Saguaro National Park is in southern Arizona. Its 2 sections are on either side of the city of Tucson. The park is named for the large saguaro cactus, native to its desert environment. In the western Tucson Mountain District, Signal Hill Trail leads to petroglyphs of the ancient Hohokam people. In the eastern Rincon Mountain District, Cactus Forest Drive is a loop road with striking views of the desert landscape.
Motor Vehicle Use Map (MVUM) of Santa Catalina Ranger District in Coronado National Forest (NF) in Arizona. Published by the U.S. Forest Service (USFS).
Pima and Santa Cruz County Map of Arizona Surface Management Responsibility. Published by Arizona State Land Department and U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
https://www.nps.gov/sagu
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saguaro_National_Park
Saguaro National Park is in southern Arizona. Its 2 sections are on either side of the city of Tucson. The park is named for the large saguaro cactus, native to its desert environment. In the western Tucson Mountain District, Signal Hill Trail leads to petroglyphs of the ancient Hohokam people. In the eastern Rincon Mountain District, Cactus Forest Drive is a loop road with striking views of the desert landscape.
Tucson, Arizona is home to the nation's largest cacti. The giant saguaro is the universal symbol of the American west. These majestic plants, found only in a small portion of the United States, are protected by Saguaro National Park, to the east and west of the modern city of Tucson. Here you have a chance to see these enormous cacti, silhouetted by the beauty of a magnificent desert sunset.
Saguaro National Park has two districts separated by the city of Tucson. The address for the Saguaro National Park West District is 2700 N Kinney Rd. We do not recommend using mobile mapping applications to search for either district. Instead, please click the link to the directions page, determine which district you plan to visit, and enter that physical address into the mobile application.
Red Hills Visitor Center (West)
The Red Hills Visitor Center is a great place to learn about the park and start your visit to Saguaro National Park's West District. Views from the patio are spectacular and overlook the Red Hills and majestic Saguaro cactus forest nearby. Learn more about the unique geology of the Tucson Mountains, get great recommendations on how to get the most out of your time in the park, or explore the park bookstore. General information, park maps, and hiking guides are available on the southern patio 24/7.
Getting to the Tucson Mountain District from the City of Tucson Travel west on Speedway Boulevard. At the junction of Camino de Oeste, Speedway Boulevard will change names to Gates Pass Road. From this junction, drive 4 miles (6.5 kilometers) west on Gates Pass Road until it ends at Kinney Road (turn right on Kinney Road). Drive 3 miles (5 kilometers) north on Kinney Road to the Park entrance (entrance is on the right side of the road). Vehicles exceeding 12,000 pounds GVWR are prohibited on Gates Pass
Rincon Mountain Visitor Center (East)
At the visitor center, you will find the bookstore, information station, maps and restrooms. The visitor center is also the starting point for a scenic auto/bike tour around the Cactus Forest Loop Drive offering incredible views of the Rincon Mountains. There are several great hikes to do along the drive including the mile loop along the Freeman Homestead Trail to learn about homesteading in the desert.
Getting to the Rincon Mountain District from the City of Tucson Travel east on Broadway or Speedway Boulevard to Freeman Road (turn right on Freeman Road). Drive south on Freeman Road (4 miles [6.5 kilometers] from Speedway, 3 miles [5 kilometers] from Broadway) to Old Spanish Trail. Turn left on Old Spanish Trail. Drive .25 miles (.4 kilometers) southeast on Old Spanish Trail to the Park entrance on the left side of the road.
Douglas Spring
- 4,800 feet elevation - 3 campsites (6 people max per site) *This campground is hike in only!
General Camping Fee
8.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Senior Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Access Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Douglas Springs looking south
Horizontal image. A flat boulder sits in front of the camera, surrounded by dry grass and trees.
Looking south in the Douglas Springs Campground area.
Grass Shack
- 5,300 feet elevation - 3 campsites (6 people max per site) *This campground is hike in only!
General Camping Fee
8.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Senior Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Access Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Grass Shack Camp Site
Grass Shack Sign at arrival of Grass Shack Camp Site Area
Grass Shack is fairly flat and setting up camp is moderately easy in this area
Happy Valley Saddle
- 6,200 feet elevation - 3 campsites (6 people max per site) *This campground is hike in only!
General Camping Fee
8.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Senior Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Access Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Happy Valley Saddle Campground
A small rock lined fire ring with a sitting log on either side. Behind it is a forest of tall trees.
One of the campsites at Happy Valley Saddle
Juniper Basin
- 6,000 elevation - 3 campsites (6 people max per site) *This campground is hike in only!
General Camping Fee
8.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Senior Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Access Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Juniper Basin Campground
A rock lined fire ring, with two sitting logs on either side. Thin trees abound in the area.
One of the campsites at Juniper Basin
Manning Camp
- 8,000 feet elevation - 6 campsites (max 6 people per site) - water available year-round *This campground is hike in only!
General Camping Fee
8.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Senior Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Access Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Manning Camp
Manning Cabin in the Manning Camp area.
Manning Cabin built in 1905
Spud Rock Spring
- 7,400 - 3 campsites (6 people max per site) *This campground is hike in only!
General Camping Fee
8.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Senior Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Access Pass Holder Camping Fee
4.00
All campsites have the same fee, $8 per campsite with a 50% discount to those with a senior or access pass ($4). Each campsite has a maximum capacity of 6 people per group, for groups larger than 6 an additional campsite must be reserved and paid for.
Sud Rock Campground
A small fire ring in the lower left, with sitting logs around it. All around is a forest of trees.
One of the campsites around Spud Rock
Saguaro Flowers
Saguaro flowers
The flowering season in Saguaro National Park attracts visitors from all over the world.
Flowering Fishhook Pincushion Cactus
A flowering fishhook pincushion cactus
Wildflower season at Saguaro National Park is at it's peak in the month of MArch. The Pincushion cactus, however, blooms April through August.
Coyote Pups
Two coyote pups captured on a wilderness camera
Saguaro National Park has a vast variety of wildlife, and with the help of wilderness cameras, can be photographed to help with studies and for visitors to learn about animals only seen by chance.
Saguaro National Park Lighting Storm
Lightning strike captured on camera with saguaros in the background
Saguaro deaths are usually attributed to natural weather conditions and other natural phenomena. Specifically, lightning strikes have been known to strike saguaros due to the large amount of water stored within their fleshy tissue.
