Set in the Morongo Basin of the western Mojave Desert, the Burns Piñon
Ridge Reserve is a dry, boulder-strewn landscape of shallow canyons and
ridges of sculptured granite. Three floristic regions meet at the site: Transverse
Range, Sonoran Desert, and Mojave Desert, creating a diverse mixture of flora and
fauna characteristic of both deserts and mountains. Habitats intermingling at the
reserve include piñon-juniper woodland with elements of Joshua tree woodland
and montane chaparral, desert wash, and freshwater seep. At least 153 vertebrate
species cross paths here, including desert and coast horned lizards, desert and duskyfooted
woodrats, mountain and Gambel’s quail, and three rare species: Townsend’s
western big-eared bat, California mastiff bat, and the federally and state-threatened
desert tortoise. Research opportunities are enriched by other
natural lands throughout the desert, such as the Joshua Tree National Park a few
miles away. Two other NRS reserves for desert research are the Philip L. Boyd Deep
Canyon Desert Research Center, less than an hour’s drive to the south, and the Jack
and Marilyn Sweeney Granite Mountains Desert Research Center, two and onehalf
hours to the east. |