SF Gate reported

The project would devastate an iconic piece of scenery near Mammoth Lakes, advocates said

— Read on www.sfgate.com/california-parks/article/hot-creek-mine-mammoth-22259880.php

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 19, 2026

No Mow May, No Mow April, Low Mow Spring?

from the Xerces Society

Re-thinking the American lawn can take a variety of forms from mowing less often to converting lawn to a more diverse and natural landscape. If 10% of lawns in the US were replaced with pollinator-friendly native plants, we would add 4 million acres of pollinator habitat!

Learn more

SF Gate reported

A wildfire on the second-largest island in California’s Channel Islands National Park had burned over 10,000 acres Sunday night, destroying two historic structures and threatening rare plant species, with zero containment.

The Santa Rosa Island Fire was burning in the rugged and remote southern and eastern sides of 53,000-acre Santa Rosa Island. Eleven National Park Service employees were rescued from their housing Sunday with no injuries, the Santa Barbara County Fire Department said.

Read more at Nearly one-fifth of Calif. national park island has burned in human-caused fire

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 19, 2026

Urine tests confirm alcohol consumption in wild African chimps

UC Berkeley News reported

An analysis of 20 urine samples from chimpanzees in Uganda found byproducts of ethanol in at least 17 samples, indicating that apes ingest significant alcohol from the fermented fruit in their diet.

Read more at Urine tests confirm alcohol consumption in wild African chimps

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 18, 2026

Regional Parks Botanic Garden Photos 5/17/26

Photographed in the East Bay Regional Parks Botanic Garden in Tilden Park in Berkeley, CA on May 17, 2026.

The Regional Parks Botanic Garden is a California native plant garden. It is located within Tilden Park in the hills above Berkeley, California, It is a 10-acre garden includes many of the state’s rare and endangered plants and a place for visitors to wander among trees, shrubs, flowers, and grasses from plant communities throughout the state. There are free weekend and holiday tours.  Admission and parking are free. For more information about the garden visit the Friends of the Regional Parks Botanic Garden.

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Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 18, 2026

Park Powerline Threat to Anza-Borrego Foundation

Anza Borrego Foundation Reported

A massive new transmission line is being planned through the heart of Anza-Borrego Desert State Park — and right now, the public has a meaningful opportunity to help inform the process. The Golden Pacific Powerlink is a proposed 500-kilovolt (kV) high-voltage transmission line that would run approximately 135 miles from the Imperial Valley Substation in southern Imperial County to the border of San Diego and Orange Counties, near the decommissioned San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. If built along its currently a

Read on theabf.org/park-threat/

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 18, 2026

Preserving pollinators is good for health — and income

NPR reported

Nature clearly benefits human health. Research shows how trees clear the air, wetlands filter water and insects pollinate food.

But moving beyond these generalities to specifics is hard, says Thomas Timberlake, an ecologist at the University of York. Figuring out which parts of an ecosystem are most important, and how much they bolster the health of people and communities is difficult to quantify.

Read more Preserving pollinators is good for health — and income

The Guardian reported

After record losses last year, beekeepers report a warm winter has led to bees ‘waking up earlier’ this year

Read on www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/17/north-america-bees-early-swarm-season

Monga Bay reported

  • Fishers and scientists joined together in Indonesia for a 10-year study to protect whale sharks (Rhincodon typus).
  • The bagan fishers’ unique relationship with the endangered whale sharks enabled scientists to satellite tag the fish.
  • The data from the decade-long study revealed previously unknown migration routes, feeding grounds and a whale shark nursery.
  • The data will be used to help create a marine protected area designed for whale sharks.

Read moe at A 10-year whale shark satellite study helps create new protected area in Indonesia

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 16, 2026

Deer seen swimming in San Francisco Bay far from shore

SF Gate

U.S. Congressman Jared Huffman his daughter took the video while aboard a ferry.

Read on http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/swimming-deer-sf-bay-22261362.php

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 16, 2026

Tejon Ranch Upcoming Events

See All Upcoming Tejon Ranch Events at Events

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 16, 2026

Rainforests Can Bounce Back Much Faster Than Thought

DNYUZ reported

Scientists once thought it would take a century or more for animals to return to deforested land in the tropics. Now, new research has found ecosystems can recover in mere decades.

Read more Rainforests Can Bounce Back Much Faster Than Thought, Researchers Say – DNYUZ

The Race to Save Birds Challenge returns to raise over £13,000 for global conservation and help break another record of 8,023 bird species seen worldwide.
— Read on www.birdlife.org/news/2026/05/15/8023-bird-species-seen-on-record-breaking-day/

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 15, 2026

Anza-Borrego Foundation  Upcoming Events 

Anza-Borrego Foundation hosts a variety of events and educational programs, including hikes, botany walks, photography workshops, and more. See the schedule at  Events | Anza-Borrego Foundation

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 15, 2026

The Intelligence of Bird Nests

Bay Nature reported

Among life’s small, durable joys is the discovery of a bird’s nest: perhaps in the shape of a bowl, woven from grasses and stems with a skill that seems inexplicable. How could a creature with such a small brain, equipped only with beak, feet, and wings, create something so exquisite, so far beyond my own capacities

Read more he Intelligence of Bird Nests – Bay Nature

NBC Bay Area reported

Three people were hospitalized in Napa County over the weekend after eating mushrooms.

Read on www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/napa-mushrooms-poison-california-22257807.php

Discover

Learn how cockatoos figure out what’s safe to eat by watching each other, and how that knowledge moves through a flock in just days.