Weather at Saguaro National Park
Rare Sight of snow in Saguaro National Park East Visitor Center (Rincon Mountain District)
Saguaro National Park summers can be extremely hot with temperatures exceeding 105 degrees F, lows averaging 72 degrees F. Winters are mild warm days averaging 65 degrees F and cool nights averaging 40 degrees F. Snowfall is extremely rare in the area.
Group of Regal Horned Lizards
A group of Phrynosoma solare, or regal horned lizards.
Regal horned lizards are one of many reptiles in the park, who have adapted to living in the harsh desert environment. Information on how different species survive can be found on the park's website, visitor center, or through our many programs offered.
Wildland Fire Module Starts The Season With Critical Training
The Saguaro Wildland Fire Module starts the season with two weeks of critical training to focus on safety, skills, and standard operating procedures in preparation for the season ahead.
The Saguaro Wildland Fire Module conducts a briefing.
Herbicides Effective on Invasive Grass Changing the Fire Regime of the Sonoran Desert
Saguaro NP has been battling nonnative, invasive, and highly flammable buffelgrass since the early ‘90s. Control efforts include manually pulling plants and applying herbicide. Approximately 1/3 of the annual fire budget for control of invasives in the park goes to buffelgrass treatments and similar nonnative grasses. However, buffelgrass is expanding faster than control efforts can keep pace. Different strategies are being considered, including spraying with a helicopter.
A person in protective equipment sprays grass with herbicide.
Wildland Fire Module Provides Nationwide Response Support
The Saguaro Wildland Fire Module (WFM) participated in more than 20 projects/incidents within Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, and California in 2013. Assignments included a diversity of planned and unplanned fire events, mechanical fuel treatments, and more than 400 wildfire defensible space structure assessments. The Saguaro WFM consistently demonstrated versatility and leadership throughout the year.
It’s Alive! Biological Soil Crusts of the Sonoran and Chihuahuan Deserts
It might come as a surprise to learn that in the sublime expanses of the Sonoran and Chihuahuan deserts, some of the most interesting life around can be found in the dirt right in front of your feet! Biological soil crusts form a living groundcover that is the foundation of desert plant life.
Soil crust at White Sands National Monument
Saguaro Cactus: Sentinel of the Southwest
The saguaro cactus is the largest cactus in the U.S., commonly reaching 40 feet in height. The saguaro provides both food and shelter for a variety of desert species and plays an integral role in the culture of the Tohono O’odham people. It has been written that the saguaro can be ecologically connected to nearly every other organism in its range, including humans.
Saguaro cacti at Saguaro National Park
Maintaining the Role of Fire in the Rincon Mountains
Fire managers at Saguaro National Park conducted a prescribed burn on Mica Mountain in the Saguaro Wilderness of the Rincon Mountain District (Saguaro East) in May 2019.
Park Air Profiles - Saguaro National Park
Air quality profile for Saguaro National Park. Gives park-specific information about air quality and air pollution impacts for Saguaro NP as well as the studies and monitoring conducted for Saguaro NP.
Saguaro NP entrance sign and saguaro cacti
The Legacies of Latino Homesteaders
Learn how Latino Heritage Intern, Verónica Barreto, researched and discovered fascinating facts about Latino homesteaders. The Homestead Act of 1862 gave citizens of the world an opportunity to obtain Free Land! Discover how these homesteaders materialized their American Dream through the Homestead Act.
Saguaro National Park Recognized for Excellence in Fire Management
Saguaro National Park was honored with the Paul Gleason Memorial Keeper of the Flame Award at the National Park Service Intermountain Regional (IMR) Visitor and Resource Protection Leadership Training in Albuquerque, New Mexico on February 11, 2015.
Saguaro National Park Fire Management Officer accepts award
World War II Plane Crashes in National Parks
During WWII, more than 7,100 air crashes involved US Army Air Force (USAAF) aircraft occurred on American soil. Collectively these crashes resulted in the loss of more than 15,599 lives (Mireles 2006). Many of these military aircraft accidents occurred in remote, often mountainous, areas managed by the National Park Service.
plane crash at base of grassy hill
Interdisciplinary Personnel Provide Value Support for Wildland Fire Efforts Nationwide
Many of our interdisciplinary agency personnel Servicewide play a key role in supplementing agency fire staff and providing key skill sets for interagency wildland fire efforts nationwide. Personnel from all disciplines – fire management, resource management, visitor and resource protection, administration, facility management, even Superintendents – help support wildland fire activities throughout the year.
Three firefighters standing in a field looking into the smoke and sun from a wildfire.
Monitoring Upland Vegetation and Soils in the Sonoran Desert and Chihuahuan Desert Networks
Vegetation and soils are two of many natural resources monitored by the National Park Service (NPS) Division of Inventory & Monitoring (I&M). Learning about vegetation dynamics helps us to better understand the integrity of ecological processes, productivity trends, and ecosystem interactions that can otherwise be difficult to monitor. In NPS units of the American Southwest, three I&M networks monitor vegetation and soils using the scientific protocol described here.
Quadrat used for biological soil crust sampling
Wildland Fire in Douglas Fir: Western United States
Douglas fir is widely distributed throughout the western United States, as well as southern British Columbia and northern Mexico. Douglas fir is able to survive without fire, its abundantly-produced seeds are lightweight and winged, allowing the wind to carry them to new locations where seedlings can be established.
Close-up of Douglas fir bark and needles.
Spatial Fire Management Plan Makes Key Info More Easily Available
In May 2016, park and fire managers finalized Saguaro National Park’s Spatial Fire Management Plan (SFMP). The SFMP is a strategic plan that contain text based and spatially represented information.
firefighter walks through a smoky sunlight forest during a prescribed burn
Assessing Wildfire Hazard at Saguaro National Park
Saguaro NP is supporting development of a community wildfire protection plan (CWPP) for Pima County, AZ. The county is slightly larger than New Jersey and has nearly 1 million inhabitants, including a sizeable number who live in unincorporated areas. Initially, communities were developing separate CWPPs to identify and mitigate hazardous fuels and protect structures, but leaders felt that a unified effort would be more effective in addressing wildland fire potential.
Aerial Treatments Reduce Fire Fuels in the Wildland Urban Interface
Invasive, nonnative buffelgrass is spreading exponentially in the Sonoran Desert and creating unprecedented fuel loads in Saguaro NP. It is replacing native plants and converting a nearly fire-proof desert plant community into a highly flammable grass-scrubland. In 2014, the park began using a helicopter for herbicide application. Intensive monitoring is occurring as part of the plan to build fire-adapted human communities and maintain and restore resilient landscapes.
