Habitat 

 
[Under construction]
The study site consists of adobe hills and washes (for pictures see here ).  The vegetation appears fairly sparse and the initial impression is of a severe desert.  The nearest National Weather Service station is in Grand Junction, about 35 kilometers to the east.  They receive an average of about 8 inches (20 cm) of precipitation per year. The Grand Junction weather station is much nearer Grand Mesa and probably receives considerably more rainfall than our site.  During the summer, when we have a rain gauge, this is certainly true.  The study site receives about 6 inches (15cm) of rainfall annually.  There is a summer monsoonal rainfall pattern with little rainfall in late May and June.  The monsoonal flow from the Gulf of California arrives sometimes in July or August and the bulk of summer rain occurs as thunderstorms.  We have occassional flash floods that plaster colonies with mud.  Even without flash floods, the mortality of young colonies in washes can be higher due to flooding.

    The vegetation is very attractive although it is not very showy.  The perrenial vegetation in this desert is largely chenopods, grasses and composites (for distribution maps see here ).  Chenopods (saltbush of four common species and greasewood ) and composites (Xylorhiza venusta, two species of rabbitbrush, Tetradymia, snakeweed and Big sagebrush ) are the common woody plants.  The perennial native grasses, galleta grass (Hilaria jamesii), and Indian rice grass (Oryzopsis ) and the annual introduced cheatgrass (Bromus (or Anisanthe) tectorum) are the most common grasses.  

    The site is situated over a series of hills and washes (for elevation map see here ).  The vegetation is influenced by drainage of the soil and is often associated with hills or washes (see here or here or here ).  

Site list of vertebrates (under construction):

Herps.   

Great Basin Spadefoot Toad
Scaphiopus intermontanus
Painted Desert Whiptail
(Western Whiptail)
Cnemidophorus tigris
septentrionalis
Plateau Striped Whiptail
Cnemidophorus velox
Long-nosed Leopard Lizard
Gambelia wislizenii
Short Horned Lizard 1 or 2
Phrynosoma douglassii
Great Basin Gopher Snake
Pituophis melanoleucus
Mammals.The mammal list is not very complete.  Most rodents and bats have not been identified.

Ord's Kangaroo Rat
Dipodomys ordi


White-tailed prairie dog 1, 2 or 3
Cynomys leudovicianus
Desert Cottontail
Sylvilagus audubonii
Long-tailed (?) Weasel
Mustela frenata
Raccoon
Procyon lotor
Coyote
Canis latrans


Pronghorn Antelope
Antilocapra americana
Mule Deer
Odocoileus hemionus
Birds.  The bird list includes all species that we have seen at the site, either on the ground or vegetation or overhead.  We note if we have only seen the bird flying overhead (o); or breeding (*).  We have not spent time at the site during migrations and presume that a number of waterbirds (particularly) fly overhead, but are not of consequence.

Sandhill Crane (o)

Ring-necked Pheasant (adjacent ag lands)

Gambel's Quail  (Adjacent ag lands)

Northern Harrier *

Red-Tailed Hawk

Swainson's Hawk

Golden Eagle

Turkey Vulture

American Kestrel

Prairie Falcon

Great Horned Owl (Adjacent ag lands)

Burrowing Owl *

Barn Owl (Adjacent Ag lands)

Belted Kingfisher (o)

Mourning Dove

Rock Dove (o)

Broad-Tailed Hummingbird

Northern Flicker

Western Kingbird

Horned Lark *

White-Throated Swift

Barn Swallow

Common Raven

Black-Billed Magpie

Rock Wren *

Northern Mockingbird *

Mountain Bluebird

Loggerhead Shrike *

Red-winged Blackbird

Western Meadowlark *

Northern Oriole (Bullock's)

Lark Sparrow *

Lapland Longspur

Lark Bunting