Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 2, 2020

Berkeley Photos 4/1/20

Photos taken in the N. Berkeley Flatlands on 4/1/20

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Bay Nature reports on the disparity of access to parks

As the statewide shelter-in-place order approaches its third week, it’s becoming increasingly clear that the decision to curtail access to open space is falling most heavily on low-income, densely populated urban communities with scant access to open space. Residents in wealthy hamlets around the region can still travel by foot or bike and access to millions of acres of open space.

Read full story Park Closures Aren’t Fair – But There’s No Easy Alternative – Bay Nature

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 2, 2020

Top FeederWatch Photos

Check out the top FeederWatch photos of 2019-2020 BirdSpotter 2019-20 Submissions – FeederWatch

The Nooshawk from Santa Barabara reports on video cams for a number of California Parks and sites

Even under new stay-home orders issued because of COVID-19, people don’t have to miss out on the wildflower bloom going on in Southern California.

Live webcams are broadcasting the bloom, bald eagles nesting on the Channel Islands, soothing views from an underwater kelp forest, and frolicking penguins and sea otters in Monterey.

Whether you’re looking for an outdoor escape or some citizen science for your kids, you can explore all of it from your couch. Here are some of the options.

Read more and see the cam links at  Wildflowers Are Blooming, Bald Eagles Nesting: How You Can Watch From Home | Coronavirus Crisis – Noozhawk.com

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 1, 2020

Updated Marin County Parks Closure Order

Marin County has updated its County Parks Closure Order as of March 31, 2020. Here are some excerpts. Click link below to see full order

All agencies and jurisdictions operating public outdoor recreation areas, including but not limited to parks, campgrounds, and open spaces (hereinafter, “Park Facilities”), within Marin County (the “County”) are hereby directed to cease all operations and services related to facilitating the public’s motorized access to all Park Facilities located within the County. This applies to all Park Facilities within the County, regardless of ownership. 4.

Individuals may continue to responsibly access those Park Facilities that are local to their residences and readily accessible by foot, bicycle or other non-motorized means for the purpose of engaging in Essential Activities as defined in the March 31 Order, including outdoor exercise. Such access of Park Facilities shall be exclusively by non-motorized means, except that disabled individuals with vehicles possessing current and validDisabled Person (DP) Parking Placards or DP License Plates may continue to access Park

Click to see the full  Updated Parks Closure Order, March 31, 2020 – 3.31-updated-parks-closure-order_-002-final-ada-check-accessible_0.pdf

The San Francisco Chronicle reports

San Mateo County restricts outdoor recreation to five miles within residents’ homes: The new shelter-in-place health order issued by San Mateo County mandates that outdoor recreation activity must take place within five miles of a person’s residence. Not all county orders were as explicit, but many parks and beaches across the region have closed parking lots to prevent vehicle access. San Francisco officials noted in an FAQ about the order that if people need to drive to go for a walk or run, they are going too far. “Our preference is that you really try to get your exercise closer to where you live if at all possible,” Mayor London Breed said on Wednesday during a town hall.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 1, 2020

Joshua Tree Closed

Effective Wednesday, April 1, 2020, Joshua Tree National Park will be closed to all park visitors until further notice. We will notify the public when we resume full operations and provide updates on our website https://www.nps.gov/jotr and social media channels.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 1, 2020

Death Valley Archaeological Find

Blowing sands have revealed the archaeological find of the decade! Buried for over 150 years, this treasure trove of paper left behind by the ’49ers came to the surface after last night’s wind storms. Archaeologists immediately carted it away “for study and conservation.”

Happy #AprilFools from Death Valley National Park!

A trunk full of toilet paper is partially buried by a sand dune.
Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 1, 2020

Berkeley Street Photos 3/31/20

 

Photos taken in the N. Berkeley Flatlands on 3/31/20

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Posted by: Sandy Steinman | April 1, 2020

More Live Nature Cams

A  large collection of nature cams by explore.org to help you get your wildlife fix while “sheltering in place

Explore Live Nature Cams – YouTube

Live Wildlife Cams

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 31, 2020

California State Parks Closes Vehicular Access at all State Parks

 

California State Parks today announced it is temporarily closing vehicle access at all 280 state parks to prevent the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19).

On Saturday, many state parks once again experienced visitation surges that made it impossible for the public to implement appropriate social/ physical distancing practices. During this pandemic disease, every person has a role to play in slowing down the spread of COVID-19. Protecting individuals, families and communities comes down to common sense.

As such, the public is reminded to adhere to the following guidance:

  • Stay home if you are sick.
  • Stay close to home when you get outdoors. This is not the time for a road trip to a destination park or beach.
  • Venture out only with people in your immediate household.
  • Walk around the neighborhood and enjoy neighborhood parks.
  • Always maintain a physical distance of 6 feet or more when recreating in the outdoors. If you cannot maintain physical distancing, leave the park.
  • Do not congregate in parks.

Read More…

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 31, 2020

Redwood National Parks At Home

For the millions of families now staying at home looking for educational and fun things to do, has FIVE ways you can bring the redwoods into your homeat

Redwood National and State Parks (NPS).