Wildland Fire: Volunteers Successfully Clear Large Patch of Buffelgrass
In March 2012, a nearly four-year quest to remove invasive buffelgrass from part of Saguaro NP ended with the clearing of the Freeman area, thanks to community volunteers. It took 464 people 2,843 person-hours to manually remove this solid 11-acre patch. Recently, buffelgrass has spread exponentially across southern AZ. It has the potential to convert the natural landscape of the park and surrounding areas, increasing competition with native species as well as wildfire risk.
Module Conducts Wildland-Urban Interface Projects Throughout the Intermountain Region
In 2013, the Saguaro Wildland Fire Module (WFM) managed multiple projects simultaneously in AZ, TX, and NM. WFMs are highly skilled and versatile fire crews that provide expertise in long-term planning, ignitions, holding, prescribed fire preparation and implementation support, hazardous fuels reduction, and fire effects monitoring. With their help, fire fulfills its natural or historic role to meet resource and management objectives and create fire-adapted communities.
A History of Saguaro Cactus Monitoring in Saguaro National Park, 1939-2007
Saguaro National Park was established in 1933 specifically to protect an impressive stand of many large saguaro cacti – the “Cactus Forest” – at the base of the Rincon Mountains east of Tucson, Arizona. However, concerns about the decline of the Cactus Forest have been expressed throughout the history of the park. As a result, research on saguaros in the park began as early as 1939 and continues to this day.
Two saguaro cacti, side by side
NPS Geodiversity Atlas—Saguaro National Park, Arizona
Each park-specific page in the NPS Geodiversity Atlas provides basic information on the significant geologic features and processes occurring in the park. Links to products from Baseline Geologic and Soil Resources Inventories provide access to maps and reports.
desert landscape
Saguaro National Park 2011 NPS-NGS BioBlitz!
Learn about Saguaro National Park's bioblitz in this article that is part of the Park Science special issue on biodiversity, 2014.
Students spell out "bioblitz" with their bodies at the top of a mountain.
Wildland Fire in Chaparral: California and Southwestern United States
Chaparral is a general term that applies to various types of brushland found in southern California and the southwestern U.S. This community contains the most flammable type of vegetation found in the United States.
Chaparral on steep rocky slopes.
Wildland Fire: Right Response, Right Time, Right Reasons
Fire managers evaluate each fire and determine the safest, most effective, and cost-efficient strategies to manage it. Article contrasts two recent lightning-ignited wildfires in Saguaro NP. Fire managers decided to manage the Deer Head fire to maintain a healthy forest and wildlife habitat. In contrast, they decided to fully suppress the Jackalope fire, which was burning approximately 0.1 mile from patches of invasive buffelgrass, which creates a heavy, continuous fuel load.
One Less Spark, One Less Wildfire Campaign Aims to Prevent Human-Caused Wildfires
Saguaro National Park has been working with local partners to bring the One Less Spark, One Less Wildfire campaign to southern Arizona to help educate the public about ways they can help prevent human-caused fires. The program focuses primarily on vehicle and homeowner equipment-caused fires, but supports the prevention of all human-caused fires. The campaign highlights lesser known but significant causes of wildfires, and seeks to create fire-adapted human communities.
Prescribed Burning Reduces Wildfire Fuels
In May 2010, Saguaro NP used prescribed fire to treat high-elevation ponderosa pine forest. This was the latest in a series of burns going back to 1996, objectives of which include decreasing fuels to reduce future fire severity, protecting habitat of the threatened Mexican spotted owl, and restoring natural ecosystem function. The forest is now closer to historical conditions, more resilient, and better able to withstand impacts of climate change.
Wildland Fire Science in the Classroom
On May 1, 2012, an NPS fire communication and education specialist presented six 50-minute programs for 8th-grade science classes, about 155 students total, at a junior high school in Tucson, Arizona. Topics included fire science and ecology, wildland fire management, prescribed fire, and fire careers. The program taught students about the need to restore and maintain resilient landscapes, create fire-adapted communities, and effectively respond to wildfire.
Native Peoples of the Sonoran Desert: The O'odham
The O'odham people (also known as the Pima) occupied a region spanning hundreds of square miles of what is now Arizona and Sonora.
group photo of O'odham people standing in front of mission church
Wildland Fire in Ponderosa Pine: Western United States
This forest community generally exists in areas with annual rainfall of 25 inches or less. Extensive pure stands of this forest type are found in the southwestern U.S., central Washington and Oregon, southern Idaho and the Black Hills of South Dakota.
Recently burned ponderosa pine forest.
Civilian Conservation Corps at Tumacácori
The CCC is one of the most well-remembered and highly regarded programs of the New Deal. Camp NM-1-N, located at Bandelier National Monument in New Mexico, made important contributions to Tumacácori’s visitor center.
men with truck and olive tree in courtyard garden
Susan Keys Receives Jeanie Harris Award
Susan Keys, the fire program management assistant at Saguaro National Park, has been selected as the recipient of the 2013 Jeanie Harris Award. The Jeanie Harris Award commemorates the legacy of service of Jeanie Harris, an Intermountain Region fire budget analyst. The award is given to a National Park Service (NPS) fire program management assistant or a fire budget analyst, at either the regional or park level.
Pollinators - Hummingbirds
Hummingbirds (family Trochilidae) are amazingly adapted pollinators, and they play an important role in pollination.
A flying hummingbird hovers next to a red flower
Pollinators - Lesser Long-nosed Bat
Get batty over Lesser Long-nose bats! With tongues as long as their bodies, lesser long-nosed bats (Leptonycteris yerbabuena) are unsung heroes in maintaining fragile desert ecosystems.
A researcher's gloved hand holds a brown Lesser Long-nose bat
Buffelgrass Management in Saguaro National Park
Saguaro National Park is located in the scenic southwest Sonoran Desert. Visitors from around the world are drawn to the park’s iconic southwestern landscape, characterized by a wide diversity of plants and animals including the giant saguaro cactus. Today, this desert is becoming increasingly threatened by buffelgrass (<em>Pennisetum ciliare</em>), a perennial grass native to Africa.
People manually removing buffelgrass
Resilient Landscapes Program Funding Helps Expand Interagency Efforts to Combat Southern Arizona Buffelgrass Invasion
In 2016, the Department of Interior expanded funding for the Southern Arizona Resilient Landscapes Collaborative. This project crosses agency boundaries to address the issue of buffelgrass, an exotic fire-adapted invasive grass, by removing the threat to fuel wildfires and restoring resilience to the biologically rich Sonoran Desert.
