The Guardian (USA)

Joshua Trees win long term protection in environmen­tal victory

- Maanvi Singh

California lawmakers have voted to permanentl­y protect the iconic western joshua tree, delivering a hard-won victory for environmen­talists who have warned that the climate crisis has imperilled these fixtures of the high desert.

The Western Joshua Tree Conservati­on Act was passed Tuesday, as part of the state’s budget agreement. It prohibits the unpermitte­d killing or removal of the trees, requires the developmen­t of a conservati­on plan and creates a fund to protect the species. It appears to be the first California legislatio­n focused on protecting a climatethr­eatened species.

“It’s been a long journey to get here,” said Brendan Cummings, the conservati­on director of the Center for Biological Diversity, who has led efforts to list joshua trees as an endangered species for years. “We can finally move on from the debate over whether joshua trees should get protection, to focusing on actually implementi­ng measures to help ensure that they get through the very difficult decades ahead.”

The western joshua tree is one of two geneticall­y distinct types (the other being the eastern joshua tree) and its range extends from Joshua Tree national park to the northern slopes of the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mountains.

The spiny-crested, gangly plants can grow up to 40ft and live about 200 years. They have grown in California’s eastern desert region since the Pleistocen­e era, 2.5m years ago. But global heating has threatened to decimate the species.

A 2019 study led by researcher­s at UC Riverside found that only .02% of the species’ habitat in Joshua Tree national park would remain viable after 2070, amid unmitigate­d climate crisis; even in the best-case-scenario only 19% may be saved.

The law comes after California’s fish and game commission deferred a decision on whether to list the species under California’s Endangered Species Act and the Biden administra­tion declined to protect the trees under the federal Endangered Species Act.

Those petitions faced fierce opposition from local officials, developers and renewable energy companies who said the protection­s could complicate or derail plans to build large-scale solar facilities in the desert and meet California’s ambitious greenhouse gas reduction goals. About 40% of the western joshua tree’s range is on private lands, in rapidly-growing desert communitie­s.

The new bill, which California’s governor Gavin Newsom is expected to sign into law this week, “fails to properly balance the protection of the species with the needs of our residents and business community, thereby threatenin­g the quality of life in our deserts”, officials for San Bernardino county, which encompasse­s much of the plant’s range east of Los Angeles, said in a press release.

But the law was proposed by the Newsom administra­tion as a compromise to streamline permitting for housing and renewable energy in exchange for developers paying mitigation fees to fund species conservati­on.

Already, at lower elevations, a searing drought in the region has been affecting the joshua trees. From 1895 to 2016, the annual precipitat­ion in Joshua Tree national park has dropped by 39%, and the average temperatur­e increased by 3 (2C) – leading to fewer seedlings sprouting and surviving, according to the national parks services.

“Given the impacts they’re already feeling from climate change and other threats we have to do so much if we want to keep these iconic irreplacea­ble trees as a part of our landscape,” said Cummings.

 ?? Étienne Laurent/EPA ?? The new law prohibits the unpermitte­d killing or removal of the trees. Photograph:
Étienne Laurent/EPA The new law prohibits the unpermitte­d killing or removal of the trees. Photograph:
 ?? Valley. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA ?? The joshua tree's fruits in the Joshua Tree national park in California near Yucca
Valley. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA The joshua tree's fruits in the Joshua Tree national park in California near Yucca

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