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 31, 2020

How you can help keep parks and trails open

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 31, 2020

GGAS’s Shelter-in-Place Activities for Kids!

Free Online Resources from Golden Gate Audubon Society

Got kids stuck at home due to shelter-in-place? Or do you have friends, relatives, neighbors with young kids at home? Here are some ideas for indoor and outdoor activities you can do with them! If you don’t have kids, please feel free to share these activities with those who do.

Enjoy these fun projects to learn about birds and nature at home and in your neighborhood, prepared by our Eco-Education team. These activities are geared primarily towards elementary school-aged children, and incorporate STEM (science-technology-engineering-math) and language arts skills, as well as direct observations of nature and outdoor activities. 

Activities are available in English and Spanish.

In English

Read more at GGAS’s Shelter-in-Place Activities for Kids!

 

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 30, 2020

Berkeley Street Photos 3/29/20

Photos takes while walking around North Berkeley Flatlands on March 29, 2020 during the Corona Pandemic.

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Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 30, 2020

Redwood National and State Parks Closure Updates

Redwood National and State Parks report

Community, we have #covid19 updates about some roads and parking areas that are now closed. This includes closing the Newton B. Drury Scenic Parkway. Check our website for full details. https://www.nps.gov/…/temporary-facilities-closure-advisory…

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 30, 2020

Midpeninsula Open Space District Photo Contest

Contest runs March 1, 2020 – May 31, 2020. We are seeking compelling digital images of nature, capturing the diversity of our open spaces.

Contest Categories

  • Wildlife
  • Plant life
  • Landscapes
  • People
  • Aspiring Photographers (students in grades 6-12)

One category per image, please.  A total of three (3) images can be entered in the contest.

Click read more for contest details and entry form

Read More…

The New York Times reports

Western monarch butterflies spend their winters in Pismo Beach and other sites on the central California coast. A few months later, they breed in the Central Valley and as far north and east as Idaho.

But where they go in between remains an open question.

Now, a group of researchers wants the public’s help to solve that mystery.

They would like anyone who spots a monarch north of Santa Barbara this spring to snap a quick picture. The researchers — from Washington State University, Tufts University, the nonprofit Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, and the University of California, Santa Cruz — need photographic evidence, a date and a location to confirm where the monarchs might be living. (Photos and information can be emailed to monarchmystery@wsu.edu or uploaded on the iNaturalist app.)

Read more at What’s Happening to the Monarch Butterfly Population? – The New York Times

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 29, 2020

Forest Service shuts down California campgrounds

 The U.S. Forest Service issued a universal order for the weekend that shut down roughly 750 campgrounds in California through April 30. Trailheads and most boat ramps have been left open at the service’s 19 national forests, which span roughly 20 million acres in the state.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 29, 2020

California State Park Updates

State Parks Safety Measures

Read More…

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 29, 2020

San Francisco Advises Stay in Your Neighborhood

SF advising residents to exercise in own neighborhoods: AlertSF, a text-based notification system for San Francisco, is advising people: “Get fresh air, but please stay in your neighborhood. If you have to drive to a walk or hike, it’s too far.” The alert fits with the guidance being given by the state’s park system, which has closed access to vehicular traffic.

This is probably a good idea for everyone. It is quite possible we will see more areas making similar recommendations. I have been walking in and photographing local neighborhoods since “shelter in place” has started. I also will temporarily stop posting wildflower reports except local sightings as I don’t want to encourage people to travel.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 29, 2020

Albany Photos

Photos taken on a walk along several streets in Albany, California

 

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University of Turku News Release

Dragonflies Are Efficient Predators that Consume Hundreds of Thousands of Insects in a Small Area

A study led by the University of Turku has found that small, fiercely predatory damselflies catch and eat hundreds of thousands of insects during a single summer – in an area surrounding just a single pond. In terms of weight, this equates to a total prey mass of just under a kilo. Dragonflies mostly catch different kinds of midges, but also large numbers of other insects.

Who keeps numbers of insect in check during the summer? This has been debated for some time, but a clear answer has remained elusive, as it has been difficult to monitor the numbers consumed by different insect predators. A new study now sheds light on the role of dragonflies that occur in large numbers.

Even in just a small area, populations of matchstick-sized damselflies that whiz around, consume hundreds and thousands of insects. Although the numbers of prey species individuals hatching in the area is as much as one hundred times the quantities being consumed by the damselflies, the quantity consumed is nevertheless significant because there are many other predators also preying on the same prey species.

The results of the novel study were obtained by combining multiple scientific methods. The prey species of the dragonflies and their relative quantities were assessed by examining prey DNA extracted from the faeces of damselflies, using a method known as metabarcoding. Population estimates of dragonflies were also obtained.

