Images © by James L. Reveal, Norton-Brown Herbarium, University
of Maryland, unless otherwise credited.
BSCI 124 Lecture Notes
Department of Plant Biology, University of Maryland
LECTURE 35 - TERRESTRIAL BIOMES, Part 6 - Deserts
Warm Deserts:
D.
Chihuahan Desert
Creosote bush and bunch grasses in southern New Mexico
XIIId. Chihuahuan
Desert
-
A. Location:
Southeastern Arizona, southern New Mexico and western Texas southward to
the trans-volcanic belt of San Luis Potosí in north-central Mexico.
Limestone slopes with creosote bush, Coahuila
B. Features:
-
1. Low, scattered and isolated, mostly limestone, short mountain ranges.
2. Warm to hot summer temperatures, cold and often freezing temperatures
in the winter.
3. Precipitation as cold rain or snow Dec to Mar; warm rains Jul through
Sep.
4. Warm spring and fall means growing season of 200 or more days a year.
C. Vegetation:
-
1. Creosote bush is dominant; tarbush
(Flourensia
cernua) can be a co-dominate.
2. Thorny shrubs (mainly species of catclaw
[Acacia])
are common along with species of ocotillo.
3. Small trees and arborescent cacti are not common compared to the Sonoran
Desert.
4. Century plants (Agave) and Spanish-bayonet (Yucca, see right)
common in places.
5. Numerous and diverse kinds of cacti: Peyote
(Lophophora williamsii) is now rare. Many species of barrel cacti
(Ferocactus),
hedgehog cacti
(Echinocereus),
cholla or prickly pear
(Opuntia),
fishhook cacti (Mammilaria, see right), and a host of lesser genera
in terms of numbers of species (e.g., Strombocactus,
Neolloydia,
Coryphantha).
6. Grasses common; many endemic herbaceous perennials and small shrubs on
gypsum outcrops, in limestone mountains, and around desert oases such as
Cuatro
Ciénegas, the
beautiful
site of numerous endemic species, especially
fish.
7. Resurrection plant (Selaginella lepidophylla, S. pilifera),
are spikemosses that curl up and brown when dry but unfold and turn green
when wetted.
D. Animals:
-
1. Deer, antelope, feral goats and pigs.
2. Numerous resident birds; scattered waterfowl
E. History:
-
1. Desert was prairie grassland into Late Pleistocene, became desert during
hypsithermal period (ca. 12,000-10,000 years ago).
2. Rapid change resulted in rapid, localized speciation.
Tumbleweed against a barbed wire fence, New Mexico
F. Exploitation:
-
1. Extensive, long-term overgrazing has resulting in many introduced weeds,
most notably the Old World tumbleweed (Salsola spp) now found throughout
the West.
2. Some mining and limited logging especially in mountains.
End of an evening rain storm, Sierra del Pinos, Coahuila
Desert main page
Tropics
Main Terrestrial
Biomes page
Last revised: 17 Oct 1997 - Reveal