Climate change and adaptation
February Newsletter 2022
Bianca Garza2022-04-12T13:44:07-07:00Safe Harbor Agreements, Clean Water Attacked, Live Presentation, New Board Member
Climate change and adaptation
Safe Harbor Agreements, Clean Water Attacked, Live Presentation, New Board Member
Recommendations on California's 30x30 strategy as it relates to natural lands and waters on the North Coast and adjacent regions.
January 2022 newsletter: California snowfall, collaborative fire resiliency, live presentation, drought update
Over four million acres burned in California in 2020, and 2021 is shaping up to be worse.
What the bees teach us is vital and invaluable for us as humans. No one is higher than the other. Even the queen is interdependent upon the workers and the drone for her survival. This is their story of how they work together and is a perfect example for us to see how their hive works and learn from this for the benefit of all beings.
On behalf of the Wiyot Tribe’s Natural Resources Department and the undersigned conservation, recreation, and other organizations, we are writing to provide our initial recommendations regarding the development of the state’s 30 by 30 strategy, especially as it relates to natural lands and waters on the North Coast and adjacent regions.
Medicine Lake Highlands & Aquifer Protection Campaign Program Update Through our large landscape campaigns that include Mount Shasta and the Medicine Lake Highlands, we are protecting our bioregion’s important contribution towards stabilizing the earth’s climate through intact ecosystems, securing large sources of California’s water supply, providing safe havens for biodiversity, recognizing Native American [...]
Today we are laboring under the combined effects of increased fuel loading, fire exclusion, climate change, and a community that exists largely within the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI).
Molly Brown: We have only seen our mountains a few times since lightning started the Nachez Fire to the northwest. It got much worse when the Carr Fire blew up. Now whatever way the wind blows, we get smoke.
Arielle Halpern: Every year, Mount Shasta plays host to migrating monarch butterflies. Not only are monarch butterflies one of a number of important native pollinator species, they are a species that has been given a great deal of attention in recent years because of their extreme decline due to habitat conversion, pesticide use, and climate change.