We investigated the numbers of dragonflies by marking them with a series of numbers on their wings, releasing them and then catching them again. By comparing the numbers of marked and unmarked dragonflies caught, we were able to estimate the total number of individuals in the area. The numbers of insects consumed, meanwhile, were estimated by covering certain areas with tent-like hatching traps and counting how many insects accumulated in them over a particular surface area, explains Senior Researcher Kari Kaunisto from the Biodiversity Unit of the University of Turku, who led the study.

Chironomids Are Damselflies’ Favourite Food

Dragonflies are among the apex predators of the insect world and are considered to be responsible for regulating the numbers of many other insect species. During the period studied, the insect species consumed the most by the damselflies were different chironomids.

In the 12-hectare area we studied, the catch mass for the four species of dragonflies was about 900 grams, equivalent to about 700,000 medium-sized midges. This equated to around 1% of the total mass of the midge populations in the area. This amount should not, however, be disregarded, as damselflies are by no means the only predators of midges and other insects. The area we are studying has an enormous number of other predators, including twenty other species of dragonfly, as well as birds and bats, explains Docent of Molecular Ecology Eero Vesterinen from the Biodiversity Unit of the University of Turku, who was responsible for the project’s DNA analyses.

Dragonflies have always fascinated people, as they are impressive insects and effective predators. Dragonflies are also particularly at risk because they are apex predators in natural ecosystems.

In this study, we focused on four small but locally abundant damselfly species from among the 62 dragonfly species found in Finland, Vesterinen adds.

The species studied were the common blue damselfly (Enallagma cyathigerum), the northern damselfly (Coenagrion hastulatum), the Irish damselfly (Coenagrion lunulatum), and the variable damselfly (Coenagrion pulchellum).

New Information on Natural Food Web Functions

Understanding the functioning of the food webs is particularly important now, when natural diversity is diminishing at an accelerating rate.

For the first time, our study examined the intensity of insect hunting in relation to the total number of insects being preyed on. The collapse of insect populations reduces the amount of food available to dragonflies, but it has not been possible to assess the impacts of predation by dragonflies without this accurate information on food chains, says Kaunisto.

Professor Tomas Roslin from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, who participated in the study, is really excited about the new approach and the interesting results of the study.

By combining several methods, the research reveals the overall impact of predation in nature. We succeeded in revealing both the wide range of insects preyed on by dragonflies and the significance of predation in relation to both individual prey species as well as the community as a whole, Roslin exclaims.

The research has just been published in the prestigious international Journal of Animal Ecology: Kaunisto K M, Roslin T, Forbes M R, Morrill A, Sääksjärvi I E, Puisto A I E, Lilley T M, Vesterinen E J. Threats from the air: damselfly predation on diverse prey taxa. https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1365-2656.13184

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 28, 2020

More Bay Area Park Closures

San Mateo County Parks announced Friday evening that it’s closing all parks as of 6 p.m. today in order to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Source: San Mateo County closes parks to prevent COVID-19 spread – SFGate

San Francisco’s Recreation and Park Department announced Thursday night that parking lots at the Marina Green, Ocean Beach and the Beach Chalet are closing.

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 28, 2020

Live Free Garden Tour Today and Tomorrow

Theodore Paynes is streaming a free on-line garden tour today and tomorrow.

A two-day self-guided, online journey through 42 of the most beautiful and inspiring private and public landscapes in Los Angeles County.

Here is the link to general information about their Tour:
Here is their link for how to use Zoom:

Source: Theodore Payne Native Plant Garden Tour

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 28, 2020

 Will planting millions of trees really save the planet? 

The BBC reports on how planting trees can impact climate change at  Climate change: Will planting millions of trees really save the planet? – BBC News

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 27, 2020

Today’s Berkeley Photos

Photos from the North Berkeley flatlands taken today.

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Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 27, 2020

Court Rules Fracking OK on Federal Land

Some more bad news. A federal judge today upheld the Trump administration’s decision to repeal an Obama-era rule that established standards for hydraulic fracking on federal land.

The Washington Post reports

Thousands are crowding into free national parks. And workers are terrified of coronavirus.

A park ranger at Grand Canyon National Park had 600 close contacts with visitors in a single day, greatly increasing his exposure to infection, according to a staff member at the attraction.

Read story at  Visitors are rushing to national parks amid employees’ concerns about coronavirus. – The Washington Post

Posted by: Sandy Steinman | March 27, 2020

Shelter-in-Place Birding 

Golden Gate Audubon a recent blog post by David Rice, author of Why We Bird Shelter-in-Place Birding – Golden Gate Audubon Society

Also check out the post May Your Shelter In Place Lift Up Your Birding Spirits – Golden Gate Audubon Society

I encourage you to feed your backyard birds. Birding your yard and neighborhood are vastly underrated and can be very rewarding. It is a chance to learn more about the behavior of your local birds. Here is an old article from Natural History Wandering from December 13, 2014 about Backyard Birding. Backyard Birding, Feeding & Safety

The Sierra Club Article Hope Is Also the Thing With Feathersis another resource with Four digital ways to learn about birds and connect with birders.

In North America, migratory birds are starting their journeys north to summer nesting and breeding grounds. But even if you’re quarantined, you can get your bird fix.

 

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