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June
1997 Therevidae Collecting Expedition to Sierra San Pedro Martir,
Baja California, Mexico
by
Michael E. Irwin
The
first week of June was hectic. I had only returned from a two-week
expedition to Guatemala on the last day of May. On June 4, I flew
out of Champaign, Illinois, to meet up with Ev and Marion Schlinger
in Santa Ynez, California. We used the Schlinger's 4X4 Jeep Grand
Cherokee for the trip to Baja California. The vehicle was packed
to the brim with malaise traps and other collecting and camping
gear, and by noon on June 5, Ev and I were headed south. We spent
the night in Brawley, California, and crossed the border into Mexico
on June 6. Our first destination was a desolate cattle ranch at
the eastern base of the Sierra San Pedro Martir just west of Santa
Clara. After considerable searching, the outwash of Diablo Canyon
was located and we positioned three malaise traps at water holes
in that wash. As the sun set, we gingerly picked our way along nonexistent
roads and through a huge watermelon patch to the sleepy town of
San Felipe where we spent the night.
The
next day was rather chaotic. We had made plans to cross the Baja
California peninsula at a small place called Valle de la Trinidad.
After several inquiries, we located the correct road across the
peninsula. We drove along this dirt track for some distance before
encountering a swarm of activity. Numerous, shiny, over-sized, souped-up
4X4's were jammed together and nearly cut off the road. Upon working
their way to the front of this metallic jumble, we were told that
this was the weekend of the Baja 500 car race and that the sliver
of a road we were hoping to traverse was part of the raceway. Our
only option was to reversed our tracks and take a diagonal paved
road to Ensenada. En route, we placed three malaise traps in unique
and promising habitats. Because the Baja 500 crowd had invaded Ensenada
in huge numbers, we were fortunate to locate a hotel with a vacant
room.
It
was on June 8 that we headed southward along the Pacific Ocean,
cut eastward at San Telmo, and finally got to our primary destination,
the Parque Nacional de Sierra
San Pedro Martir, a massive mountain range that divides Baja
California into an eastern sector (San Felipe side) and a western
sector (for about 200 km south of Ensenada). The highest peak in
the range is about 3,100 meters (10,200 feet). As we climbed upward,
we placed malaise traps at strategic localities that reflected the
transitional vegetation zones. The climb was gradual with several
successive ranges, each rising higher than the last. The vegetation
changed from sparse chaparral to dense ribbonwood cover to manzanita
thickets to oak woodland to mixed pine and finally pure Jeffrey
pine stands. We set up camp in a dry meadow at about 2,450 meters.
It froze every night but reached around 24° C. each afternoon.
Clouds began to accumulate in the afternoons but, fortunately, no
rain fell during the four days we camped in that meadow.
June
9 was spent placing malaise traps at strategic
waterholes at elevations above 2,300 m. This was a memorable
day because we discovered thousands of therevids at one of the higher
waterholes, most belonging to one species, Ozodiceromyia nanella.
That evening, the expedition organizers, Dr. Ernesto Franco, Department
of Crop and Soil Sciences, Michigan State University; Dr. Horacio
de la Cueva, Centro de Investigacion Cientifica y de Educacion Superior
de Ensenada (CICESE); and Dr. James Berry, state ecologist, Department
of Parks and Recreation, Sacramento, CA, greeted us after returning
from a two-day hike. They brought good news, that the collecting
and export permits for therevids had been granted and had arrived
from Mexico City.
The
morning of June 10 was spent with Jim, Ernesto, and Heracio. They
showed us magnificent vistas from
the observatory, views of rugged country that stretched eastward
across the Gulf of California and into Sonora and westward to the
Pacific Ocean and beyond. In the afternoon, Ernesto and Horacio
broke camp and headed to Ensenada. Meanwhile, we checked the malaise
traps each day and curated the material to the level possible in
the field.
On
June 11, we broke camp, and Ev and I began to pull down the malaise
traps while Jim drove to Ensenada. It was late in the afternoon
when we left the national park and, fortunately, we were able to
overnight at the Melin Guest Ranch, half way down the mountain towards
San Telmo. A warm shower was very welcomed that evening.
June
12 was a travel day. We took the dirt track from Colonet to Valle
de Trinidad, picked up the malaise trap we had placed there several
days earlier, went to Santa Clara and the Canyon del Diablo, removed
the malaise traps that were left in the wash there, then headed
toward Ensenada, gathering en route the two traps that were placed
along that road a week earlier. It was dark when we arrived.
The
morning of June 13 was spent curating much of the malaise trap material
gathered during the previous day's travel. After lunch, we headed
towards Tecate, crossed the border, and spent the night near Oceanside,
California. The next morning we continued north to Santa Ynez. The
trip lasted nine days. During that time, 17
different sites were sampled.
This
expedition resulted in a number of species not known to occur
in Baja California. Some material was collected dry and was pinned
while some was collected in 95% ethanol for molecular studies.
Fourteen therevid species were collected at those sites. They
are presented in a table
along with the vegetation zones and approximate elevation of the
collections. Note that the various species seem to partition the
environment, some occupying wider niches than others. This material
will play a critical role in determining the distribution, ecological
and evolutionary relationships among the lineages within this
family.
The
expedition received financial assistance from the Schlinger Foundation
and the National Science Foundation's Partnership for Enhancing
Expertise in Taxonomy (PEET) program. It also was aided by the
Centro de Investigacion Cientifica y de Educacion Superior de
Ensenada (CICESE), Baja California, Mexico, and its scientists,
Drs. Horacio de la Cueva and Ernesto Franco. Thanks is also given
to the Instituto Nacional de Ecologia, Direccion General de Vida
Silvestre, Secretaria de Medio Ambiente, Recursos Naturales y
Pesca of Mexico City for providing a permit to collect and study
Therevidae in Baja California. Our special thanks go to Jim Berry
who first suggested that we accompany him and the Mexican team
to the Sierra de San Pedro Martir.
Other
Collecting Trips & Expeditions
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