Dense stand of the invasive grass buffelgrass choking out native vegetation in Saguaro National Park
Inventory of Medium and Large Mammals at Saguaro National Park
Many visitors to national parks eagerly anticipate the chance to see large mammals such as bears, elk, and bighorn sheep. Yet surprisingly little is known about mammals in most parks. At Saguaro National Park, wildlife cameras were used for 10 years (1999-2008) to document the park’s medium and large mammals and where they occur.
A black bear photographed in the Rincon Mountains
Southwest River Environments
In the arid Southwest, water means life, and prehistorically, rivers were the lifelines of the people.
The Colorado River flowing through a canyon
Southern Basin and Range
The Southern Basin and Range is an extension of the Basin and Range Province centered on Nevada and the Great Basin and extending from southern Oregon to western Texas, and into northwest Mexico.
Mountains and Desert in Guadalupe Mountains National Park
“Pulse study” of the Madrona Pools, Saguaro National Park
In May 2003, Saguaro National Park sponsored a “pulse study” of the Madrona Ranger Station area in the park’s Rincon Mountain (east) District.
Madrona pools
Climate Monitoring in the Southern Plains, Sonoran Desert, and Chihuahuan Desert
Climate is one of many ecological indicators monitored by the National Park Service (NPS) Division of Inventory & Monitoring (I&M). Climate data help scientists to understand ecosystem processes and help to explain many of the patterns and trends observed in other natural-resource monitoring. In NPS units of the American Southwest, three I&M networks monitor climate using the scientific protocol described here.
Kayaking across a fl ooded parking lot, Chickasaw NRA, July 2007.
Saguaro Cactus Growth
The saguaro cactus is the signature plant of the Sonoran Desert. This stately giant is not only unique in appearance, it is also unique in its biology and ecological niche.
blooming saguaro
Lowland Leopard Frogs in Saguaro National Park
Saguaro National Park was established to protect the saguaro cactus, but the park also provides habitat for many unique animals. The lowland leopard frog (<em>Rana yavapaiensis</em>) is a native frog that depends on unique desert waters. It has declined in the desert Southwest and is considered a species of special conservation concern.
Lowland leopard frog
Levi Manning and Manning Cabin: Past and Present
The Manning Cabin sits in the Rincon Mountains in Saguaro National Park. The cabin belonged to Levi H. Manning, a successful businessman and one-term Mayor of Tucson. Manning had the cabin built in 1905 for use as a mountain summer home. The cabin was a retreat for his family from the heat of Tucson and a place where they could entertain friends. He was the first to build and own such a retreat in the mountains.
Manning Cabin, May 1986
Eusebio Francisco Kino
Padre Kino was a unique man and very much a part of the history of the American Southwest. His missionary work, maps, and explorations documented many cultures and wonders of the New World.
statue of mane on a horse
Saguaro Citizen Science
Every ten years, Saguaro National Park hosts a census of its namesake plants. The 2010 Saguaro Census assessed the population of saguaros, as well as the plants in 45 permanent study plots, to better understand the density of plant populations in the park's landscape. Volunteer citizen scientists assisted in field monitoring the plants.
Saguaros, cacti, and wildflowers
Plant Responses to Climate Change in the Sonoran Desert: Recent Research and Findings
Under the effects of climate change, the Sonoran Desert is expected to become hotter and drier. These changes are likely to have strong impacts on the abundance and distribution of the region's plant species. A recent study used long-term vegetation monitoring results across two national parks and two research sites to determine how Sonoran Desert plant species have responded to past climate variability.
Mesquite savanna
Tortillas de harina (Flour Tortillas)
What exactly are tortillas? How big are they? Of what are they made? How should they be made? These are questions that can spark much discussion and debate, even among tortilla makers themselves. The important thing is that none of this really matters - they are good, as you will be able to assert for yourself when you eat one made fresh by a Tumacácori demonstrator or in your own kitchen.
Tortilla demonstrator in front of Tumacácori mission church
Vegetation Mapping at Saguaro National Park
Vegetation maps tell park managers what’s growing where, and what kinds of habitat occur in a park. At Saguaro National Park, the Sonoran Desert Network mapped and classified 97 different vegetation associations from 2010 to 2018. Communities ranged from low-elevation creosote shrublands to mountaintop Douglas fir forests on the slopes of Rincon Peak.
Map with irregularly shaped color fields representing location of different vegetation associations
Series: The New Deal at Tumacácori
The grounds of Tumacácori protect a map of treasures made by men and women during the New Deal era of the 1930's. Will you find them all?
black and white photo of young men and truck in walled courtyard garden
Series: Defining the Southwest
The Southwest has a special place in the American imagination – one filled with canyon lands, cacti, roadrunners, perpetual desert heat, a glaring sun, and the unfolding of history in places like Tombstone and Santa Fe. In the American mind, the Southwest is a place without boundaries – a land with its own style and its own pace – a land that ultimately defies a single definition.
Maize agriculture is one component of a general cultural definition of the Southwest.
Series: Park Air Profiles
Clean air matters for national parks around the country.
Photo of clouds above the Grand Canyon, AZ
Saguaro Trail Crew Assists with Post-Fire Trail Damage at Tonto National Monument
The 2019 Woodbury fire impacted soil conditions creating unstable trails, increased flood hazard, and created greater risk of falling rocks or trees. In fall 2019, a trail crew from Saguaro National Park assisted Tonto National Monument mitigating trail damage that resulted from soil movement after the Woodbury Fire.
Left: damaged eroding trail with logs next to trail; Right: rebuilt trail with gabion in place.
Paleozoic Era
During the Paleozoic Era (541 to 252 million years ago), fish diversified and marine organisms were very abundant. In North America, the Paleozoic is characterized by multiple advances and retreats of shallow seas and repeated continental collisions that formed the Appalachian Mountains. Common Paleozoic fossils include trilobites and cephalopods such as squid, as well as insects and ferns. The greatest mass extinction in Earth's history ended this era.
fossil corals in a rock matrix
Series: Native Peoples of the Sonoran Desert
Who were the original inhabitants of the Sonoran desert and how did they adapt to the world-changing arrival of Spanish colonists?
folklórico dancers with a series of different flags including Arizona and Tohono O'odham
The Heliograph: 2020 Edition
The Heliograph is the newsletter of the Sonoran Desert Network and Desert Research Learning Center. This issue features stories on how we adapted our operations to minimize field work lost to the covid-19 pandemic, vegetation mapping at Saguaro NP, and communication improvements and opportunities for network parks. We also probe the minds of our interns and celebrate a high honor for our program manager.