Read more This Wild Parrot Species Copies Its Peers to Figure Out What Food Is Safe to Eat | Discover Magazine

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 13, 2026

Sonoma Land Trust Events

Check out the latest events and news for Sonoma Land Trust at OUTINGS & EVENTS

Discover Wildlife 

The researchers discovered a hidden world of life among the roots of Chile’s ancient alerce trees. Here’s why that’s important.

The towering conifers of Chile’s southern rainforests do far more than shape the skyline. Research in Biodiversity and Conservationreveals that these ancient trees are hubs of hidden biodiversity, highlighting their crucial role in the forest ecosystem.

Read more Scientists looked beneath one of oldest trees on Earth. What they found is astounding

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 12, 2026

Photos from my garden 5/12/26

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The three high-school birders, dubbed The Pete Dunnelins, have one day to count as many bird species across the state of New Jersey as physically possible. Here’s what it takes.
— Read on www.npr.org/2026/05/12/nx-s1-5801539/world-series-of-birding-new-jersey

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 12, 2026

HOW TO CREATE A BIRD-SAFE BACKYARD

From Golden Gate Bird Alliance

As spring rolls in, bird migration ramps up, and birds begin flying north through one of themost important migration corridors, the Pacific Flyway. Each spring and fall, roughly 1 billion birds travel through this route, passing through our homes and making the greater San Francisco Bay Area an important stop along the way.

On their journey north, migrating shorebirds and waterfowl move through our neighborhoods and local environments each year. The San Francisco Bay Area is recognized as an international biodiversity hotspot, providing these migrating birds with critical habitats. As a stop along the Pacific Flyway, the greater Bay Area serves as a crucial resting point where birds can fuel up and prepare for the long journey ahead. However, as California continues to grow, urban development unintentionally harms birds by removing native plants and disrupting the local biodiversity they depend on year-round.

While your backyard may seem like an insignificant stop, creating a bird-friendly space can help rebuild our ecosystem and support local environments by providing food and shelter for migrating birds.

Read more How to Create a Bird-Safe Backyard – Golden Gate Bird Alliance

NPR reported

This flood-prone river mouth north of Seattle changed dramatically in October when the Stillaguamish Tribe removed two miles of earthen levee. The ridge of dirt kept the river and the tides from spreading onto nearby farmland. Once a giant excavator bit into the levee to breach it, the tribe welcomed tidewater onto the land for the first time in over a century.

“Before, it was a dairy operation, and now it’s a big tidal marsh,” Boyd, a Stillaguamish tribal member and fisheries manager, says while looking out at the new 230-acre wetland.

Read more To save salmon, a tribe near Seattle is flooding farmland : NPR

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 10, 2026

Anza-Borrego Desert Natural History Association Upcoming Events

See upcoming events calendar of hikes and programs at https://www.abdnha.org/calendar1.htm.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 10, 2026

This unexpected plant discovery could change how drugs are made

ScienceDaily reported

Plants make chemical weapons to protect themselves, and many of these compounds have become vital to human medicine. Researchers found that one powerful plant chemical is produced using a gene that looks surprisingly bacterial. This suggests plants reuse microbial tools to invent new chemistry. The insight could help scientists discover new drugs and produce them more sustainably.

Read on www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260203030546.htm

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 9, 2026

Job Opening: Land Steward Manger

Los Padres ForestWatch, one of the premier land and wildlife advocacy organizations along California’s central coast, is seeking a Land Stewardship Manager. The role is responsible for overseeing our 157-acre nature preserve and working with partners and volunteers to plan and execute habitat restoration and other field work throughout Los Padres National Forest. This full-time exempt position is based in Santa Barbara, California with a substantial amount of field work coupled with a flexible combination of remote and office work.

See the full job description and how to apply at https://forestwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/LPFW_LandSteward2026.pdf

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 9, 2026

Birds on the Move – YouTube

For World Migratory Bird Day check out this video on bird migration

The Boreal Forest is one of the last great intact forest systems on Earth and the heart of North America’s bird nursery. Spanning from Alaska to Newfoundland…
— Read on www.youtube.com/watch

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 9, 2026

Forest Service says don’t spread wildflowers

Your Central Valley reports

The National Forest Service says it’s not okay to spread wildflower seeds across the countryside, despite how good your intentions may be.

In a Thursday email to YourCentralValley.com, they explained that sowing the seeds could be dangerous to the local native plant community.

“[People] may want to help the land heal after a wildfire or feel compelled to supplement natives with more colorful flowers. The truth is that these practices are damaging to wildlands and impair the long-term diversity of native plants (and animals) that inhabit wildlands.”

Read more Forest Service says don’t spread wildflowers | CBS47 and KSEE24 | News from YourCentralValley.com, Fresno CA

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 8, 2026

Theodore Payne Foundation  Upcoming Events 

Theodore Payne Foundation inspires and educates Southern Californians about the beauty and ecological benefits of California native plant landscapes.We are located on 22 acres of canyon land in the northeast corner of the San Fernando Valley. Our full-service native plant nursery, seed room, book store, art gallery, demonstration gardens, and hiking trails are open to the public year round. We offer garden tours and classes for adults and families, as well as field trips to TPF and in-classroom programs for children. Friendly on-leash dogs are welcome and there is no admission charge!

See upcoming events at  Theodore Payne Foundation Events – Upcoming Activities and Tickets | Eventbrite

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | May 8, 2026

Want to Help Birds? Count Them!

from Audubon
This spring, help birds by participating in Climate Watch! Twice a year, we recruit volunteer bird lovers across the country to count species to track shifts in their range.

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