Transitions can be hard, especially if you don’t have the proper space to move and change. This is true in life and nature. Point Blue is teaming up with partners to figure out what makes transition zones between marshes and upland around the San Francisco Bay healthy and useful in the face of climate change. Read on to learn more.
Science Tags: climate change
Learning About a Vital Ecosystem – From Below the Ground Up
Point Blue scientists get their hands in the dirt to take the pulse of rangeland ecosystem health.
Monitoring Tidal-Marsh Change
Bird studies show that ecosystem restoration works in San Francisco Bay – and is “climate-smart” as sea levels rise.
Breaking the Ice and Making Connections
A Point Blue ecologist ponders the parallel struggle between marshes of the SF Bay and the Antarctic Ocean
Re-imagining Ridgway’s Rails
The complexity and creativity of recovering a species in the San Francisco Bay
Early Bird Gets the Worm (or Brine Shrimp)?
This year marked the earliest Snowy Plover nesting season in 32 years of study
One Mile, Big Impact
Restoring the Upper Pajaro River corridor for climate change.
New Micro-technology Tracks the Secret Paths of Songbirds
Understanding migration routes can provide insights into the challenges songbirds face.
Schoolchildren Plant Pajaro Wildlife Corridor
Plantings are providing a way for wildlife to move between four mountain ranges.
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