| DESERT IRONWOOD PRIMER
 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
  Desert ironwood, or palo fierro in Spanish, provides many wildlife 
        and plants with habitat and resources critical to their survival. While 
        scientists do not consider ironwood endangered or threatened as a species, 
        its populations are dwindling rapidly and recover extremely slowly after 
        exploitation. Its ecological importance comes largely through the roles 
        it plays for over 500 other species of plants and animals in the Sonoran 
        Desert. This report confirms ironwood's critical role as a keystone 
        species and nurse plant in maintaining desert biodiversity 
        and makes recommendations for its future protection.  Initiated with funding from the United States Department of Interior 
        Border XXI project, our binational team launched this region-wide assessment 
        to help guide land use decisions impacting ironwood habitat on both sides 
        of the border. The study compiles nearly all previously published literature 
        on ironwood ecology and analyzes data from 148 new study plots. The report 
        consists of two parts: first, an overview of the ecological and historical 
        background of desert ironwood; then a discussion of the first comprehensive 
        binational study on perennial plant diversity of ironwood habitats in 
        the Sonoran Desert, completed by our research team for this report.  Ironwood ecology  A hardy legume tree, ironwood's range closely matches the boundaries 
        of the Sonoran Desert, the only place in the world where it occurs. The 
        only species in the genus Olneya, ironwood is notable for its slow 
        growth rates and extremely dense wood. Its wood even sinks in water. While 
        scientists consider ironwood to be the "old growth" tree of the desert, 
        standard tree-ring dating of its wood is difficult. The Ironwood Alliance 
        is currently pursuing alternative methods to date ironwoods. Estimates 
        show some trees to be 800 years old, and it is likely that they live even 
        longer. Though long-lived, ironwoods face many threats, both as seedlings 
        and as mature trees, from habitat fragmentation, grazing, woodcutting, 
        and competition from exotic species.  Ironwoods bloom profusely in the spring and their blossoms lend a purple 
        hue to the landscape. The pea-type pods mature at a time of year when 
        little else is producing fruit in the Arizona Uplands, leading to a high 
        dependence of wildlife on its seeds. Unlike other desert trees, ironwood 
        rarely sheds all its leaves, so that its canopy provides shade and protection 
        from frost and extreme heat year round.  Ironwood as a Keystone Species and Nurse Plant  Ironwood functions as a habitat modifying keystone species, that 
        is, a species that exhibits strong influences on the distribution and 
        abundance of associated species. Ironwood generates a chain of influences 
        on associated understory plants, affecting their dispersal, germination, 
        establishment, and rates of growth as well as reproduction. Scientists 
        call these ecological dynamics "nurse plant ecology". Mesquites and palo 
        verde also play this role, however, each tree caters to slightly different 
        sets of plants in its "nursery". Ironwood is the dominant nurse plant 
        in some subregions of the Sonoran Desert.  As nurse plants, ironwoods provide safe sites for seed dispersal, seedling 
        protection from extreme cold and freezes, and sapling protection from 
        extreme heat and damaging radiation. They also function as prey refugia, 
        providing herbs and cacti protection from herbivores preying on vulnerable 
        plant seedlings. Finally, like other legumes, they alter the soil composition 
        beneath their canopies, enriching the soil with nutrients such as nitrogen.  Ironwood, often the tallest tree in its habitat, attracts birds and 
        other seed dispersers who roost in its branches and generate a literal 
        "rain" of seeds and whole fruit. The mere presence of ironwood and other 
        legume trees can increase the number of bird species in desertscrub habitat 
        by 63%. Germination rates are higher and seedling survival rates better 
        due to the improved soil conditions. Plant health, survival and growth 
        are also improved by the shade and protection from frost that ironwood's 
        canopy offers. Thorny, low-sweeping branches keep out herbivores, promoting 
        plant growth further. In turn, the greater diversity of plants growing 
        in ironwood nurseries attracts a greater diversity of birds, both breeding 
        and migratory.  The relationship between succulent cacti and ironwoods is especially 
        well documented. Recent studies show that without the protective cover 
        of desert legumes, the distributional ranges of saguaro, organ pipe, and 
        senita cactus would retreat many miles, to more southern, frost-free areas. 
        On freezing nights, the canopies of ironwood, below which the temperature 
        may be 4º C warmer than in adjacent open areas, make the critical difference 
        for vulnerable seedlings.  Ironwood plays a similar role in sheltering seedlings and saplings sensitive 
        to extreme heat and radiation. Its canopy minimizes heat, damaging radiation, 
        and water stress among plants established in its shade. When stripped 
        of ironwood's protective cover above them, some cacti actually suffer 
        sunburn and die.  In addition to serving as a buffer from such abiotic stresses as soil 
        and moisture conditions, ironwood buffers nursery plants from some biotic 
        stresses, especially that of herbivores. Thorny nurse plants can dramatically 
        reduce the amount of predation on seedlings by large and small herbivores 
        such as cows, rabbits, and rodents. In some places, the high number of 
        animals that nest, burrow or seek refuge under ironwoods reduces this 
        effect.  Ironwood as a Cultural Resource  The many indigenous and ethnic cultures of the Sonoran Desert have long 
        valued ironwood for its cultural, as well as ecological, resources. Traditional 
        products and uses of ironwood include food, medicines, agricultural and 
        household implements, and ceremonial and ritual uses. Because most of 
        these uses utilized either renewable resources (pods, seeds, flowers) 
        or salvaged wood from already dead trees, their impact on ancient ironwood 
        forests was negligible.  The most well known contemporary cultural use of ironwood is by the Seri 
        and Mexican carvers of coastal Sonora. The Seri began to carve elegant, 
        abstract renderings of native animals in the 1960's. They always use dried, 
        already dead ironwood. Nearby Mexican communities quickly copied the successful 
        forms of the Seri carvings. However, their use of machines allows them 
        to produce carvings at a rate which is depleting the local supply of ironwood. 