Person wearing hat and face covering sits near a stream with a bucket and net.
Series: Intermountain Park Science 2021
Integrating Research and Resource Management in Intermountain National Parks
Group of National Park Service staff and volunteers standing in front of a desert canyon.
Climate Change and Other Factors Influencing the Saguaro Cactus
This article describes factors influencing the long-term dynamics of the saguaro cacti, a symbol of the desert southwest and namesake of Saguaro National Park. After decades of decline in some areas of the park, the saguaro population grew dramatically in the 1970s and 1980s, but establishment has been poor since then. We examine the influence of climate, tree-cutting, and other factors on changes in saguaro populations at the park.
top of a large cactus with blooming white flowers
The Heliograph: Summer 2021
The Heliograph is the newsletter of the Sonoran Desert Network and Desert Research Learning Center. This issue shares predictive tools and planning processes that can help park managers make proactive decisions in the face of climate change. We also explore some explanations for this spring's highly unusual saguaro bloom, celebrate our staff members, and provide updates on our monitoring projects.
Saguaro cactus with blooms all over its top
Saguaro Cacti at Saguaro National Park
The Saguaro cactus is an iconic and unmissable feature of the Sonoran Desert landscape. The cactus stands out in the landscape, growing tall with thick, arm-like branches that extend from the trunk. The Saguaro has evolved to survive the harsh environment, through periods of heat, drought, and the occasional winter frost. Native peoples have long used almost every part of the Saguaro for construction materials, tools, food, and ceremony.
Vertical Saguaro cacti grow scattered over a hillside, surrounded by other desert vegetation.
Changing Patterns of Water Availability May Change Vegetation Composition in US National Parks
Across the US, changes in water availability are altering which plants grow where. These changes are evident at a broad scale. But not all areas experience the same climate in the same way, even within the boundaries of a single national park. A new dataset gives park managers a valuable tool for understanding why vegetation has changed and how it might change in the future under different climate-change scenarios.
Green, orange, and dead grey junipers in red soil, mountains in background
Dare to Imagine: Elise Dillingham
Read about how Elise went from training to become a flight nurse for the US Air Force to engaging youth citizen scientists in Southwestern parks. This article is part of a National Park Foundation funded project called the Dare to Imagine project dedicated to highlighting women in parks who are breaking barriers and showing what a scientist looks like.
graphic of a young woman in the field. text reads: Elise Dillingham, biologist
The Extraordinary Saguaro Bloom of 2021: An Explanation
After an unseasonal bloom in fall 2020, saguaro flowers in May 2021 appeared down the length of main stems and arms, and—remarkably—even on small buds (“nubbins”). Theories abounded about what caused the phenomenon—but soil moisture appears to be an important key.
Blooms grow on the top and down the sides of mature saguaro arms
Older Caldera Complexes
The presence of voluminous ash-flow tuffs are one of the main markers for the presence of older caldera complexes. Subsequent erosion and/or volcanic activity can make their caldera walls hard to find. Most of the older caldera complexes in or near national park sites are very large and were of the resurgent type.
photo of hillside with layered rock outcrops
Calderas
Calderas are large collapse features that can be many miles in diameter. They form during especially large eruptions when the magma chamber is partially emptied, and the ground above it collapses into the momentary void. Crater Lake and Aniakchak Crater are calderas.
photo of oblique aerial view of a volcanic caldera with snow and ice
Series: Volcano Types
Volcanoes vary in size from small cinder cones that stand only a few hundred feet tall to the most massive mountains on earth.
photo of a volcanic mountain with snow and ice
Explosive Calderas
Explosive calderas result from violent eruptions of great quantities of silicic magmas. These eruptions produce massive eruption columns that extend into the stratosphere, and voluminous pyroclastic flows. Eruptions that produce explosive calderas generally range from 6 (Colossal) on the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) to 8 super eruptions (Apocalyptic).
digital oblique aerial image of a volcanic caldera
Pyroclastic Flows and Ignimbrites, and Pyroclastic Surges
Pyroclastic flows and surges are among the most awesome and most destructive of all volcanic phenomena. Pyroclastic flow deposits are found in at least 21 units of the National Park System.
photo of a cloud of ash and dust moving down a mountain side.
eDNA Inventories to Reveal Species Use of Sonoran Desert Network Springs
At nine southwestern parks, Sonoran Desert Network staff are performing environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling. By analyzing the genomes present in a water sample, eDNA sampling allows us to learn which species use a given area without the use of capture, hair snares, or cameras. The results of this inventory will help NPS staff to prioritize springs for monitoring and conservation.
A large tinaja set within bedrock walls
The Heliograph: Summer 2022
The Heliograph is the newsletter of the Sonoran Desert Network and Desert Research Learning Center. In this issue, find out how eDNA inventories may change what we thought we knew about SODN springs. Learn about the new technology that will improve our streams monitoring, and the lasting contributions of our IVIPs to projects across multiple networks. Get caught up on our latest reports and the status of ongoing projects, and find out what’s happening at the DRLC.
Two men at the edge of a marsh. One crouches. The other holds a long metal rod with a disc on top.
Climate and Water Monitoring at Saguaro National Park, Water Year 2021
At Saguaro National Park, iconic plants, desert wildlife, and park visitors all depend on reliable water sources. The Sonoran Desert Network monitors climate, groundwater, and springs at this park. Understanding changes in these closely linked factors helps managers make informed decisions affecting natural resources. Learn about our recent findings.
Storm clouds over desert landscape, saguaro in foreground.
Studying the Past and Predicting the Future Using Rat Nests
In the western United States, packrat middens are one of the best tools for reconstructing recent environments and climates. These accumulations of plant fragments, small vertebrate remains, rodent droppings, and other fossils can be preserved for more than 50,000 years. Packrat middens have been found in at least 41 National Park Service units.
Photo of a wood rat.
Series: Park Paleontology News - Vol. 14, No. 2, Fall 2022
All across the park system, scientists, rangers, and interpreters are engaged in the important work of studying, protecting, and sharing our rich fossil heritage. <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fossils/newsletters.htm">Park Paleontology news</a> provides a close up look at the important work of caring for these irreplaceable resources. <ul><li>Contribute to Park Paleontology News by contacting the <a href="https://www.nps.gov/common/utilities/sendmail/sendemail.cfm?o=5D8CD5B898DDBB8387BA1DBBFD02A8AE4FBD489F4FF88B9049&r=/subjects/geoscientistsinparks/photo-galleries.htm">newsletter editor</a></li><li>Learn more about <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fossils/">Fossils & Paleontology</a> </li><li>Celebrate <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fossilday/">National Fossil Day</a> with events across the nation</li></ul>
Photo of a person sitting while using a laboratory microscope.
