Share Our World: The Sonoran Desert

in Pinmapple2 years ago

Have you been to the Sonoran Desert?

In the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix, Arizona there is a path that shows different Habitats of the Sonoran Desert.

Let me take you on a 1.3 mile loop that highlights each of these habitats.

Desert Habitat
Mesquite Bosque
Desert Oasis
Semi Desert Grassland
Chapparal


Desert Habitat

When most people think of the desert this is what they envision. Lots of cactus... and in the Sonoran Desert that would include the stately Saguaro!

Elevation: 260-3000 feet (85-980 meters)
Annual Rainfall: Less than 10 inches (25.4 cm)

Key plants:
Saguaro
Prickly Pear
Cholla
Palo Verde
Iron Wood
Creosote
Ocotillo


SaguaroPrickly PearCholla

Palo Verde Tree-in bloomIron Wood treeCreostoe Bush

Ocotillo

This is the habitat I know best and feel most comfortable in now that I have lived in the desert for 15 years. At first it seems a bit sparse and hostile. It is really quite lovely and full of life and variety.

Mesquite Bosque

Mesquite trees are quite beautiful. For so long I thought the desert was just cactus. I have learned that Ironwood, Mesquite and Palo Verde also thrive in the desert and have a very important function for the people and animals of the desert.

Elevation: Sea Level- 1500 feet (457 meters)

In the hot summers these dense grouping of mesquite trees provide much needed shade.

The mesquite tree also provided:
food from the pods, cords from the roots, dye from the pitch and building structures from the hard wood.


Desert Oasis

There is water in the desert and here we see the some of the lift that grows around the oasis in the desert.

Yerba Mansa- white flower- bottom right and set below
Western Cottonwood tree- top right
Arrow weed- Set below
Southern Cattail- middle

Yerba Mansa

Arrow weed

Semi Desert Grassland

This is one of the pretties parts of the trail and desert to me.

Elevation: 3600-5600 feet (1097-1700 meters)
Annual Rainfall: 10-18 inches (25.4-45.7 cm)

In addition the the grasses you can find shrubs, succulents and a few trees in the grasslands.


Chapparal

According to Merriam dictionary Chapparal means

a dense impenetrable thicket of shrubs or dwarf trees 1

It is also a synonym for bosque which we saw with the mesquite trees earlier and is Spanish in origin.

Elevation: 3400-6100 feet (1036-1860 meters)
Annual Rainfall: 15-25 inches (38.1-63.5 cm)

Key Plants:
Agave
Mexican Manzanita
One Seed Juniper
Desert Spoon
Banana Yucca


Agave and Desert Spoon
For those that know me agave is my current obsession. Here is an agave in bloom. The agave flower once in there life time sending up a stalk that is sometimes up to 25 feet tall (7.63 meters). 2

Desert Spoon is to the right of the agave and is a yucca plant and flowers once every few years and is native to the Sonoran Desert. 3

One Seed Juniper tree

Close up of Mexican Manzanita Tree

Cool lizard that posed on the is rock for me.

I have walked on this trail many times and this is the first time I really understand some of the differences of the desert and the vegetation.

Share Our World Series

2022

Share Our World: Spring 2022 Round Garden
Share Our World: Winter Wonderland

2021 posts are here 4 Year Hive Birthday (2021)
All the 2020 posts are here 3 year anniversary on HIVE
All the 2019 posts are here My 2019 Steem Journey
All the 2018 posts are here My Year Journey on Steem

Sort:  

Haha, you are right, when I hear the word dessert I think of dry soil and Saguaro cactus! It is amazing how diverse the dessert actually is :)
I was double amazed when I saw the annual rainfall numbers that you provided, they are pretty close to the ones we have here!

That is really interesting that it is the same rainfall.

I love this snap. It is not every day that I get to see this kind of view (in photo). Good evening!


The rewards earned on this comment will go directly to the person sharing the post on Twitter as long as they are registered with @poshtoken. Sign up at https://hiveposh.com.

Está muy bonita tu publicación, Gracias por compartir tu viaje 👏👏👏.

Nice photos! It's nice to see all those colors and even some flowers... Everyting looks so much nicer and warmer than Minnesota, although the summer temperatures are probably a little harder to handle.