Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 23, 2025

Trump Scraps Trail And Bike-Lane Grants Deemed ‘Hostile’ to Cars

MSN reported

President Donald Trump’s DOT just took a red pen to dozens of walk-and-bike projects across the country, and the rationale is as blunt as a bumper sticker: they’re not designed for cars. In a burst of letters sent this month, the department yanked previously awarded grants for trails, bike lanes, and street-safety fixes, arguing the plans would trim vehicle lanes, slow traffic, or “alter auto-centric configurations.”

Read on www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-scraps-trail-and-bike-lane-grants-deemed-hostile-to-cars/ar-AA1N9idP

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 23, 2025

Regional Park Botanic Garden Update

Access the garden through the Anza View Road gate.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 23, 2025

Calif. wildfires more severe on private logging land, study finds

SF Gate reported

The Trump administration wants to increase logging in forests to simultaneously boost timber production and reduce wildfire risk. Yet, a new study shows that industrial private land managed by timber companies is nearly 1.5 times more likely to experience high-severity wildfires compared with public land.

Read on www.sfgate.com/california-wildfires/article/calif-wildfires-high-severity-private-timber-land-21018295.php

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 22, 2025

Photos from the Mono Basin and Lundy Canyon 7/5/25

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Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 22, 2025

New giant-eyed octopus discovered in Australian waters

Earth.com reported

A new species of deep-sea octopus with enormous eyes. Opisthoteuthis carnarvonensis, the Carnarvon flapjack octopus, was found in Australia.

Read on www.earth.com/news/new-giant-eyed-octopus-discovered-opisthoteuthis-carnarvonensis/

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 22, 2025

New giant-eyed octopus discovered in Australian waters – Earth.com

Earth.com reported

A new species of deep-sea octopus with enormous eyes. Opisthoteuthis carnarvonensis, the Carnarvon flapjack octopus, was found in Australia.

Read on www.earth.com/news/new-giant-eyed-octopus-discovered-opisthoteuthis-carnarvonensis/

La Grada Online reported

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) has raised alarms and has requested citizen collaboration to find specimens of one of the most colorful snake species, the Farancia erytrogramma, more commonly known as the rainbow snake. We must go back to 2020 to talk about the last revival, so the authorities are asking for collaboration to find and preserve this endangered species. It is a non-venomous species that used to inhabit the Panhandle and the northern part of the Florida peninsula.

Read more and see photos at: Alert in Florida—authorities request urgent help to find the mysterious rainbow snake, missing since 2020 and on the brink of extinction

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 21, 2025

Photos from Yosemite High Country

Photos are from July 3, 4 and 12 taken along highway 120 through Yosemite and east to Lee Vining. Also includes Ellery Lake are and Nunatuk Nature Trail.

You can see larger, high quality versions of the photos  on Flickr at Yosemite Area Photos

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Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 21, 2025

Fall is Planting Season in California

Fall is here 🍂 and in California, that means planting season! Now is the time to visit your CNPS Chapter Fall Plant Sale for local native plants that are best suited to your region. Some are online, some are in person, some are both! Visit cnps.org/events and search by “plant sale” to find them. We’ll keep adding events as chapters make them available.🌱

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 21, 2025

New species of mouse opossum has a tail longer than its body

Earth.com reported

A peer-reviewed report has documented a new animal species – a small marsupial, found at 8,740 feet (2,660 meters) in the eastern Andes of Peru. Turns out this is not just a variant of something already known, but a new species in its own right.

Read more  New species of mouse opossum has a tail longer than its body – Earth.com

Smithsonian Magazine reported

Iberian harvester ant queens produce offspring of their own species and of the builder harvester ant, seemingly by cloning males

Read on at  These Ant Queens Seem to Defy Biology: They Lay Eggs That Hatch Into Another Species

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 20, 2025

Scientists just found the “master switch” for plant growth

ScienceDaily reported

Scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory have cracked open the secrets of plant stem cells, mapping key genetic regulators in maize and Arabidopsis. By using single-cell RNA sequencing, they created a gene expression atlas that identifies rare stem cell regulators, links them to crop size and productivity, and offers a new roadmap for breeding resilient, high-yield plants.

Read on www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/09/250915202831.htm

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 20, 2025

Bay Area Biology Internship

Love plants and the San Francisco Bay Area national parks?? There’s an internship for that! 🌳🌼🌱
Applications have opened for a spring-summer 2026 Scientists in Parks BIOLOGY ASSISTANT position with the San Francisco Bay Area Inventory & Monitoring Network Plant Community Monitoring team!
👉👉👉 Learn more and APPLY TODAY at bit.ly/sfbay2025plants! This position will close after 60 applications or by October 12th, whichever comes first.
Looking for something a little different? Find science internships in national parks across the country at go.nps.gov/sip
Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 20, 2025

 Marin County Parks Upcoming Events

See the calendar of upcoming free events for Marin County Parks  Events Calendar – Marin County Parks

NPR writes about Plant-Fungal relatioinships

Over the past few decades, scientists have come to increasingly appreciate plant intelligence.

Plants communicate and alert each other to predators. They mount defenses, such as releasing toxic or unpleasant chemicals when animals munch on their greenery, and learn to ignore harmless stimuli. They may even form memories.Some 70 to 90% of plants engage in symbiotic exchanges like those between mycorrhizae and their plant partners.

