Intro
Joshua trees are large, visually-striking trees in the Mojave desert. Most of them are in California and Nevada, but there is also a population in the western part of Arizona. They are frequently photographed and there are more than 17,000 observations (1,000 in AZ) saved on iNaturalist, a website and app used to document biodiversity.
Arizona Joshua Tree locations observed on iNaturalistiNaturalist. |
Joshua trees produce showy clusters of white flowers at the tips of their branches in March, but this year I noticed they were not flowering. I wondered how often they produce flowers and decided to answer this question using data from iNat.
53 observations in Arizona showed evidence of flowering, always in March and April. |
Methods
iNat observations of Joshua Trees (Yucca brevifolia) in Arizona were marked using the Plant Phenology option in the Annotation Field. Plant phenology (flower budding, flowering, or fruiting) was determined based on visual inspection of the saved photos in iNat.
The iNat website has a nice phenology visualization tool. This view is filtered to show only Arizona observations. However, it cannot show differences in phenology from one year to the next. |
Observations were then filtered on the iNat Explore page by adding &term_id=12&term_value_id=13 to the URL and downloaded for analysis in Excel.
More info about using iNat search URLs. |
Results
I graphed the results starting in 2017, because there are fewer iNat observations before 2017. It appears Joshua Trees flower episodically. According to this data, Joshua Trees flowered in four out of the last 7 years. They appear to alternate years from 2017-2020, but then skipped 2021 and flowered in both 2022 and 2023.
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