid-May, the EPA under Administrator
Scott Pruitt – a longtime oil industry advocate who was formerly attorney
general of Oklahoma – dismissed half the members of its key scientific advisory
boards. At the same time, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke suspended more than 200
advisory panels on everything from invasive species to oil drilling.
This means the ethereal Joshua trees
can expect little help from federal agencies, despite their main habitat’s
promotion from national monument to national park status in 1994.
And they will apparently need some
help – or a major shift back to old climate patterns – if they’re to survive
into the next century.
That’s because the species shows signs
of flagging in the ever warmer heat of the Mojave Desert. The plants, actually
huge lilies and cousins of the far more common yuccas whose flowers dot much of
California during the spring, depend on ground water to survive. Their
extensive root systems can reach 35 feet underground and they also take in
atmospheric moisture through their leaves, trunks and branches.
But Joshua tree saplings are not so
hardy. With much shallower root systems than their mature relatives, they are
far more vulnerable to hotter and drier weather. That’s exactly what scientists
project for the national park and the rest of the Mojave, where average
temperatures are expected to rise four degrees by 2050, while rainfall drops by
2.6 percent in the same time.
For the saplings to survive, they need
to grow an average of about three inches in each of their first 10 years, then
another 1.5 inches yearly after that.
It’s apparently not happening for them
in this mostly dry period, despite the heavy rains of the past winter. In the
first year of a projected 20-year survey of Joshua tree population and growth
both inside and outside the park, scientists from nearby UC Riverside found few
or no young trees on about 30 percent of the species’ normal range. If that
continues through the end of this century, Joshua trees could eventually exist
only in about 10 percent of their current habitat. Essentially, new Joshua
trees are not replacing older, dying ones fast enough for the species to
survive much longer.
The outlook can only get worse under
current trends, which have seen nighttime low temperatures in Twentynine Palms,
nearest significant town to the national park, rise by 8 degrees over the last
40 years.
The great preponderance of scientists
worldwide, with little to gain from lying about it, maintain human activity has
caused much of that change in the local climate, part of a worldwide
phenomenon. But Trump and his allies hotly deny this. Republican Sen. James
Inhofe of Oklahoma, an avid backer of both Trump and Pruitt, insists this
represents “rigged science,” saying the latest firings and suspensions at both
Interior and the EPA mean that government will now “start dealing with science,
and not rigged science.”
The current supposed stewards of the
national park system and its multitude of plants and animals do not appear
serious about that duty, though, as indicated by shutting down their advisory
panels or loading them up with representatives of industries that contribute to
climate change.
They also are in no mood to heed any
advice that contradicts their beliefs. Joshua trees, beware.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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