Protecting and Restoring the Sonoran Desert Ecosystem in Saguaro National Park
The survival of Saguaro National Park’s namesake, the Saguaro cactus, is threatened by invasive buffelgrass. As a fire-tolerant plant, buffelgrass is not only threatening native species but also propelling more frequent, intense wildfires. The park is using Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding to treat new infestations before large quantities of seed spread downslope to form additional colonies.
Buffelgrass creating a blanket across the landscape surrounding saguaros.
Series: Geologic Time—Major Divisions and NPS Fossils
The National Park System contains a magnificent record of geologic time because rocks from each period of the geologic time scale are preserved in park landscapes. The geologic time scale is divided into four large periods of time—the Cenozoic Era, Mesozoic Era, Paleozoic Era, and The Precambrian.
photo of desert landscape with a petrified wood log on the surface
Guide to the Henry G. Peabody Photograph Collection
Finding aid for the Henry G. Peabody Collection
Guide to the Thomas J. Allen Photograph Collection
Finding aid for the Thomas J. Allen Photographs in the NPS History Collection.
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding ensures long-term success of native plants in Western U.S. national parks
Thanks to funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, NPS projects in the West hope to collect native seeds to aide in accelerating repairs to damage due to wildfire, mining, flood, or other causes.
A person reaches down into waist high, brown grasses to collect seeds
Wildlife Monitoring at Saguaro National Park's Tucson Mountain District: 2022
At National Park Service units across the Sonoran Desert and Apache Highlands, the Sonoran Desert Network is monitoring small and mid-sized mammals using remote wildlife camera traps. Find out what we're learning about wildlife occupancy at Saguaro National Park's Tucson Mountain District.
Grey fox walks down a vegetated hillside, licking its nose
NPS Barricades Abandoned Mines that Pose Danger for Wildlife and Visitors at Saguaro National Park
Native wildlife in Saguaro National Park are being entrapped in abandoned mines scattered throughout the vast wilderness of the Saguaro Forest. With funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL), park staff working with the Forest Service will soon close 15 mines to improve safety conditions for wildlife and park visitors and to restore the park landscape.
NPS Crew of four men with tools standing at a former mine site.
Outside Science (inside parks): Exploring the Great Outdoors
Meet the students that are making a difference by taking care of Saguaro National Park.
A sunset with saguaro cactus in silhoutte
Girl Scouts Use Girl Scout Cookie Boxes to Create National Park Designs
Have you ever considered how Girl Scout cookie boxes could be used for something other than the cookies themselves? In March of this year, six teams from the Girl Scouts of Northeast Texas in grades 6-12 partnered with local architects and engineers in Dallas Texas to compete in a design contest that transformed Girl Scout cookie boxes into National Park-themed structures.
A view of a national park made from Girl Scout cookie boxes
Making an Impact: Long-Term Monitoring of Natural Resources at Intermountain Region National Parks, 2021
Across the Intermountain Region, Inventory & Monitoring Division ecologists are helping to track the effects of climate change, provide baseline information for resource management, evaluate new technologies, and inspire the next generation of park stewards. This article highlights accomplishments achieved during fiscal year 2021.
A man looks through binoculars at sunrise.
Invasive Buffelgrass Poses Significant Threat to Sonoran Desert Habitats
Saguaro National Park was named after the iconic Saguaro cactus which is native to the Sonoran Desert and a symbol of the American Southwest. Visitors come to Saguaro National Park to experience the unique wildlife and culture the park has to offer. The Sonoran Desert is home to many native species like the Sonoran Desert tortoise, Gila monster, and javalina.
Sonoran Desert Tortoise eating prickly pear
Testing Treatments for Mitigating Climate-Change Effects on Adobe Structures in the National Parks
In the US Southwest, climate change is making it harder to preserve historic adobe structures for future generations. Using adobe test walls and rainshower simulators, staff at the Desert Research Learning Center are evaluating the potential for increased erosion, and testing the effectiveness of different treatments methods to protect against it. The results will help park managers tailor their preservation methods to better protect culturally valuable resources.
American flag viewed through the remains of an adobe doorway.
A Changing Bimodal Climate Zone Means Changing Vegetation in Western National Parks
When the climate changes enough, the vegetation communities growing in any given place will also change. Under an expanded bimodal climate zone, some plant communities in western national parks are more likely to change than others. National Park Service ecologists and partners investigated the future conditions that may force some of this change. Having this information can help park managers decide whether to resist, direct, or accept the change.
Dark storm clouds and rainbow over mountains and saguaros.
50 Nifty Finds #30: So Funny It Hurt
Humor is a form of commentary that often reveals serious truths. Cartoonists combine artistic talents with razor-sharp wits to shine light on political and social issues. In most cases, those artists are external observers. In the National Park Service (NPS), employees in the 1960s to 1980s drew cartoons, published in official newsletters, that provide unique insights into NPS organizational culture, working conditions, and employees' concerns—many of which still exist today.
A ranger showing a coloring book to a visitor saying that they care about children's education
Project Profile: Increase Native Seed Production for Intermountain Region Parks
The National Park Service will increase readily available supplies of genetically appropriate native seeds to support grassland, sagebrush, and southwestern desert restoration and climate adaptation in Intermountain Region parks.
a row of people collecting seeds from shrubs in a grassy field
Project Profile: Mitigate 15 mine hazards at Saguaro National Park
The National Park Service will partner with the US Forest Service to mitigate safety hazards of 15 features within four abandoned mine sites in the designated wilderness of Saguaro National Park.
trail crew in hard hats work among towering saguaro
Project Profile: Saguaro National Park Sonoran Desert Restoration
The National Park Service will restore and protect the Sonoran Desert Ecosystem from non-native plant species through aerial herbicide application and manual removal.
silhouettes of saguaros and ocotillos stand out against the bright sun
Project Profile: Expand Southwest Seed Partnership for Intermountain Region Parks
The National Park Service and organizations of the Southwest Seed Partnership will implement the National Seed Strategy and associated revegetation and ecosystem restoration efforts. The project focuses on native plant development and involves collecting, producing, cleaning, testing, tracking, and storing seeds from native species.
grasses and shrubs on a hillside
Signal Hill Petroglyphs
Just north of the Signal Hill picnic area is the largest petroglyph site in the Tucson Mountain District of Saguaro National Park. The Signal Hill Petroglyph Site consists of over 200 prehistoric Native American petroglyphs, including geometric, anthropomorphic, and animal figures.
