Western Fence Lizard (Sceloporus occidentalis )

The Western Fence Lizard ( Sceloporus occidentalis ) is perhaps one of the most common lizards in the desert southwest and is also known as a “Blue belly”. Perhaps this commonality is the reason for its name. The Western Fence lizard is found in a variety of habitats and common at elevations up to 10,800 feet. They can be located in forests, desert sage, farmlands and grasslands. This species is typically not found in harsh desert climates and moist forests.

Western Fence Lizard
Western Fence Lizard

This animal is typically between 2 inches and 3.5 inches in length. They are typically black to brown in colors with stripes on their backs. They have blue colored patches on their ventral abdomen. This reptiles will lay clutches of eggs between 3 and 17 eggs in the spring between April and July. The eggs will hatch within two months of feralization.

This animal are known to eat insects including ant, beetles, flies, spiders and some caterpillars. They typically can be found sunning themselves on rocks, fences and paths. The are a prey item for other animals including larger lizards, birds and also some a mammals. As is common with most reptiles, the lizard is known to hibernate in cooler winter months.

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Oatman Arizona – Mohave County Ghost Town

Perched precariously on the steep flanks of the Black Mountains in Mohave County, Arizona, at an elevation of 2,710 feet (830 meters), Oatman stands as a defiant relic of the American Southwest’s gold rush era—a “living ghost town” where the ghosts are not spectral but very much alive in the form of wild burros that roam its dusty streets. Straddling the historic alignment of U.S. Route 66 between Kingman, Arizona, and Needles, California—some 25 miles southwest of Bullhead City—this unincorporated census-designated place (CDP) evokes the raw, unyielding spirit of the frontier. Once a booming mining camp that yielded fortunes in gold, Oatman’s narrative is woven with threads of tragedy, triumph, and tenacity: from the harrowing tale of its namesake, Olive Oatman, to the frenzied strikes that swelled its population to over 3,500, and its improbable resurrection as a tourist haven sustained by Hollywood glamour, highway nostalgia, and a herd of free-spirited donkeys. This report traces Oatman’s evolution from a shadowed massacre site to a pinnacle of desert prosperity, its wartime eclipse, and its vibrant persistence as a quirky Route 66 icon in the 21st century.

Mines of the Oatman district; Up Gold Road Gulch, showing the surface relations of the Gold Road mine, right to left the following are identified; Gold Road Mill, No. 1 shaft, and No. 3 shaft. All the rock included in the view is the Gold Road latite. The generally easterly dip of the flows is distinctly shown. Mohave County, Arizona. 1921.
Mines of the Oatman district; Up Gold Road Gulch, showing the surface relations of the Gold Road mine, right to left the following are identified; Gold Road Mill, No. 1 shaft, and No. 3 shaft. All the rock included in the view is the Gold Road latite. The generally easterly dip of the flows is distinctly shown. Mohave County, Arizona. 1921.

Shadows of the Past: The Oatman Massacre and Early Exploration (1850s–1890s)

Oatman’s origins are etched in blood and endurance, predating its gold-fueled fame by decades. The town’s name honors Olive Ann Oatman (1837–1903), a 13-year-old Illinois girl whose family’s westward odyssey ended in horror on February 18, 1851, along the banks of the Gila River, approximately 100 miles east of present-day Yuma, Arizona. Traveling as part of the Brewsterite wagon train—a splinter Mormon group seeking a utopian haven at the Colorado-Gila confluence— the Oatmans and their companions faced the perils of the Southern Emigration Route: scorching deserts, scarce water, and marauding bands of Tonto Apache or Yavapai warriors. In what became known as the Oatman Massacre, attackers killed Olive’s parents and seven siblings, leaving only Olive, her sister Mary Ann (aged 7–10), and possibly her brother Lorenzo (who escaped and later reunited with survivors) alive. The sisters were enslaved for a year before Mary Ann perished from starvation and exposure; Olive was traded to the Mohave tribe, who adopted her, tattooed her chin in tribal custom, and treated her as kin for four years. Rescued in 1856 near Fort Yuma through the intervention of a Mojave-Mexican interpreter, Olive’s saga—captivity, cultural assimilation, and redemption—captivated the nation via her 1857 memoir Captivity of the Oatman Girls, fueling frontier fascination with Indian captivity narratives.