Read story at  Fungi and plants have something to teach humans about global trade and cooperation : Planet Money : NPR

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 19, 2025

Job Openings

Click on each for more details and application process

San Clemente Island Seasonal Habitat Restoration Technician

San Clemente Island Invasive Plant and Botany Project Manager

San Clemente Island Seasonal Invasive Plants Technicians (2)

 

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 19, 2025

Death Valley Road Closures

from Death Valley National Park

Storm Impacts in Death Valley National Park
The remnants of Tropical Storm Mario brought 0.6 inches of rain to Furnace Creek on the night of September 18—about one-quarter of the park’s average annual rainfall in just a few hours.
In a desert like Death Valley, even small amounts of rain can trigger flash flooding. The park’s rocky, steep terrain causes water to run off quickly, creating fast-moving flows of mud, rocks and debris. These floods have covered some roads and have eroded road shoulders, making travel hazardous.
🛑 Roads currently closed due to storm damage:

Read More…

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 19, 2025

Regional Parks Botanic Garden Photos 9/18/25

Photographed in the East Bay Regional Parks Botanic Garden in Tilden Park in Berkeley, CA on September 18, 2025.

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 | September 19, 2025

Spectral bats lead social lives with hugs, play, and food sharing 

Earth.com reported

In the depths of Costa Rica’s tropical forests, a surprising story has emerged. Spectral bats – the world’s largest carnivorous bats – are not the solitary hunters many once believed them to be. Instead, these creatures lead richly social lives, filled with affection, cooperation, and care.

Read more at Spectral bats lead social lives with hugs, play, and food sharing – Earth.com

ScienceDirect reports

Highlights
•Honeybee temporal removal on a small island increased nectar and pollen availability
•Without honeybees, wild bees increased activity and changed hourly patterns
•Without honeybees, wild bees increased nectar intake and optimized search time
•Wild bee abundance declined ∼80% in 4 years, supporting trophic competition

Read on www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982225002623

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 18, 2025

New plant species discovered has flowers with tiny “horns” 

Earth.com reported

New genus and species of plant discovered, Ovicula biradiata, is called a “woolly devil” because it appears to have tiny horns.

Read more and see photos at  New plant species discovered has flowers with tiny “horns” – Earth.com

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 18, 2025

Taft Gardens & Nature Preserve Events

See upcoming events at Taft Gardens and Nature Preserve at Events — Taft Gardens & Nature Preserve

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 18, 2025

New Family of Black Bears in the Santa Monica Mountains

Los Padres ForestWatch reported

The Santa Monica Mountains have a new mama bear, and she’s now roaming the Topanga Canyon area with her three cubs. It’s the first family of bears in these mountains in at least a quarter-century.

Read more  Meet Your New Neighbors in the Santa Monica Mountains – Los Padres ForestWatch

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 18, 2025

Why Insects Are More Sensitive Than They Seem

Pocket reported

For decades, the idea that insects have feelings was considered a heretical joke – but as the evidence piles up, scientists are rapidly reconsidering.

Read more at Why Insects Are More Sensitive Than They Seem

The Good News Network reported

…a second national jaguar population census which found this charismatic cat is actually increasing in numbers across the country, reaching around 5,300 animals.

Read article at  Researchers Blown Away After Finding Jaguar Population up 30% Across Mexico

Arab News reported

Two endangered Eurasian griffon vultures, satellite tagged and released by Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve, have traveled 245,632 kilometres, through eight countries, in the past 29 months.

Read more: Eurasian griffon vultures’ 245,000km journey underlines need for conservation

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 17, 2025

Rare and beautiful bird rediscovered after 100 years of no sightings 

Earth.com writes about the Endangered night parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis) is one of the rarest birds in Australia, with fewer than 20 known alive today. Read about how they were recently found at  Rare and beautiful bird rediscovered after 100 years of no sightings – Earth.com

MSN reported

On a rainy day in southern China, a 1-foot-long creature emerged from its hiding place and worked its way along a mountain road. Something about the iridescent animal caught the attention of locals – and for good reason.

It turned out to be a first-of-its-kind record.

A team of scientists visited southern Yunnan Province, near the China-Vietnam border, in April as part of a project to survey the region’s amphibians and reptiles, according to a study published Aug. 22 in the peer-reviewed Biodiversity Data Journal.

During the researchers’ visit, locals caught an unfamiliar-looking snake and showed it to the team, the study said. Researchers took a closer look at it, analyzed its DNA and identified it as a Zugs’ odd-scaled snake, or Achalinus zugorum.

Zugs’ odd-scaled snakes are a “poorly-known” and “enigmatic species” found in northern Vietnam and described as a new species in 2020, researchers said. Except for a single male snake, “no other specimens of this species have been reported so far.”

Read more and see photos at  Footlong creature found on rainy road in China in first-of-its-kind sighting

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 16, 2025

Woodrats reveal how herbivores survive eating toxic plants

Earth.com

Plants protect themselves. They often produce chemicals that discourage animals from feeding on them. For herbivores, survival means eating enough food while avoiding dangerous toxins. This delicate balance shapes how animals forage and adapt to their environment.

The challenge is not only about survival in the present moment. It is also about long-term adaptation. Animals that fail to strike this balance risk starvation or poisoning, while successful ones pass on their strategies to future generations.

Read on www.earth.com/news/woodrats-reveal-how-herbivores-survive-eating-toxic-plants/

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | September 16, 2025

E. Bay Regional Parks Looking for a Web Designer

The East Bay Regional Park District is on the lookout for a talented website design professional or agency to breathe new life into our public-facing website. If you have a passion for creating engaging online experiences, we want to hear from you! Check out the full Request for Proposals https://www.ebparks.org/public-info/bids-rfps. Don’t miss your chance—submit your proposal by October 6, 2025!

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