4.7 Article

Dust storms ahead: Climate change, green energy development and endangered species in the Mojave Desert

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 277, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109819

Keywords

Climate change; Mojave Desert; Endangered species; Yucca; Solar

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The Mojave Desert is facing threats from urbanization, climate change, and energy development, which are putting even common species at risk of extinction. The renewable energy development, while potentially mitigating climate change, also poses a threat to habitats. Protecting the Mojave requires making difficult choices about conservation priorities and finding a compromise between protection and development.
The Mojave Desert contains the hottest, driest regions in North America and is also one of the most ecologically intact regions in the contiguous United States. However, a confluence of factors including urbanization, climate change, and energy development are rapidly transforming this ecoregion. As a result of these growing threats, even common, widespread Mojave Desert endemics are at risk of being driven to extinction by the end of the 21st century. Ironically, renewable energy development that could delay or even reverse the effects of climate change in the region is also a potentially significant source of habitat loss for these same organisms. Protecting the Mojave therefore presents difficult choices about how to select among different conservation priorities. We argue that these choices will necessarily involve compromises in which protections for some habitats will have to be prioritized while allowing development in other areas. We review the state of conservation in the Mojave and use the Mojave Desert's iconic Joshua trees (Yucca brevifolia and Y. jaegeriana) as a case study to describe a framework for identifying habitats that should be given the highest levels of protection to ensure climate change resilience. Finally, using existing spatial data, we evaluate land use and conservation status in the Mojave. The result identifies considerable scope for compromise between conservation and renewable energy development. Although our examples are specific to the Mojave, we argue that these recommendations apply broadly to many biological communities threatened by climate change.

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