The massacre site’s proximity to future Oatman sowed seeds of legend: local lore claims Olive and Mary were hidden at “Ollie Oatman Spring,” a half-mile from the townsite, though historical evidence points farther south. By the 1860s, prospectors like John Moss staked early claims in the Black Mountains, naming one the “Oatman Mine” in her honor—or, per some accounts, after a local miner named John Oatman, Olive’s purported half-Mohave son. Sporadic gold finds yielded modest returns, hampered by the rugged terrain—jagged volcanic ridges, creosote-dotted basins, and temperatures swinging from 110°F (43°C) summers to freezing winters. A narrow-gauge railroad chugged 17 miles from the Colorado River near Needles, California, between 1903 and 1905, but the camp remained a whisper in the desert wind.

1838–1903, by Benjamin F. Powelson (1823–1885), Albumen silver print, c. 1863, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
1838–1903, by Benjamin F. Powelson (1823–1885), Albumen silver print, c. 1863, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Boomtown Fever: Gold Strikes and Frontier Frenzy (1900s–1930s)

The 20th century ignited Oatman’s transformation from tentative outpost to roaring boomtown. In 1902, the Durlin Hotel (later the Oatman Hotel) rose as the county’s oldest two-story adobe, its thick walls shielding miners from dust storms and desperadoes alike. Renamed Vivian in 1906 for a miner’s daughter, the post office formalized the settlement; by 1908, it was Oatman proper, with banks, a chamber of commerce, and saloons slinging whiskey amid the clang of picks and the groan of ore wagons. The 1910 opening of the Tom Reed (or Bluebird) Mine unleashed a torrent: over 24 years, it disgorged $13 million in gold (about $450 million today). But 1915 marked the deluge—a United Eastern Mining Company strike unearthed $10–14 million in high-grade ore, sparking one of the desert’s final gold rushes and swelling the population to 3,500–10,000 souls by the 1920s. The United Eastern alone produced $15 million from 1913–1926, making Oatman and nearby Goldroad Arizona’s top gold producers, rivaling the Comstock Lode’s glory.

Main Street pulsed with polyglot energy: Cornish “Cousin Jacks” (expert hard-rock miners), Mexican laborers, Chinese merchants, and ex-soldiers seeking dry-air cures for World War I gas injuries flooded in, erecting frame shacks, a newspaper (Oatman Miner), assay offices, and brothels. Pack burros—sturdy descendants of Spanish explorers—hauled ore up treacherous switchbacks, their brays mingling with saloon pianos and the distant rumble of stamp mills. Yet peril shadowed prosperity: a 1921 inferno razed much of the town, sparing only the Oatman Hotel, whose bar became a respite for dust-caked claim-jumpers. Hollywood arrived too: Oatman doubled as frontier backlots for films like How the West Was Won (1962) and Foxfire (1955), its crags and canyons lending authenticity. In 1939, stars Clark Gable and Carole Lombard honeymooned in the hotel’s upstairs suite after a Kingman wedding, their romance immortalized in faded photos and lingering whispers of spectral sightings—Oatman’s resident ghost, “Oatie,” is said to haunt the halls.

Eclipse and Endurance: Decline and Route 66 Revival (1940s–1970s)

Oatman’s zenith proved ephemeral. The United Eastern shuttered in 1924 amid fluctuating gold prices and exhausted veins; by 1941, World War II’s metal demands prompted federal orders to halt remaining operations, idling the district’s $40 million legacy (equivalent to $734 million today). Miners departed, leaving burros to fend for themselves in the hills—legally protected by federal law, their descendants now number around 1,900 across the Black Mountains, managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Population plummeted from 500 in 1940 to near-zero by the 1960s, as Interstate 40 bypassed the town in 1953, rerouting traffic from its wooden sidewalks.

