Puerto Peñasco Municipality | |
Pushpin Label Position: | above |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Mexico |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Mexico |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Subdivision Name1: | Sonora |
Subdivision Type2: | Capital |
Subdivision Name2: | Puerto Peñasco |
Population As Of: | 2015 |
Population Total: | 62,177 [1] |
Timezone: | Mountain Standard Time |
Utc Offset: | -7 |
Timezone Dst: | No DST |
Utc Offset Dst: | -7 |
Puerto Peñasco Municipality is a municipality in the Mexican state of Sonora in north-western Mexico.[2] As of 2015, the municipality had a total population of 62,177 inhabitants.[1] The only locality with a significant population is the municipal seat, also named Puerto Peñasco, which contains almost 99% of the municipality's population.
Most of the municipality consists of empty stretches of the Gran Desierto de Altar (Altar Desert) adjacent to and south of the international border with the U.S. state of Arizona.
The municipality lies at the northern end of the Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez).
As municipal seat, the city of Puerto Peñasco has governing jurisdiction over 27 other named communities,[3] which cover a territory of .[4] The municipality has a total population of 62,177 inhabitants.[1] The municipality borders with the municipalities of San Luis Río Colorado Municipality, Plutarco Elías Calles Municipality, and Caborca Municipality. To its north-northwest is Yuma County, Arizona, in the United States, and to the south is the Gulf of California.[4]
The land is generally flat with the small mountain range of Sonoyta to the north and east of the area. Most of the territory is the Altar Desert, which extends north and east of the city, and a volcanic zone called Sierra El Pinacate.[4] [5] The municipality has 110 km of beaches.[6] Near the city are fields of sand dunes of the Altar Desert, which is one of the driest in the world.[4] ATVs and motocross are permitted on the sand dunes.[7] Most vegetation and animal life is typical for sandy deserts, scrub brush, reptiles (including the Gila monster) and small mammals.[4]
Farming and livestock is nearly non-existent due to the dry conditions. Some industry exists, associated with fishing such as canning and freezing. The commercial sector of the economy support 57% of the population selling food, clothes, pharmaceuticals and other items to both the local population and to tourists. The second most important economic sector is fishing, especially shrimp fishing.[4] Tourism drives most of the commercial sector. The municipality receives about 1,000 visitors a day, with about 85% coming from the U.S. state of Arizona.[6]
El Pinacate is a volcanic region and a biosphere reserve that covers 714,556.6 hectares which covers parts of the municipalities of Puerto Peñasco, San Luís Río Colorado and Plutarco Elías Calles. This area has been considered one of the most arid and inhospitable of the Sonoran Desert. In spite of this, the area contains a wide variety of wildlife and evidence of human habitation from ancient times, which has attracted the attention of both tourists and researchers. It contains 553 species of plants with cactuses such as saguaros, chollas and ocotillos dominating. With the rainy season, the area explodes with short-lived wildflowers. The area also contains 41 species of mammals, 237 species of birds, 45 species of reptiles, and four types of amphibians. It was declared a protected biosphere reserve by the Mexican government in 1993. The entrance to the biosphere park is located 50 km from the city of Puerto Peñasco. The nucleus of the biosphere consists of the Sierra el Pinacate, Adair Bay and Sierra del Rosario which cannot be developed under any circumstances. The main attraction for tourists is the volcanic craters. The major ones are named Badillo, Molina (or Trébol), McDougal (the largest) and Caravajales. In addition, there is the Grande Volcano which stands at 3,200 feet tall, and has a depth of 950 ft.[8]
San Jorge Island, also known as Bird Island, is really a small group of rocky outcroppings that are just above the surface of the sea about 40 km southeast of the city. The rocks are capped in white like the Alps, not with snow, but with the guano of innumerable sea birds such as seagulls and pelicans, which live here. Below the birds live approximately 3,000 sea lions very close to the water. It is the largest concentration of sea lions in Mexico. It is possible to kayak and/or snorkel here.[5]
Nine native cultures can be found in the municipality. The Guarijíos have a wide variety of crafts such as figures made with natural materials such as palm fronds and clay. They also make hats from a variety of natural fibers. The Mayos, who call themselves the Yoreme, have a rich oral tradition. Other groups include the Opatas, the Papagos, the Pimas, the Seris, the Yaquis, the Cucapa, and the Kikapu, all of whom are noted for basketmaking using desert plants.[9]
Municipal president | width=85px | Term | Political party | width=180px | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Víctor Estrella Bustamante[10] | 1951–1954 | ||||
Rodolfo Rogel Villa | 1954–1957 | PRI | |||
Julián Bustamante | 1957–1958 | PRI | |||
Rafael Godoy Cisneros | 1958–1960 | PRI | |||
Eduardo Ibarra | 1961–1964 | PRI | |||
Francisco Higuera Padilla | 1964–1967 | PRI | |||
Gerardo Portugal Coronado | 1967–1970 | PRI | |||
Valente Cornejo López | 1970–1973 | PRI | |||
Óscar Palacio Madueño | 1973–1976 | PRI | |||
Gilberto Castillo Montiel | 1976–1979 | PRI | |||
Fernando Pérez Barnett | 1979–1982 | PRI | |||
Alfredo López Aceves | 1982–1985 | PRI | |||
Gerardo Portugal Martínez | 1985–1988 | PRI | |||
Genaro Alfredo Gastélum Cinco | 1988–1991 | PRI | |||
Fernando Martínez Vázquez[11] | 1991–1994 | PRI | |||
Óscar F. Palacio Soto | 1994 | PRI | Acting municipal president | ||
Reyes Guadalupe Hernández Vega[12] | 1994–1997 | PRI | |||
Manuel Guillermo Flores Díaz[13] | 1997–2000 | ||||
José Rodrigo Vélez Acosta[14] | 2000–2003 | PRI | |||
Francisco Ramón Martínez González[15] [16] | 2003–2006 | PRI | |||
Heriberto Rentería Sánchez[17] [18] | 2006–2009 | Coalition "Alliance PRI Sonora–Panal" | |||
Alejandro Zepeda Munro[19] | 2009–2012 | PAN | |||
Gerardo Figueroa Zazueta[20] [21] | 2012–2015 | ||||
Ernesto Roger Munro, Jr.[22] [23] [24] | 2015–2018 | PAN | |||
Ernesto Roger Munro, Jr.[25] | 2018–2021 | Coalition "For Sonora to the Front" | |||
Jorge Iván Pivac Carrillo[26] | 2021– | PAN PRI PRD |