by Louis Sahagun, LATimes,
5/24/17
Wildlife biologists say an
alarming number of female desert tortoise carcasses found earlier this year
just outside the southern edge of Joshua
Tree National Park may be the result of mothers fighting extinction
by exhausting their water and energy to lay eggs, even under stress.
U.S. Geological Survey biologist
Jeffrey Lovich, who has monitored tortoises in and around the park for two
decades, said the potentially lethal response to prolonged drought may become
more common throughout the Southern California desert as temperatures rise and
forage diminishes.
“This is still a hypothesis,”
Lovich said on Monday, “but I believe these tortoises died after continuing to
lay clutches of four eggs the size of ping pong balls year after year, using up
vital resources they need to survive.”
“It was an evolutionary gamble,”
he said. “If it pays off, their genetic information will be passed on to a new
generation of hatchlings in conditions more suitable for survival of the
species.”
A research team led by Lovich was
surveying a study area of several square miles on the northern flanks of the
Orocopia Mountains when it discovered the remains of 14 female and three male
tortoises, and 15 live animals, most of them males.
Judging from the deterioration of
the carcasses and chalkiness of the bones, Lovich concluded the animals
perished over the last five to 10 years, a period including five consecutive
years of drought regarded as the most severe in recorded history.
The find has stepped up concerns
over the fate of tortoises within the nearly 800,000-acre national park, which recent
rains made into a showcase of habitat, lush with plants and flowers
for the lumbering reptiles to fatten up on.
But vast swaths of terrain
carpeted with daisies can only do so much, biologists say, in the face of
longer droughts and climate change.
Despite its name, scruffy body
armor and status as a symbol of the desert conservation movement, the tortoise
is not well adapted to arid landscapes. It evolved thousands of years ago, when
the region was cooler and dominated by lakes and marshes fringed with Joshua
trees and junipers, Lovich said.
Over the past three decades, the
park’s tortoise population has plummeted from roughly 30,000 to an all-time low
of about 3,000, Michael Vamstad, a wildlife ecologist at the park, said.
A federal analysis determined
that a viable population of tortoises must maintain an average minimum density
of about 10 adults per square mile. The average density within the park today
is about nine adults per square mile, Vamstad said.
“We’re at a point now where we
expect tortoises to disappear in certain areas because there aren’t enough of
them around to find a mate,” he said. “But we believe there will also be
pockets with the right combinations of air temperature, moisture and forage to
sustain tortoises for years to come.
Over the past century, desert
tortoises have been decimated by habitat loss, trampling by cows and sheep,
shootings, vehicle strikes, disease, collecting, relocation
efforts on military bases and predation by ravens, coyotes and dogs.
Now their deadliest foe is
climate change, which is upsetting the delicate balance of life and death
conditions for the species in an otherwise intensely managed expanse of habitat
within a national park.
“The recent five-year drought is
a window into the future of what climate change may look like across the
Southwestern United States,” Cameron Barrows, a UC Riverside ecologist who
specializes in the park’s wildlife, said. “In certain study plots where we found
lots of tortoises even two years ago, we didn’t find any this year.”
Improving the odds of survival
for tortoises hasn’t been easy at a time when record numbers of tourists are
straining park roads, campsites and services, officials said. The park had 2.5
million visitors in 2016, twice the number seen five years ago, officials said.
In the midst of a spectacular
wildflower bloom in March that attracted both hungry tortoises and a crush of
camera-toting tourists, three tortoises were struck and killed by cars in a
single week.
Officials are considering
roadside fencing, which is effective in reducing mortalities of tortoises and
other reptiles. It is also controversial, however, because it is expensive to
install and maintain, fragments habitat and is an eyesore on federal lands set
aside for their natural beauty.
“Climate change has no regard for
traffic signs, speed limits, roadside barriers or national park boundaries,”
said Debra Hughson, a research biologist at the Mojave National Preserve, about
50 miles northwest of the park.
It’s not all bad news.
Under a hot morning sun on a
recent weekday, park biologist Kristen Lalumiere followed telemetry pings
across a desolate arroyo edged with cholla cactus to a radio-collared female
desert tortoise the size of a volleyball emerging from a burrow to bask in the
sunshine, dine on flowers and, perhaps, find a mate.
Lalumiere peered inside, then
smiled and said, “You’re looking good, girl -- clear eyes, clean nose and
flower stains all over your mouth.”
Adding a hopeful dose of
anthropomorphism, she said, “Single female seeks relationship with strong male
willing to fight to protect her. Must enjoy flowers, long slow walks and
cuddling up in desert caves.”
The tortoise biologists dubbed
“Salsa Verde” stared back at her, then retreated into her burrow.
In a nearby burrow, a male
tortoise known as “Scuter” was taking a siesta.
Whether or not they produce a new
generation of tortoises will not be known for 15 to 20 years because that is
how long it takes hatchlings to reach maturity, even in the best of times.
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