Spiral petroglyph with mountains in the distance
Lesser Long-nosed Bat Research at Organ Pipe Cactus
Lesser long-nosed bats have been in scientific focus since the late 1900's. These unique animals face different obstacles in their changing environment, but researchers are at work in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, learning more about these bats. Through research here and throughout Central America, scientists are understanding better how to protect these animals and their environment.
A small black lesser long-nosed bat with a black face hovers above a waxy white saguaro flower.
Toad Research in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument
Research at Organ Pipe Cactus has seen large monsoons, drought, and the Sonoran Desert’s impact on different species of toad. The aim of this research is to understand which species are present, as well as the geographical reach of the chytrid fungus.
A large dark green-gray Sonoran Desert toad sits in a pool of water.
National Park Service project to build up 'workhorse' native seed stocks for major restoration and revegetation efforts
The National Park Service, with funds from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, will be able to build up stocks of the native workhorse plant species that can out compete invasive plant species so that native grasses and forbs can grow in previously disturbed areas.
a man kneels next to a bucket collecting seeds in a field
I Didn't Know That!: Biological Soil Crusts
You’ve heard people say to stay on the trail, but what does it matter in the desert? It’s just dirt... right? Wrong—it's alive! Discover what biological soil crusts are and why they're so important in dry environments.
biological soil crust
Ramadas of the Southwest
How did indigenous peoples of the Sonoran Desert stay cool? What is vernacular architecture and why is it relevant today? This article explores the history of ramada use by the Akimel O’odham and Tohono O’odham, describes the ramada built at the Desert Research Learning Center, and highlights the importance of constructing living spaces in harmony with the natural environment.
A man on top of a ladder drills into a wooden ramada frame; a second person holds his ladder steady.
50 Nifty Finds #39: An NPS Art Factory
Between 1938 and 1941 the National Park Service (NPS) Western Museum Laboratories (WML) created many iconic posters. Often described as “the WPA park posters,” they should be called “the WML posters.” Research reveals more designs than previously thought (including several previously unknown ones), reevaluates what is known about the artists, and argues that modern reproductions have made the designs more significant to NPS graphic identity today than they were in the past.
Poster with a purple El Capitan at Yosemite
The Devoted People behind Big Data in National Parks
Citizen science volunteers collect massive amounts of crucial scientific information. They gather it from sources as varied as oceans, mountainsides, and historic archives. Smart new tools are making their contributions even more powerful.
Two smiling women stand in front of a national park sign.
Desert Varnish
Ever wondered what those dark lines were on the rock walls of canyon country? These black, brown, and red streaks are called desert varnish.
streaks of black desert varnish on a red rock wall
Project Page: Amphibian and Garter Snake Recovery in Southwestern Parks
The American bullfrog is a great threat to aquatic ecosystems in the Southwest. They are voracious predators of aquatic animals and carry diseases that kill native species. We will implement three main actions in this project funded by the Inflation Reduction Act, Invasive Species Grant: bullfrog control, native species recovery and reintroduction, and development of early detection/rapid response protocols for bullfrogs.
One scientist crouching by water and another holding water sampling equipment on a long pole.
Saguaro Crochet Pattern
Crochet your own saguaro cactus!
A green crochet saguaro sits on the ground with desert scenery in the background.
Updated Species Database Will Help Boost Amphibian Conservation Across the National Park System
To steward amphibians effectively, managers need basic information about which species live in parks. But species lists need constant maintenance to remain accurate. Due to recent efforts, the National Park Service now has an up-to-date amphibian species checklist for almost 300 parks. This information can serve as the basis for innumerable conservation efforts across the nation.
A toad sits on red sand, looking into the camera.
Collaboration & Innovation For Ecosystem Restoration in the Southwest
The National Park Service is implementing the restoration of native amphibians in over 20 sensitive wetlands across eight southwestern national parks. However, there's a particular threat (that croaks) that requires the NPS and partners to collaborate and innovate to find solutions.
A bullfrog poking its head above a shallow pond, surrounded by twigs.
Climate and Water Monitoring at Saguaro National Park: Water Year 2022
Climate and water shape ecosystems and the services they provide, particularly in arid places like the Sonoran Desert. We monitor climate, groundwater, and 16 springs at the park to help managers protect park resources. Understanding how climate and water may be changing over time can also help explain changes in plants and animals on the park.
A pool of water in a bedrock-lined desert drainage.
2024 Director's Management and Administration Awards
The annual 2024 Director’s Management and Administration Awards recognize outstanding contributions to the advancement and service of management, administration, Information Technology, and Information Management by NPS employees. The Excellence Awards recognize employees who go beyond day-to-day duties to solve problems or create new opportunities. They do so with creative thinking and action.
a man wearing a collared gray shirt with a "J Loggins" name tag smiles for the camera
Dragonfly mercury studies uncover unexpected atmospheric delivery pathways
Read the abstract and get the link to a published paper on how dragonfly mercury studies uncover unexpected atmospheric delivery pathways: Janssen, S.E., C.J. Kotalik, J.J. Willacker, M.T. Tate, C. Flanagan Pritz, S.J. Nelson, D.P. Krabbenhoft, D. Walters, and C. Eagles-Smith. 2024. Geographic Drivers of Mercury Entry into Aquatic Foods Webs Revealed by Mercury Stable Isotopes in Dragonfly Larvae. Environmental Science & Technology. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.4c02436
close up of dragonfly larvae on white spoon
Mario Cardoza-Reyes: From Intern to NPS Employee
Meet Mario Cardoza-Reyes
A young individual wearing a ball cap outdoors near water
Community Volunteer Ambassadors
The primary duty of the Community Volunteers Ambassadors is to encourage local residents, particularly young people, to volunteer for climate-resilience-related projects in the park.
A young woman holds two fingers up in front of a cactus, seemingly doing the same thing
Slithering Towards Hope: Sidewinder Inventory Reveals Snake Status in Saguaro National Park
Sidewinder snakes are small creatures that face big threats. They play a crucial role in the desert ecosystem of Saguaro National Park in Arizona. Scientists conducted a species inventory to find out how rare this species is in the park, and if actions are needed to protect it.
An up-close view of a sidewinder's face showing its speckled brown eyes and dark nostrils.
