Desert Plants – Santa Catalina Mountains – 6/7/2018

Desert Plants - Annotated Flora of the Santa Catalina Mountains, Pima & Pinal Counties, Southeastern Arizona. June 2018.
Desert Plants – Annotated Flora of the Santa Catalina Mountains, Pima & Pinal Counties, Southeastern Arizona – James T. Verrier. June 2018.

It was an absolute thrill to find that the current issue (Volume 33, Number 2, January 2018) of Desert Plants is about the Santa Catalina Mountains! I love the Catalinas and would be excited regardless of what was inside this volume, but to find pictures of lesser traveled destinations like Buehman Canyon and Burro Creek, sections on the history of botanical collection, rare plants and invasive plants and a long annotated checklist of vascular plants followed by pictures?!?! Amazing!!

Given the remote locations and large amount of material in this volume I was not completely surprised to read James T. Verrier’s notes on the effort that went into this project:

A total of 380 days of field work were conducted between April 2007 and December 2017, including over 28,000 miles of driving. Although nearly all areas of the range were visited, lesser collected regions were emphasized. … Extensive botanical exploration was performed on the remote and rugged east side of the mountains. Field days sometimes included up to a 180-mi round trip to a single destination, traveling along rough Jeep trails and arriving in areas with no trails. These areas proved to be the most satisfying to explore and filled in large voids of the known flora. … All field work was conducted while working a full-time job, so only day trips were possible. Field days were typically long and tiring, beginning at 5am and sometimes returning home after 9pm.

Recent issues of Desert Plants can be found at the Kirk-Bear Canyon Library (with the periodicals) and older issues are available for in library use at the Joel Valdez Main Library. Desert Plants is sold by Desert SurvivorsPlants for the Southwest, and B & B Cactus – I suggest contacting them before visiting to ask if they have the issue you want in-stock. The Desert Plants Journal also sells issues and when I contacted them about a purchase were quite helpful!

Hiker Injured fleeing Mountain Lion, Plant Survey

Hiker injured fleeing from mountain lion – Nick Nasca (noted in the articles to be 18 years old) and Melanie Vibrat of Oro Valley were in the Romero Pools area around 7:30am and felt threatened by a mountain lion (see pictures below) that moved closer to them after they saw it – Mr. Nasca was injured while moving out of the area and required a rescue. The Arizona Daily Star credits notes that the picture in the articles below is courtesy of Arizona Game and Fish and was taken by the hikers: Do you see the lion a teen encountered on hike near Tucson?Game and Fish investigating mountain lion sighting, hiker taken to hospitalPHOTO: Mountain lion that stalked stranded Romero Pools hikerHiker airlifted after brush with lion. Warming climate pushes plants up the mountain and Half century old map points to plant changes – An interesting study about a University of Arizona study that compares a 1963 survey of plants along the Catalina Highway to 2011 data finding that a number of abundant species have shifted their ranges upslope. They site warming temperatures and drier conditions as the reason. However, also important to note here that the interpretation and presentation of the data has been criticized with the conclusion that there is no significant change overall – The Effect of Climate Change On The Arizona Quadrat.