Porterville Recorder

Desert in bloom? Wildflower­s could sprout along storm’s path

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Outdoor enthusiast­s looking for wildflower­s in the Mojave Desert this year are likely to encounter the blossoms only along the path of a storm that moved through Las Vegas last month.

Should wildflower­s bloom at all in the coming months after a dry fall and winter, experts believe it will occur in a roughly 50-mile-wide area, the Las Vegas Review-journal reported .

The swath of land stretching from southern Nevada to Yucca Valley, California, is showing early signs of germinatio­n, said Jim Andre, director of the Granite Mountains Desert Research Center.

The area hit by the storm includes the eastern edge of Joshua Tree National Park, the Mojave National Preserve and the Red Rock Canyon National Conservati­on Area outside Las Vegas.

“There is still a chance we’ll see some annuals pop up,” Andre said. “This one rain in a season of bone-dry might get some response. It’s not looking real promising, but it’s not a guarantee.”

Las Vegas went without rain for 116 days before the early January storm. It dropped an inch or more of rain on parts of the desert where rain has not been recorded for at least 300 days, Andre said.

In some past years, so-called superbloom­s have spurred flocks of tourists to visit desert areas like Death Valley National Park. A superbloom covered the valley with wildflower­s in 2016, resulting in record park attendance.

The park is unlikely to experience a superbloom this year due to the lack of rain, said Patrick Taylor, the acting chief of interpreta­tion for the park.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY CHRISTIAN K. LEE ?? Park Ranger David Low speaks about amsonia bushes, foreground, during a hiking tour at the Spring Mountain Ranch State Park on 2017 in Blue Diamond, Nev.
AP PHOTO BY CHRISTIAN K. LEE Park Ranger David Low speaks about amsonia bushes, foreground, during a hiking tour at the Spring Mountain Ranch State Park on 2017 in Blue Diamond, Nev.

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