Now it's climate change to be killing the Joshua trees

Study based on fossil sloth dung found in desert caves and packrat middens

From the US Geological Survey, because doing mapping and boundary lines are sooo yesterday:

Uncertain Future for Joshua Trees Projected with Climate Change

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Temperature increases resulting from climate change in the Southwest will likely eliminate Joshua trees from 90 percent of their current range in 60 to 90 years, according to a new study led by U.S. Geological Survey ecologist Ken Cole.

The research team used models of future climate, an analysis of the climatic tolerances of the species in its current range, and the fossil record to project the future distribution of Joshua trees. The study concludes that the species could be restricted to the northernmost portion of its current range as early as the end of this century. Additionally, the ability of Joshua trees to migrate via seed dispersal to more suitable climates may be severely limited.

“This is one of the most interesting research projects of my career,” said Ken Cole, a USGS ecologist and the study’s lead author. “It incorporated not only state-of-the-art climate models and modern ecology, but also documentary information found in fossils that are more than 20,000 years old.”

By using fossil sloth dung found in desert caves and packrat middens — basically, the garbage piles of aptly named packrats — scientists were able to reconstruct how Joshua trees responded to a sudden climate warming around 12,000 years ago that was similar to warming projections for this century.  Prior to its extinction around 13,000 years ago, the Shasta ground sloth favored Joshua trees as food, and its fossilized dung contained abundant remains of Joshua trees, including whole seeds and fruits. These fossil deposits, along with fossil leaves collected and stored by packrats, allowed scientists to determine the tree’s formerly broad range before the warming event.

The study concluded that the ability of Joshua trees to spread into suitable habitat following the prehistoric warming event around 12,000 years ago was limited by the extinction of large animals that had previously dispersed its seeds over large geographic areas, particularly the Shasta ground sloth. Today, Joshua tree seeds are dispersed by seed-caching rodents, such as squirrels and packrats, which cannot disperse seeds as far as large mammals. The limited ability of rodents to disperse Joshua tree seeds in combination with other factors would likely slow migration to only about 6 feet per year, not enough to keep pace with the warming climate, Cole and his colleagues concluded.

The Joshua tree, a giant North American yucca, occupies desert grasslands and shrublands of the Mojave Desert of California, Nevada, Arizona, and Utah; Joshua Tree National Park in California is named after this iconic species. The Joshua tree is known for its distinctive shape and height of up to 50 feet.

Results of the study, “Past and ongoing shifts in Joshua tree distribution support future modeled range contraction,” appear in a current edition of “Ecological Applications.” The research team included Kenneth L. Cole, U.S. Geological Survey; Kirsten Ironside, Northern Arizona University; Jon Eischeid, NOAA Earth Systems Research Laboratory; Gregg Garfin, University of Arizona; Phillip B. Duffy, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and University of California; and Chris Toney, USDA Forest Service.

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bob paglee
March 30, 2011 3:30 pm

I live in NJ, but the Joshua Tree preserve is a beautiful, fantastic place I first visited in the early 1960’s. Went there again several times later, more recently with wife and kids in the 1980’s. It’s a shame if mother nature is now putting it under pressure, and it isn’t easy to get there, but if you haven’t seen it yet, go anyway.

Editor
March 30, 2011 4:39 pm

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
March 25, 2011 at 2:54 pm

Study based on fossil sloth dung…

This is the point where I had to stop for a giggle break.

Yeah, I know, but both fossilized dung (coprolites) and unfossilized dung contains huge amounts of information about the animals and their habitats. For example, in Molecular coproscopy: dung and diet of the extinct ground sloth Nothrotheriops shastensis (Science mag, abstract only, paywalled), the abstract says:

DNA from excrements can be amplified by means of the polymerase chain reaction. However, this has not been possible with ancient feces. Cross-links between reducing sugars and amino groups were shown to exist in a Pleistocene coprolite from Gypsum Cave, Nevada. A chemical agent, N-phenacylthiazolium bromide, that cleaves such cross-links made it possible to amplify DNA sequences. Analyses of these DNA sequences showed that the coprolite is derived from an extinct sloth, presumably the Shasta ground sloth Nothrotheriops shastensis. Plant DNA sequences from seven groups of plants were identified in the coprolite. The plant assemblage that formed part of the sloth’s diet exists today at elevations about 800 meters higher than the cave.

The “plant assemblages” referred to are Yucca spp., presumably including Joshua trees. They go on to say:

These genera [Yuccas], as well as all other taxa observed in the sample, are now common in high-elevation desert scrub (above about 1370 m) on the Spring Range, about 50 km west of Gypsum Cave, and on the Las Vegas Range, about 30 km north-northeast of the cave. At 19,875 ± 215 years before present (B.P.), this sample dates to the last glacial maximum and it is reasonable to assume that yucca, now found only at higher altitudes, would then have been common around the cave.

So yeah, studying ancient sloth poop isn’t all that glamorous, I laughed too … but anyone studying animals past or present knows that excrement contains lots of fascinating information about the animal, its diet, and the environment.
w.

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