East Bay Times

Progress is made against a massive wildfire

Famous Joshua trees threatened by the blaze

- By Ty O'Neil, Stefanie Dazio and Rio Yamat Dazio reported from Los Angeles, and Yamat reported from Las Vegas. AP writer Amy Taxin in Santa Ana contribute­d to this report.

MOJAVE NATIONAL PRESERVE >> Firefighte­rs aided by rain fought to contain a massive blaze that swept through the California desert into Nevada and is threatenin­g the region's famous spiky Joshua trees.

The York Fire that erupted last Friday is California's largest wildfire this year. As of early Wednesday it had burned through more than 128 square miles of land and was 30% contained, fire officials said.

Humid monsoonal weather conditions Tuesday afternoon brought brief but heavy rain, especially on the south end of the fire, and kept its spread to a minimum, fire officials said. Drier weather was poised to return on Thursday.

“Right now, the monsoonal influence is still over the fire,” said Marc Peebles, a spokespers­on for California's incident management team for the York Fire. “There's always the possibilit­y of showers that will help the effort.”

The 400 or so firefighte­rs battling the blaze have had to balance their efforts with concerns about disrupting the fragile ecosystem in California's Mojave National Preserve.

Crews used a “light hand on the land,” clearing and carving fire lines without the use of bulldozers in order to reduce the impact in the ecological­ly sensitive region, which is home to some 200 rare plants.

“You bring a bunch of bulldozers in there, you may or may not stop the fire, but you'll put a scar on the landscape

that'll last generation­s,” said Tim Chavez, an assistant chief for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

The blaze ignited near the remote Caruthers Canyon area of the vast wildland preserve, crossed the state line into Nevada on Sunday and sent smoke farther east into the Las Vegas Valley.

The fire started on private lands within the preserve, but the cause remains under investigat­ion. Less than 3% of the land in the 2,500-square-mile preserve is privately owned.

The Mojave National Preserve's desert landscape is varied — from mountains and canyons, to sand dunes

and mesas, to Joshua tree forests and volcanic cinder cones — and features about 10,000 threatened desert tortoises within its boundaries.

Some of the preserve's plants can take centuries to recover from destructio­n. The pinyon-juniper woodlands alone could take roughly 200 to 300 years to return, while the blackbrush scrub and Joshua trees — which grow only in the Mojave Desert — are unlikely to regrow after this catastroph­ic blaze, said Ileene Anderson, a senior scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity.

The 2020 Dome Fire in a different part of the national preserve destroyed an estimated 1 million

Joshua trees.

But fire itself isn't the only worry. On federal lands, with few people and little property at risk, firefighte­rs sometimes forgo certain equipment like bulldozers, chainsaws and aircraft.

“You don't disturb any more soil than you absolutely have to; you don't cut trees unless they absolutely have to come down,” said Chavez, speaking about the tactics in general.

When there are ecological and cultural sensitivit­ies at stake, firefighte­rs negotiate with federal officials to determine what equipment can and cannot be used.

“It's not just going out there and throwing everything

we've got at it,” Chavez said.

In Nevada, the fire has entered the state's newest national monument, Avi Kwa Ame, said Lee Beyer, a spokespers­on for the U.S. Forest Service. But Beyer said the number of acres burned within the boundaries of the vast monument in southern Nevada wasn't yet known.

President Joe Biden establishe­d the monument in March, permanentl­y protecting the desert mountain region considered sacred by some tribes. The area stretches more than 500,000 acres and includes Spirit Mountain, a peak northwest of Laughlin called Avi Kwa Ame (ahVEE'

kwa-meh) by the Fort Mojave Tribe and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

On Wednesday, firefighte­rs continued to make progress on the Bonny Fire, a 3.6 square mile wildfire that broke out nearly a week ago in California's Riverside County and is now 60% contained. Evacuation orders remain in place for residents near the fire, but some evacuation warnings were lifted late Tuesday, fire officials said.

 ?? TY O'NEIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joshua trees burn in the York Fire on Sunday in the Mojave National Preserve. Crews battled “fire whirls” in California's Mojave National Preserve this weekend as a massive wildfire crossed into Nevada amid dangerousl­y high temperatur­es and raging winds.
TY O'NEIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joshua trees burn in the York Fire on Sunday in the Mojave National Preserve. Crews battled “fire whirls” in California's Mojave National Preserve this weekend as a massive wildfire crossed into Nevada amid dangerousl­y high temperatur­es and raging winds.

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