Salvation came via Route 66 nostalgia. The “Mother Road,” paved through Oatman in the 1920s, drew wanderers seeking the old highway’s romance. By the 1970s, entrepreneurs leaned into the Wild West aesthetic: gunfight reenactments by groups like the Oatman Ghost Rider Gunfighters (Arizona’s oldest) and the Bitter Creek Outlaws halted traffic twice daily at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m., cowboys in chaps trading blanks and barbs. Burros, emboldened by tourist carrots (now limited due to health concerns), became unofficial mascots, nosing into shops and vehicles with endearing audacity. The annual Burro Biscuit Toss—flinging gold-painted droppings for prizes—cemented their quirky sovereignty.

Tom Reed Mine, Oatman, Arizona, 1935
Tom Reed Mine, Oatman, Arizona, 1935

Current Status (As of November 2025)

In 2025, Oatman endures as a resilient enclave of 84 residents—a 95% surge from 2020’s census tally of 43, though declining annually by 3.45%—clinging to its Route 66 lifeline amid the BLM’s vast desert expanse. No longer a mining hub (the Gold Road Mine, reopened in 1995, briefly toured visitors before resuming extraction amid high gold prices but remains sporadically active), Oatman thrives on tourism, luring over 500,000 annual pilgrims to its sun-bleached facades and burro brigade. Main Street, a narrow ribbon of weathered wood and adobe, hosts a dozen souvenir shops hawking T-shirts, mining relics, donkey puppets, and Southwestern art; the Oatman Hotel’s ground-floor bar and restaurant serve burgers and “burro ears” (potato chips), while upstairs, the Gable-Lombard suite anchors a museum of faded finery.

The burros—tame enough to peer into car windows yet wild by decree—steal the spotlight, their herds swelling midday as gunshots echo, drawing crowds that pause traffic for theatrical justice. Recent X posts from November 2025 buzz with delight: visitors gush over “cutest baby donkey” videos, warn of nighttime burro hazards on the winding approach from Kingman (a nerve-wracking 23-mile switchback jaunt), and share aurora sightings over the Black Mountains during a rare G4 geomagnetic storm. Yelp reviews (241 as of July 2025) hail its “too tough to die” vibe, with 4.5-star averages praising friendly locals who name the burros and recount mining yarns. Events like the Burro Biscuit Toss persist, though summer heat tempers schedules; no formal services exist beyond basic amenities, and visitors are urged to pack water, respect burro boundaries (no mounting!), and navigate the hairpin roads cautiously.

Oatman remains a microcosm of resilience: a place where gold’s gleam has faded into burro brays and gunshot echoes, yet the desert’s unyielding embrace ensures its stories endure. For real-time road conditions or events, check Arizona DOT or Visit Arizona resources.

Oatman Map

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Desert Tarantula (Aphonopelma iodius)

Aphonopelma iodius, commonly known as the Desert Tarantula (also called Great Basin blonde, Mojave Desert tarantula, northern blonde, or similar regional names in the pet trade), is a medium to large-bodied tarantula. Adults typically have a diagonal leg span of 3–5 inches (7.6–12.7 cm), with a body length (carapace to abdomen) of about 1.5–2.5 inches. Females are generally stockier and larger overall than males, while males have longer, more slender legs and a slimmer abdomen.

Desert Tarantula (Aphonopelma iodius)
Desert Tarantula (Aphonopelma iodius)

The coloration is usually dark brown to blackish or grayish-brown, with a covering of lighter (blondish, reddish-brown, or golden) hairs, giving it a somewhat “blonde” appearance in many individuals—especially noticeable on the carapace and legs. Like other New World tarantulas, it possesses urticating hairs on the abdomen, which it can kick off as a defensive mechanism to irritate predators’ skin, eyes, or respiratory system. The spider has small eyes clustered on a raised tubercle, powerful chelicerae (fangs), and a robust, hairy build typical of theraphosids. Its venom is mild and not medically significant to humans, causing pain similar to a bee sting at most.