        Attempts to protect the ironwood forests in this area have so far been 
        unsuccessful.  The dense wood of ironwood burns extremely hot, making it the preferred 
        fuelwood in communities in the northern Mexico, where any type of fuelwood 
        is scarce. Mesquite charcoal production for export to the U.S. consumes 
        even more ironwood. Ironwood grows in mixed stands with mesquite and is 
        cut down as an illegal "by-catch" in much the same way tuna nets kill 
        dolphins and other species, though its harvest is usually intentional 
        rather than accidental. The Mexican charcoal industry boomed in the 1980's 
        after the U.S. environmental laws banned highly polluting earthen pits, 
        a grossly inefficient method where 60% of the energy is lost. Through 
        the requests of the Seri and others, the Mexican government now requires 
        permits for ironwood cutting, and no permits are given to cut ironwood 
        for charcoal production. However the laws are difficult to enforce, and 
        the incentive to cut dense, heavy ironwood is high among poor woodcutters 
        paid by the weight of wood collected per day.  Threats to Ironwood  In Mexico, woodcutting alone causes an average 17% reduction in ironwood's 
        dominance in the vegetation of the areas studied. The demand for wood 
        even sends Mexicans over the U.S. border to cut ironwood from Organ Pipe 
        Cactus National Monument and other protected areas. Other impacts threaten 
        ironwood habitat on both sides of the border, especially habitat fragmentation 
        due to the rapid growth of cities such as Tucson, Yuma, Phoenix, Hermosillo 
        and Mexicali, and the conversion of ironwood habitat to agricultural lands. 
       Grazing and competition by exotic species such as buffelgrass pose additional 
        serious threats to ironwood. Buffelgrass, a popular forage grass for cattle, 
        is highly invasive. Studies show it decreases plant species richness and 
        diversity in native plant communities and increases the frequency of fires. 
        Fueled by buffelgrass, these hot burning wildfires destroy ironwood and 
        other trees and cactus. Among other threats, the population explosion 
        in the Sonoran Desert has led to increasing recreational impacts in ironwood 
        habitat.  Ironwood Diversity Study  After establishing the various potential benefits mature ironwood trees 
        could provide to native flora and fauna in their habitats, our team surveyed 
        16 sites scattered across the Sonoran Desert to determine whether ironwood's 
        presence influenced biodiversity in the same manner at all sites. Sampling 
        the perennial vegetation in 148 new plots in 3 states, we determined ironwood's 
        presence to be equally high in ecological importance in every subregion 
        of the Sonoran Desert where we measured it.  In other words, the loss of ironwood from habitats in any Sonoran Desert 
        subregion would diminish the overall lushness of vegetative cover, especially 
        of vines. Nonetheless, the presence of ironwood in each subregion influenced 
        the diversity of associated plants in different ways, with great dissimilarities 
        in the types of understory plants found below ironwoods in the Arizona 
        Uplands and the Central Gulf Coast of Sonora. In short, protecting ironwood 
        habitat in Pima County, Arizona, will benefit a different mix of native 
        species than would be conserved in ironwood habitats currently being protected 
        on the islands or coasts of the Gulf of California. Although ironwoods 
        and mesquites found in the same habitats share most of the same understory 
        species, ironwood favors some vines and shrubs more than others, while 
        mesquite favors a somewhat different mix.  The abundance and cover of understory plants found beneath ironwoods 
        varies according to their location, from the banks of dry washes in valleys 
        to those growing along small drainages on rocky slopes. In addition, all 
        sizes of ironwoods do not necessarily function equally as nurse plants 
        for other species. Young trees provide hardly any protective microenvironment 
        at all, while the large, dense canopies of ancient trees can become too 
        shady to allow much plant growth beneath them, and their higher branches 
        allow cows to forage under them in grazed areas.  Recommendations  Using several different measures of species diversity, richness, and 
        ecological importance, we have selected several sites as priorities for 
        new protection and for strengthened conservation management. In the U.S. 
        state of Arizona, the sites are: Ragged Top on the boundary of Pinal and 
        Pima Counties; and the Cocoraque Rock and Ironwood Picnic Areas on either 
        side of Brawley Wash in Avra Valley, Pima County. In Sonora, Mexico, the 
        sites are: Punta Santa Rosa north of Kino Bay, and Tecomate on Tiburón 
        Island, both on Seri Indian lands; the southern reaches of the Sierra 
        El Pinacate north of Puerto Peñasco (Rocky Point); and Rancho El Carrizo, 
        a private ranch and masked bobwhite quail refuge near Carbo, Sonora. Although 
        other areas undoubtedly deserve further study and protection, these sites, 
        with the already protected sites in Saguaro National Park, Cabeza National 
        Wildlife Refuge, and Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, could provide 
        the cornerstones for a regional reserve network to protect the biodiversity 
        associated with ironwood habitats in the Sonoran Desert.  
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