Protection The preserve was established October 31, 1994, with the enactment of the
California Desert Protection Act by the
United States Congress, which also established
Joshua Tree National Park and
Death Valley National Park. Previously, some lands contained within the preserve were protected as the East Mojave National Scenic Area, under the jurisdiction of the
Bureau of Land Management. The land was made a national preserve, not a
national park, in order to allow
hunting and
ranching to continue within its borders; desert protection activists felt that insisting on national park status would have eroded too much support for the bill, which was already controversial. Upon the preserve's establishment, Mary Martin was designated as its superintendent. Martin served from 1994 to 2005, when she was moved to
Lassen Volcanic National Park. Dennis Schramm then served from 2005 to 2010. Stephanie Dubois served from 2010 to 2014. Todd Suess served from 2014 to 2020, though he continues to work for the National Park Service as the Chief of Biological Resources. Mike Gauthier served from 2020 to 2023, and is now superintendent at Lake Mead National Recreation Area. The preserve is underfunded compared to other National Park Service units. In its first year, the
House Ways and Means Committee allocated it a budget of one dollar. Administrators responded to the lack of funding by choosing to make it "a park people could discover for themselves", with few developed facilities for visitors. The preserve continues to face challenges due to lack of funding. As of 2018, the preserve had a
deferred maintenance of $118,036,341. This has led to infrastructure disrepair which, in combination with the reckless driving by some visitors, has caused a significant threat to the
endangered desert tortoise population within the preserve. In addition to the tortoise's threatened population, the
prairie falcon and the
bighorn sheep are both at a risk within the preserve. A common solution provided to help save this population is to install wildlife crossings over the main roads within the preserve, though this is currently not possible with the funding provided. The preserve reported 424,864 visitors in 2024, although its visitation figures have been challenged due to the inclusion of through traffic.
2020 wildfire In August 2020, a
wildfire destroyed 1.3 million Joshua trees around Cima Dome. == Geology ==