Scientific Taxonomy

Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Subphylum:Chelicerata
Class:Arachnida
Order:Araneae
Infraorder:Mygalomorphae
Family:Theraphosidae
Genus:Aphonopelma
Species:A. iodius

The taxonomy of the genus Aphonopelma has been complex and subject to multiple revisions due to morphological similarities among species. A major 2016 integrative taxonomic revision (using phylogenomic, morphological, and geospatial data) consolidated several previously described species or synonyms (such as A. brunnius, A. chamberlini, A. icenoglei in some contexts, A. melanium, A. nevadanum, A. zionis, among others) into A. iodius, resulting in a broader species concept. This species is now recognized as valid in current classifications, including the World Spider Catalog.

Behavior

A. iodius is a reclusive, nocturnal ambush predator that spends the majority of its life in a silk-lined burrow dug into the soil, often under rocks, logs, or in desert flats. The burrow entrance may have a webbed mat or silken collar. It emerges primarily at night to hunt, ambushing passing prey such as insects (crickets, beetles, grasshoppers), other arthropods, and occasionally small vertebrates like lizards.

This species is generally docile and avoids confrontation. When threatened, it may rear up to display its fangs, kick urticating hairs, or flee rather than bite. Bites are rare and not dangerous to humans. A notable behavioral trait is the seasonal activity of mature males: during late summer through fall (typically August–October, depending on region), males leave their burrows and wander openly during daylight or twilight hours in search of receptive females. This leads to frequent sightings of males crossing roads or open ground during this mating period. Females remain in or near their burrows. Lifespan varies significantly by sex—males live around 3–7 years (often dying shortly after mating), while females can live 15–20+ years or longer in captivity.

Range and Habitat

Aphonopelma iodius is native to the arid southwestern United States, primarily inhabiting desert and semi-arid environments. Its range includes:

  • Southern California (including parts of the Mojave Desert, Central Valley fringes, and areas as far north as the Bay Area and Diablo Range in some populations)
  • Nevada (especially the Mojave Desert region)
  • Western Arizona
  • Southwestern Utah

It is particularly common in the Mojave Desert west of the Colorado River, extending into parts of the Great Basin and adjacent arid zones. Habitats consist of dry, open areas with sandy or rocky soils suitable for burrowing, including desert scrub, grasslands, and rocky hillsides. It avoids extremely hot, low-elevation Sonoran Desert cores (where the related A. chalcodes, the Desert Blonde Tarantula, predominates). Populations are often localized but can be abundant in suitable microhabitats.

This species is well-adapted to desert conditions, remaining in burrows during extreme heat or cold to conserve moisture and avoid predators such as tarantula hawks (Pepsis wasps), birds, and mammals.

Pronghorn ( Antilocapra americana )

The pronghorn (Antilocapra americana), often mistakenly called an antelope, is the sole surviving member of the Antilocapridae family and North America’s fastest land mammal, capable of sustained speeds up to 55 mph (88 km/h). In the desert southwest of the United States, particularly the Sonoran Desert, the subspecies known as the Sonoran pronghorn (A. a. sonoriensis) exemplifies remarkable adaptations to arid environments, including efficient water conservation and heat tolerance. These graceful ungulates, with their distinctive pronged horns and white rump patches, roam vast open landscapes, evoking the untamed spirit of the American West.

A solitary Pronghorn ( Antilocapra americana ) found near Golbin Valley, Utah
A solitary Pronghorn ( Antilocapra americana ) found near Golbin Valley, Utah

Classification

Pronghorns belong to the kingdom Animalia, phylum Chordata, class Mammalia, order Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates), family Antilocapridae, genus Antilocapra, and species americana. There are five recognized subspecies: the American pronghorn (A. a. americana), Mexican pronghorn (A. a. mexicana), Sonoran pronghorn (A. a. sonoriensis), Baja California pronghorn (A. a. peninsularis), and Oregon pronghorn (A. a. oregona). The Sonoran pronghorn, endemic to the desert southwest, is listed as endangered due to habitat fragmentation and human activities. Pronghorns are not true antelopes but are more closely related to giraffes and okapis, though they represent a unique evolutionary lineage that once included multiple species during the Pleistocene era.

