Sonoran Desert Life

The Sonoran Desert has a great diversity of plant and animal life.  Despite the harsh climate, many species of mammals, reptiles, birds, and insects call this desert home.

Click on the following to learn more about them and to view photographs.
  
SNAKES                                                                                                INSECTS                                                                     
Sidewinder Rattlesnake                                                                        Centipede

Western Diamond-backed Rattlesnake                                              Kissing Bug

Mohave Rattlesnake                                                                              Drywood Termites

Long Nosed Snake                                                                                Ants

Glossy Snake                                                                                        
                                                                                                                 Lubber Grasshopper
Gopher Snake
   
 
SCORPIONS                                                                                         Opuntia Borer                                                                                                                                                    
Desert Hairy Scorpion                                                                           Sphinx Moth
                                              
LIZARDS                                                                                                OTHERS

Western Banded Gecko                                                                        Black Bear

Regal Horned Lizard                                                                              Coyote

Gila Monster                                                                                            Coati

Madrean Alligator Lizard                                                                        Desert Tortoise

FROGS & TOADS                                                                                  Antelope Squirrel

Sonoran Desert Toad                                                                             Javelina

Canyon Tree Frog                                                                                   Cottontail Rabbit  

                                                                           
BIRDS

Mourning Dove

Red Tail Hawk

Roadrunner

Turkey Vulture


Hummingbird

Lesser Gold-finch

Elf Owl

Coopers Hawk

Great Horned Owl

Long-eared Owl

Great Egret

SONORAN DESERT


The Sonoran Desert is an arid region covering 120,000 square miles in southwestern Arizona and southeastern California, as well as most of Baja California and the western half of the state of Sonora, Mexico. Subdivisions of this hot, dry region include the Colorado and Yuma deserts. Irrigation has produced many fertile agricultural areas, including the Coachella and Imperial valleys of California. Warm winters attract tourists to Sonora Desert resorts in Palm Springs, California, and Tucson and Phoenix, Arizona.

This is the hottest of our North American deserts, but a distinctly bimodal rainfall pattern produces a high biological diversity. Winter storms from the Pacific nourish many West Coast annuals such as poppies and lupines, while well-developed summer monsoons host both annuals and woody plants originating from the south. Freezing conditions can be expected for a few nights in winter.

Trees are usually well developed on the desert ranges and their bajadas. Often abundant on these well-drained soils are Little-leaf Palo Verdes, Desert Ironwoods, Catclaw and Saguaro.

The understory consists of three, four or even five layers of smaller woody shrubs. Tall chollas may occur in an almost bewildering array of species. The alluvial lowlands host communities of Desert Saltbush, wolfberry and bursage. On coarser soils, Creosote Bush and bursage communities may stretch for miles. Where the water table is high, Honey or Velvet Mesquite may form dense bosques or woodlands.

Other species are restricted to alkaline areas. Stream sides may be lined with riparian woodlands composed of Arizona Ash, Arizona Black Walnut, Fremont Cottonwood and various willows, with a dense understory of Arrow-weed, Seepwillow and Carrizo. The Sonora Desert is rich in animal life as well, with many species in all groups derived from tropical and subtropical regions.

The western part of the Sonora Desert (sometimes called the "Colorado Desert") is closer to the source of Pacific storms and is noted for spectacular spring flowering of ephemerals when there is winter-spring rainfall. (This phenomenon is not limited to here.) However, the western portion is relatively depauperate, lacking many of the species such as the Saguaro that depend on good summer rainfall.

Approximate DesertUSA Boundaries: Bordered on the west by Borrego Springs, and San Gorgonio Pass in southern California, on the north by Interstate 10 in California and Interstate 40 in Arizona, on the east by Arizona's U.S. Route 191, south to the tip of Baja California, Mexico.

-- A.R Royo