Program Highlights July 21-28

Jul 30, 2018

Program Highlights July 21-28

Jul 30, 2018

   
Madrone bark
Madrone bark

What's going on when manzanitas (Arctostaphylos sp) and Pacificmadrone (Arbutusmenziesii) peel their beautiful smooth red bark into cinnamon-like curls? Trees and shrubs with smooth bark lack a thick woody bark layer, so they need to employ alternative protective strategies. By self-exfoliating a thin layer, they shed insects, moss, lichen, and other organisms. Additionally, the red bark is very tannic and bitter, which most species find unpalatable.


New peer-reviewed research from UC Berkeley and The Greater Good Science Center indicates that the awe we feel in nature can dramatically reduce symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Researchers tracked psychological and physiological changes in war veterans and at-risk teens from underserved communities during white-water rafting trips and undergraduate students that kept a nature journal. Read about it, and links to the original studies here.  


Registration is now open for Cuesta College's California Naturalist course. The college is offering the course for the first time this fall, Sept. 21 - Nov. 9, on Fridays from 9am-3pm. Each Friday starts on campus with a classroom presentation, followed by a field trip. It's ideal for adults who want to strengthen their knowledge and understanding of California's natural history in a structured 8-week program. It's a great resume-builder for people seeking jobs in environmental fields. And it's a fun and enjoyable way to see many unique areas in San Luis Obispo County. More details at our course site.


 

ceeinlogo
CalNat is excited to announce our new formal partnership with the California Environmental Education Interagency Network (CEEIN)! CEEIN is a state government consortium of environmental educators. CEEIN serves to ensure important connections among members and partners to amplify efforts in environmental education and collaboration through ongoing communication, cooperation, and coordination, avoiding redundancy and waste, and facilitating the exchange of best practices. #CalNat is thrilled to contribute towards these efforts!

The recent 2017 CEEIN Memorandum of Understanding included UC Agriculture & Natural Resources as a new signatory. More information about CEEIN and its members and partners can be found at http://www.ceein.org.


Congrats to the newest #CalNat graduates from the Sagehen Creek Field Station! This week was jammed packed full of the latest research from UC Berkeley and UC Davis, covering local and Sierra geology, cutting edge forestry practices, creek entomology, conifer practice and a whole lot more. Students pledged to take their newfound knowledge back to their communities and give back through their capstone projects. The cherry on top was helping other experts from iNaturalist.orgAudubon California, and more during the fourth annual Sagehen Bioblitz. In just one morning, #CalNat grads and participants of the blitz collected almost 700 observations, helping to document the field station's biodiversity. Highlights of the observations included a new juniper species and horsetail species (Equisetum hymenale) for the basin. Even with scientists collecting data at Sagehen for 68 years, there's always something new to find - keep exploring, naturalists!


Sea star wasting disease, a marine pandemic that wiped out many West Coast sea stars, provided researchers at UC Merced? with a natural experiment in evolutionary survival. They found considerable changes to the sea star genomes following the pandemic by comparing the genomes of those alive just before the pandemic with survivors. Read about it here.


Monarch butterfly
From July 28 to August 5, 2018, citizens from Canada, the United States and Mexico are invited to participate in the second International Monarch Monitoring Blitz to help identify the monarch butterfly's breeding sites and provide a valuable snapshot of monarch population status across the monarch flyway. Visit the Monarch Larva Monitoring Project or the following link for details. This is a community science project and no special skill is needed- free comprehensive online training is available. Read more here.


 

A mountain lion family enjoy a stroll here at HREC! The Environmental Science, Policy, & Management (ESPM) - UC Berkeley Brashares lab is conducting a number ofstudies at The Hopland Research and Extension Center. One of the studies includes the use of trail cameras to better understand our wildlife populations and their movement and behavior. These amazing pictures show some of our largest inhabitants with their young... #mountainlion #nature Visit Ukiah Visit Mendocino CountyDestination Hopland UC Agriculture & Natural Resources

 

 


By Brook Gamble
Author - Community Education Specialist 3 (NorCal)