Physical Description

Adult pronghorns measure 1.3–1.5 meters (4.3–4.9 feet) in length, stand 81–104 cm (32–41 inches) at the shoulder, and weigh 36–70 kg (79–154 pounds), with males typically larger than females. Their coat is tan to reddish-brown on the back and sides, with white underparts, throat, and distinctive white rump patches that flare as alarm signals. The namesake horns, present in both sexes but larger in males (up to 50 cm or 20 inches), are unique: they consist of a bony core sheathed in keratin that is shed annually, unlike true antlers or horns. Females’ horns are smaller and lack the forward-facing prong. Large eyes positioned on the sides of the head provide a 320-degree field of vision, aiding in predator detection, while long legs and cushioned hooves enable high-speed endurance running. Sonoran pronghorns are slightly smaller and lighter, adapted for desert life with enhanced heat dissipation through large ears and a slender build.

Behavior

Pronghorns are diurnal and crepuscular, most active at dawn and dusk to avoid midday heat in desert regions. They are highly social, forming mixed-sex herds of up to 1,000 individuals during winter migrations, but in the southwest deserts, groups are smaller (5–20) due to sparse resources. Territorial males defend harems during breeding, using scent marking from glands on the head and rump, and engage in ritualized displays like parallel walking or horn clashing. Their legendary speed—sprints up to 98 km/h (61 mph) and sustained 55 km/h (34 mph) over distances—evolved to outrun extinct predators like American cheetahs, and they can leap 6 meters (20 feet) horizontally. In the desert southwest, Sonoran pronghorns exhibit nomadic behavior, moving in response to rainfall and forage availability, and they pant or seek shade to thermoregulate in extreme heat. Communication includes visual signals like rump flashing, vocalizations such as snorts or bleats, and olfactory cues.

Food Sources

As herbivores, pronghorns are selective browsers and grazers, consuming a diverse diet of forbs (broad-leaved herbs), shrubs, grasses, and occasionally cacti, with preferences shifting seasonally. In the desert southwest, they favor drought-resistant plants like chainfruit cholla, mesquite, and palo verde for moisture, and can digest toxic species unpalatable to other ungulates due to large kidneys and specialized gut microbes. Forbs dominate in spring and summer (up to 90% of diet), while shrubs like sagebrush provide winter sustenance. They obtain most water from vegetation, drinking infrequently but traveling up to 10 km (6 miles) to water sources in arid areas. This opportunistic feeding helps them survive in low-productivity deserts, where they forage by nipping plants at ground level.

Breeding

Pronghorns are polygynous, with breeding (rut) occurring from July to October in southern populations like the Sonoran subspecies, timed to monsoon rains for optimal fawn survival. Males compete for females through displays and fights, establishing territories of 0.5–5 km² (0.2–2 sq mi). Gestation lasts 235–250 days, with females typically birthing twins (singles for first-time mothers) in secluded spots, hiding fawns in vegetation for the first few weeks. Fawns are precocial, standing within hours and running soon after, weaned by 4–5 months, and reaching sexual maturity at 15–16 months. In the desert southwest, breeding success is tied to rainfall; drought can lead to high fawn mortality from predation by coyotes or bobcats. Lifespan in the wild averages 10–15 years.

