
JOJOBA (Simmondsia chinensis)
Main sources: Dimmit, Mark,
"Simmondsiaceae (jojoba family)," in Steven Phillips and Patricia
Comus, eds., 2000, A Natural History of the Sonoran Desert, pp.
256-7, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum Press, Tucson; Epple, Ann, 1995,
A Field Guide to the Plants of Arizona, Helena, Montana: Fountain
Press, p. 137; Shreve, Forrest & Ira Wiggins, 1964, Vegetation
and Flora of the Sonoran Desert, Vol. 1, Palo Alto: Stanford University
Press;
Jojoba is a woody evergreen
shrub whose leaves are leathery, thick, grayish green in color,
and elliptical in shape, reaching up to 1 1/2" in length. Distinctively,
these leaves are vertically oriented (note the banner photo closeup
of a single large bush, above), an adaptation which lessens sun impact
at summer high noon, while exposing each leaf to the less extreme temperatures
of morning and evening (Dimmit, cited above). Evergreen shrubs are few
in the Sonoran Desert (Creosotebush is another example), their occurrence
reflecting the ability of the plant to conduct its leaf functions both
in cold months and in dry ones. (Nearly all desert evergreens are confined
to deserts having mild, rainy winters like our own Arizona Uplands.)
Jojoba
plants are dioecious -- female and male flowers occur on separate
plants -- and the male pollen buds may be seen in the two images stacked
to the right. These are pale-greenish in color, occurring in
a dense cluster. Blossoming times for Jojoba are extremely variable
(from December to July), depending on weather variations. the budding
images at right were taken in late February 2004, following a couple
of good winter rains. Click on the top image
to enlarge it.

Female
flowers are also tiny, and greenish yellow in color, eventually forming
hard-shelled, acorn-like seeds up to 1" long, which initially are
pale green (see left image).
(Click on the image at left to
enlarge it)

The seeds eventually ripen to a strong brown color, as
you can see in the image to the right. (Click
on the image to enlarge it: you will
then see, on one of these female plants, three of last year's nuts,
now dessicated -- one at the lower left, one in the center, and one
at upper right-center of the photograph.)
Jojoba nuts contain a liquid wax which is highly resistant
to spoilage and stable under high temperatures. As such, it is a very
high quality oil, used for industry and also in cosmetics. (Difficulties
in harvesting have limited its commercial development.)
This shrub may reach quite large sizes, occasionally more
than 7 feet tall. The photographs below give an indication of
various sizes: below left, a very large plant towers overhead
at the base of the Yellow Cliffs of Hot Springs Canyon; below middle,
two much more typical size bushes on a ridge above the Canyon; below
right, a young plant sprouts in the shadow of a larger Jojoba.
(Click on each image to enlarge it.)



Jojoba foliage is browsed by deer and javelina (and also
cows). Various rodents, rabbits, and large birds eat the nuts, but the
wax inside is largely indigestible (and acts as a laxative in humans).
According to Shreve & Wiggins (cited above), Jojoba
seems especially suited to the North slopes of granitic hills and upper
Bajadas of the Sonoran Desert, but in our particular area, we find it
mainly in the Galiuro Volcanics hills and rocky slopes near the Yellow
Cliffs of Hot Springs Canyon, where (especially on North-facing slopes)
it is in some places the dominant plant. (We also see lots of very small
plants here, a sign that this habitat is well suited for Jojoba.) For
example, looking down toward the stream from slopes above, most of the
plants below, in the foreground as well as the immediate adjacent
slopes further below, are Jojoba:

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