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The Mojave Desert is a desert found within the rain shadow of the southern Sierra Nevada mountains and Transverse Ranges in the Southwestern United States. This desert is located primarily in southeastern California and southwestern Nevada, with small portions extending eastward into Arizona and Utah.
The Mojave desert, together with the Chihuhuan, Great Basin and Sonoran deserts, forms what is known as the North American Desert. Of these four deserts, the Mojave is the smallest and the driest.
Biome:
Desert and xeric shrublands
Fauna
There is a large diversity of fauna, which include 230 bird species and about 100 mammal species.
Flora
Due to the fact that there is very little water in this desert, the natural ground cover here is predominantly creosote bush resulting in little or no livestock grazing. However, there are various
endemic plant species found within this ecoregion, notably the Joshua Tree, which has become an indicator species for the Mojave Desert. Too, there are more endemic flora in this desert than almost anywhere else in the world.
Predominant plants of the Mojave desert include: all-scale (Atriplex polycarpa), brittlebush (Encelia farinosa), creosote bush (Larrea tridentata), desert holly (Atriplex hymenelytra), Joshua tree (Yucca brevifolia), and white burrobush (Hymenoclea salsola).
Other cacti species in the Mojave Desert include: beavertail cactus (Opuntia basilaris), Mojave prickly pear (Opunita erinacea), and many-headed barrel cactus (Echinocactus polycephalus), silver cholla (Cylindropuntia echinocarpa).
Additionally, there are other dissimilar plants including: blue Palo Verde (Parkinsonia Florida), California dalea (Psorothamnus arborescens), chuparosa (Justicia californica), desert senna (Cassia armata), goldenhead (Acamptopappus shockleyi), ironwood (Olneya tesota), and spiny menodora (Menodora spinescens).
Geography:
The Mojave Desert displays typical basin and range topography by having a series of parallel mountain ranges divided by interspersed valleys.
The Mojave Basin ecoregion has scattered mountains, generally lower than those of the Central Basin ecoregion to the north.
The Mojave Desert is often called the High Desert due to the fact that most of this desert is from 2,000 and 4,000 feet in elevation. However, there are areas in Death with the lowest elevation in North America.
This desert is named for the indigenous Mojave people, who are a Uto-Aztecan language people of the
Cochimà family group.
Tuttle Creek BLM Campground
Colorado River
Mojave River
Walker Lane Geologic Trough
Death Valley National Park
Joshua Tree National Park
Pathway Journeys:
Footpath Journeys
Roadpath Journeys
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