Wildlife after the Woolsey Fire: Research Images (Free lecture)
Fifty and Better Fall LectureSeries
The Woolsey Fire in 2018 remains the largest wildfire in the history of the Santa Monica Mountains by acreage. The National Park Service, the Santa Monica Mountains Fund, partner agencies and NPS volunteers have collaborated to study and investigate the fire's impacts and long-lasting effects on the ecosystem and its inhabitants. With the use of wildlife camera traps, biologists have gained a better sense of what lives, breathes and zooms through the Santa Monica Mountains and nearby mountain ranges.
The first part of the lecture will highlight the scope of this research, how researchers capture these wildlife images and get insight on the massive collaborative effort driven by park staff, partner agencies and volunteers to maintain this project. The second part of the lecture will highlight select images from the research data, including images of wildlife behavior rarely seen in person, photos of collared animals and site comparisons over the years.
Miroslava Munguia Ramos is the Woolsey Fire Recovery Project lead with the Santa Monica Mountains Fund, the official nonprofit partner of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. Now collaborating with the wildlife division, she works regularly with volunteers and citizen/community scientists to showcase some of the park's research and help make it more accessible to the public.
The Fifty and Better (FAB) program was designed for people 50 years of age and older, seeking intellectual stimulation through university-level courses — without the pressure of grades — for the sake of learning and social engagement.
Register by 3 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 10
Sponsored By
Fifty and BetterContact
Christina Tierney
fab@CalLutheran.edu
805-493-3290
Website