Wildlife Monitoring at Saguaro National Park, Tucson Mountain District: 2023
The Sonoran Desert Network uses remote wildlife cameras to monitor mammals in the Tucson Mountain District of Saguaro National Park. In 2023, we deployed 59 wildlife cameras and collected 3,967 photos of mammals. We analyze the photos using single-season occupancy models to find out how mammals use the park and to understand the pressures that affect mammal distribution across the landscape.
A bristly, pig-like creature walking through a rocky desert area with a baby following close behind
Project Profile: Control Bullfrogs and Restore Native Amphibians to Protect Imperiled Wetlands of Southwestern Parks
The National Park Service is implementing the restoration of native amphibians in over 20 sensitive wetlands across eight southwestern national parks - Carlsbad Caverns National Park, Chiricahua National Monument, Coronado National Memorial, Fort Bowie National Historic Site, Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument, Montezuma Castle National Monument, Saguaro National Park, and Tuzigoot National Historical Park.
An American bullfrog closeup.
Citizen Science Data Inform Park Managers of Ecological Threats
National park visitors are using mobile-friendly platforms like iNaturalist to collect valuable data on biodiversity. Their observations help park managers monitor and respond to emerging threats, from stinknet in Saguaro National Park to the hemlock woolly adelgid in Acadia.
People on the shore smiling at the camera
Crawlies That Aren't Creepy
Join Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area in celebrating our very important volunteer, VIP Bob Stoltz! Bob recently received the President’s Volunteer Service Award for completing over 2000 volunteer service hours. During his 19 years of service, Bob has also volunteered at Yellowstone National Park and Saguaro National Park. He plans to continue to volunteer at Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area for his 20th year in 2025.
Man with a dark blue shirt and a tan flat brimmed hat holds up a tan certificate, smiling proudly.
“Cracking the code” on mercury bioaccumulation
Read the abstract and get the link to a published paper on a model to predict mercury risk park waterbodies: Kotalik, C.J. et al. 2025. Ecosystem drivers of freshwater mercury bioaccumulation are context-dependent: insights from continental-scale modeling. Environmental Science & Technology. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.4c07280
A person stands in a field looking at a bug through a magnifying lens.
Park News
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Saguaro Sentinel
Heading for 100: The Park Service and A Saguaro
TWO SEEDS ARE PLANT ED
1916. In the Sonoran Desert, far to the east of the sleepy
village of Tucson, a saguaro cactus seed fell to the ground
under a palo verde tree. Perhaps it slipped from the
beak of a gila woodpecker, or arrived in the droppings
of a nectar-feeding bat. Before the seed could dry up,
two rainstorms swept the desert within five days. Thus a
saguaro cactus was born in the shade of a nurse tree.
PREPARING FOR THE
PARK SERVICE CENTENNIAL!
1966
Welcome to Saguaro National Park!
You are visiting during a very special
time for us and the entire National
Park Service (NPS). From Acadia
National Park to Martin Luther King
Jr. National Historic Site; from Yellowstone National Park to César E.
Chávez National Monument, we
are joining over 400 National Park
units across the country to celebrate
the 100th anniversary of the NPS in
2016…and we’re starting now!
Meanwhile on the East Coast, in the busy city of Washington,
D.C., another seed was planted when Congress passed
and President Wilson signed the National Park Service Act.
This new law provided an agency to oversee 37 parks and
monuments scattered from Maine to Hawaii. Now there
would be a cadre of rangers and a visionary director -- Stephen
Mather -- to care for and develop these national treasures.
GROWING UP
These two birthdays became entwined in 1933. In March
of that year a group of Tucson citizens convinced outgoing President Herbert Hoover to proclaim Saguaro
National Monument, including the home of that young
saguaro cactus, now about ten inches high.
A saguaro growing outside the Rincon Mountain Visitor Center
was designated the Anniversary Saguaro in 1966 as the Park
Service, and the cactus, turned 50 years old. NPS fle photo.
At first, the new monument was administered by the U.S.
Forest Service, but a new Parks director, Horace Albright,
appealed to incoming President Franklin Roosevelt to
transfer all National Monuments and a grand collection
of historic areas to Park Service care in August of 1933.
This created the system of parklands that we know today.
The goal of the National Park Service
Centennial in 2016 is to “connect
with and create the next generation
of park visitors, supporters, and advocates”. Over the next few years,
we will be looking to engage more
youth, fnd greater connections to
the increasingly-urban community
of Tucson, and raise the visibility of
the park. We want to engage new
stewards that will help care for and
protect this place for generations to
come.
CHANGE, GROWTH, AND TH E FU TURE
1966. The saguaro. now fifteen feet tall, was carefully
transplanted at the Monument’s Rincon Mountain District
visitor center (a Tucson Mountain District 35 miles to
the west was added in 1961.) At the same time, the Park
Service celebrated its 50th anniversary with a program
of improvements to facilities called Mission 66. Visitors
found new exhibits inside and a centerpiece “Anniversary
Saguaro” outside.
As we approach the passage of another 50 years, the
saguaro, its surroundings, and the system have all grown.
Stop by to see the saguaro today. Then enjoy 140 square
miles of Saguaro National Park (re-named in 1994,)
east and west. And join with us all around the country
to celebrate 100 years of your National Park Service,
preserving the natural and cultural heritage of America
in over 400 sites, and in scores of regional and local
projects. Join the celebration -- Find Your Park!
Take a Hike
pg 3
The park and the entire Tucson area
have changed dramatically over the
last 100 years. Can you predict what
this area will look like in 2116? Will
the next generation still care about
national parks and wilderness areas?
What impacts will climate change
have on the American west’s iconic
saguaro cactus, the namesake of this
park? Will these places be valued
enough to ensure the continued
protection of our precious natural
and cultural resources?
The Anniversary Saguaro as it looks today, with the Park’s
Superintendent Darla Sidles. This cactus has grown three arms
and about twenty feet in the past ffty years. NPS photo.
Explore RMD pg 4
Are you visiting us for an hour or for a
couple of days? Are you with small children
or a super-athlete ready to test your endurance? No matter what your skill or ftness
level, we can suggest an adventure for you.
Take some time to explore the Rincon
Mountain District on the east side of
Tucson. There is a map and some helpful
advice about how to make the best use of
your time during your visit.
Use this hiking guide as your starting place,
but we always encourage you to check the
most recent trail conditions with our staff at
the visitor centers.
Drive the scenic Cactus Forest Loop. Hike
among the saguaros or up toward the
pines. You can even ride a mountain bike
to an historic ranching site.
Discover TMD pg 6
Discovering the Tucson Mountain Dis