California won’t immediately list Joshua tree as threatened
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California won’t be listing the iconic western Joshua tree as a threatened species for now.
The California Fish and Game Commission was locked in a 2-2 vote Thursday on whether to list the tree under state Endangered Species Act. The tie vote doesn’t mean the tree won’t be listed.
Instead the commission will hear the issue again in October. Commissioners voted unanimously to gather more input from tribes over the next four months. They also directed the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to work on a conservation plan for the species.
Listing the species as threatened would make it harder to remove or kill the trees to make way for housing, solar fields or other development projects. About 40% of the state’s Joshua trees are on private land.