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Joshua Tree Yucca brevifolia Engelm. The
Joshua tree, the largest of the yuccas, grows only in the Mojave Desert. Natural stands of this picturesque, spike-leafed ...
Yucca brevifolia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joshua tree |
|
In Joshua Tree National Park, California |
Scientific classification |
Kingdom: |
Plantae |
Clade: |
Angiosperms |
Clade: |
Monocots |
Order: |
Asparagales |
Family: |
Asparagaceae |
Subfamily: |
Agavoideae |
Genus: |
Yucca |
Species: |
Y. brevifolia |
Binomial name |
Yucca brevifolia
Engelm. |
|
Natural range |
Synonyms[1] |
- Clistoyucca brevifolia (Engelm.) Rydb.
- Sarcoyucca brevifolia (Engelm.) Linding.
- Yucca arborescens (Torr.) Trel.
- Yucca jaegeriana (McKelvey) L.W.Lenz
- Yucca brevifolia subsp. jaegeriana (McKelvey) Hochstätter
- Yucca brevifolia var. jaegerana McKelvey
- Cleistoyucca arborescens (Torr.) Eastw.
- Clistoyucca arborescens (Torr.) Trel.
- Yucca arborescens (Torr.) Trel.
- Yucca brevifolia var. herbertii (J.M. Webber) Munz
- Yucca brevifolia fo. herbertii J.M. Webber
- Yucca brevifolia subsp. herbertii (J.M. Webber) Hochstätter
- Yucca brevifolia var. jaegerana McKelvey
- Yucca draconis var. arborescens Torr.
|
Yucca brevifolia is a plant species belonging to the genus
Yucca. It is tree-like in habit, which is reflected in its common names:
Joshua tree,
yucca palm,
tree yucca, and
palm tree yucca.
[2][3][4][5]
This
monocotyledonous tree is native to the arid southwestern
United States, specifically
California,
Arizona,
Utah, and
Nevada, where it is confined mostly to the
Mojave Desert between 400 and 1,800 m (1,300 and 5,900 ft) elevation. It thrives in the open grasslands of
Queen Valley and
Lost Horse Valley in
Joshua Tree National Park. A dense Joshua tree forest also exists in
Mojave National Preserve, in the
Cima Dome, (
Cima, California),
northeast of Kingman, Arizona in Mohave County, Arizona, as well as
along U.S. 93 between the towns of Wickenburg and Wikieup, and
designated as the Joshua Tree Parkway of Arizona.
Taxonomy
The name
Joshua tree was given by a group of
Mormon settlers crossing the Mojave Desert in the mid-19th century. The tree's unique shape reminded them of a
Biblical story in which
Joshua reaches his hands up to the sky in prayer.
[6][7][8]
Ranchers and miners who were contemporary with the Mormon immigrants
used the trunks and branches as fencing and for fuel for ore-processing
steam engines. It is also called
izote de desierto (Spanish, "desert dagger").
[9] It was first formally described in the botanical literature as
Yucca brevifolia by
George Engelmann in 1871 as part of the Geological Exploration of the 100th meridian or
Wheeler Survey.
[10]
In addition to the
autonymic subspecies Yucca brevifolia subsp.
brevifolia, two other subspecies have been described:
[11] Yucca brevifolia subsp.
jaegeriana (the Jaeger Joshua tree or Jaeger's Joshua tree or pygmae yucca) and
Yucca brevifolia subsp.
herbertii (Webber's yucca or Herbert Joshua tree), though both are sometimes treated as varieties
[9][12][13] or forms.
[14]
Growth and development
Joshua
trees are fast growers for the desert; new seedlings may grow at an
average rate of 7.6 cm (3.0 in) per year in their first ten years, then
only about 3.8 cm (1.5 in) per year.
[15] The trunk consists of thousands of small
fibers and lacks annual
growth rings,
making it difficult to determine the tree's age. This tree has a
top-heavy branch system, but also what has been described as a "deep and
extensive" root system, with roots reaching up to 11 m (36 ft).
[2]
If it survives the rigors of the desert, it can live for hundreds of
years; some specimens survive a thousand years. The tallest trees reach
about 15 m (49 ft). New plants can grow from
seed, but in some populations, new stems grow from underground
rhizomes that spread out around the parent tree.
The
evergreen leaves
are dark green, linear, bayonet-shaped, 15–35 cm long and 7–15 mm broad
at the base, tapering to a sharp point; they are borne in a dense
spiral arrangement at the apex of the stems. The leaf margins are white
and
serrate.
Flowers appear from February to late April, in
panicles 30–55 cm tall and 30–38 cm broad, the individual flowers erect, 4–7 cm tall, with six creamy white to green
tepals. The tepals are
lanceolate and are fused to the middle. The fused
pistils
are 3 cm tall and the stigma cavity is surrounded by lobes. The
semi-fleshy fruit that is produced is green-brown, elliptical, and
contains many flat seeds. Joshua trees usually do not branch until after
they bloom (though branching may also occur if the growing tip is
destroyed by the yucca-boring
weevil),
and they do not bloom every year. Like most desert plants, their
blooming depends on rainfall at the proper time. They also need a winter
freeze before they bloom.
Once they bloom, the trees are pollinated by the
yucca moth, which spreads pollen while laying her eggs inside the flower. The
moth larvae
feed on the seeds of the tree, but enough seeds are left behind to
produce more trees. The Joshua tree is also able to actively abort
ovaries in which too many eggs have been laid.
Distribution and habitat
Yucca brevifolia is
endemic to the
Southwestern United States with populations in western
Arizona, southeastern
California, southern
Nevada, and southwestern
Utah. This range mostly coincides with the geographical reach of the
Mojave Desert,
[2] where it is considered one of the major
indicator species for the desert. It occurs at altitudes between 400 and 1,800 m (1,300 and 5,900 ft).
[16]
Conservation status
In a 2001 paper published in the journal
Ecosystems, Joshua trees are one of the species predicted to have their range reduced and shifted by
climate change.
[17] There is concern that they will be eliminated from
Joshua Tree National Park,
with ecological research suggesting a high probability that their
populations will be reduced by 90% of their current range by the end of
the 21st century,
[18][19]
thus fundamentally transforming the ecosystem of the park. There is
also concern about the ability of the species to migrate to favorable
climates due to the extinction of the giant
Shasta ground sloth (
Nothrotheriops shastensis)
13,000 years ago; ground sloth dung has been found to contain Joshua
tree leaves, fruits, and seeds, suggesting that the sloths might have
been key to the tree's dispersal.
[18][19]
Uses and cultivation
Different forms of the species are cultivated, including smaller
plants native from the eastern part of the species range. These smaller
plants grow 2.5 meters tall and branch when about a meter tall.
[20]
Cahuilla
Native Americans, who have lived in the southwestern United States for
generations, identify this plant as a valuable resource and call it
"hunuvat chiy’a" or "humwichawa". Their ancestors used the leaves of
Y. brevifolia to weave sandals and baskets, in addition to harvesting the seeds and flower buds for meals.
Yucca tree roots have
saponin glycosides.
[21]
See also
References
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