Habitat and Range

Pronghorns thrive in open, arid to semi-arid habitats with low vegetation for visibility, including grasslands, shrublands, and deserts at elevations from sea level to 3,300 meters (10,800 feet). In the desert southwest, the Sonoran pronghorn inhabits broad alluvial valleys, bajadas, and dry plains of the Sonoran Desert, separated by granite mountains, with sparse creosote bush, saguaro cacti, and ocotillo. Their range spans southwestern Arizona (e.g., Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge) and northwestern Sonora, Mexico, with a small population in California potentially extinct. Overall, pronghorns occur from southern Canada to northern Mexico, but in the U.S. southwest, they are found in Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, and parts of California and Texas. They prefer gentle, rolling terrain for spotting predators from afar and avoid dense forests or steep mountains. Human developments like fences and roads fragment habitats, posing threats to migration and genetic diversity in desert populations.

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Classification

Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Artiodactyla
Family:Antilocapridae
Subfamily:Antilocaprinae
Tribe:Antilocaprini
Genus:Antilocapra
Ord, 1818
Species:A. americana[

Coyote (Canis latrans)

The Coyote (Canis latrans), commonly known as the prairie wolf, brush wolf, or American jackal, is a highly adaptable medium-sized canid native to North America.

Coyote (Canis latrans) enduring a snow storm in Joshua Tree National Park - Photo by James L Rathbun
Coyote (Canis latrans) enduring a snow storm in Joshua Tree National Park – Photo by James L Rathbun

The binomial name Canis latrans translates to “barking dog,” reflecting its vocal nature. It belongs to the genus Canis, which includes wolves, dogs, and jackals. Approximately 19 subspecies are recognized, with variations in size and coloration across regions (e.g., larger northeastern forms often show some historical hybridization with wolves).

Classification

Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Carnivora
Family:Canidae
Genus:Canis
Species:C. latrans

Physical Description

Coyotes are smaller and more lightly built than gray wolves (Canis lupus), but larger than most foxes. Adults typically stand about 60 cm (24 inches) at the shoulder, measure 1–1.3 meters (3.3–4.3 feet) in total length (including a 30–40 cm bushy tail), and weigh 9–23 kg (20–50 pounds), with eastern populations often heavier.

The fur is long and coarse, usually grizzled buff, grayish-brown, or yellowish-gray on the upper parts, with whitish underparts, reddish tones on the legs, and a black-tipped tail. There is considerable variation; some individuals appear silver-gray or nearly black (melanistic forms are rare). Coyotes have pointed, erect ears, a slender muzzle, and a drooping bushy tail when running. They resemble a lean German Shepherd or collie but are distinguished by their narrower build and pointed features.

Behavior

Coyotes are highly intelligent, opportunistic, and adaptable. They are primarily nocturnal or crepuscular (active at dawn and dusk), though daytime activity occurs where undisturbed. They can reach speeds up to 65 km/h (40 mph) and jump distances of 4 meters.

Social organization varies: many live solitarily or in pairs, while others form small family groups (often a mated pair and pups). They maintain territories, especially during denning season. Coyotes are famous for their vocalizations, including yips, barks, howls, and “serenades” at night for communication, territory defense, or coordination.

As efficient hunters and omnivores, they primarily prey on small mammals (e.g., rodents, rabbits, hares), but also take larger prey like white-tailed deer (especially in winter or packs), birds, insects, and carrion. They readily consume fruits, berries, and vegetation when animal prey is scarce. Hunting often occurs alone or in pairs, though packs form seasonally for larger prey. Keen senses of smell, hearing, and vision aid in locating food.

Range and Distribution

Historically centered in the western Great Plains and arid regions of North America, coyotes have dramatically expanded since the early 20th century. Today, they occupy a vast range from northern Alaska and most of Canada southward through the United States, Mexico, and into Central America (at least to Panama and parts of Costa Rica). They are found coast-to-coast in the U.S. and Canada, absent only from the northernmost tundra and some extreme southern peninsulas.

This expansion includes forests, urban areas, agricultural lands, deserts, and riparian zones, making the coyote one of the most widespread carnivores in the Americas. Highest densities occur in the Great Plains and south-central U.S. The species is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN due to its adaptability and stable/increasing populations.

The coyote’s success stems from its behavioral flexibility, omnivorous diet, and ability to thrive alongside human activity, making it a classic example of ecological resilience in modern landscapes.