Planting in memory of MLK
January 23, 2013 by Alison Hawkes
What’s native plant restoration have to do with MLK Day? Maybe not a whole lot, unless you spend it on the MLK Regional Shoreline planting seven varieties of wetland species.
January 23, 2013 by Alison Hawkes
What’s native plant restoration have to do with MLK Day? Maybe not a whole lot, unless you spend it on the MLK Regional Shoreline planting seven varieties of wetland species.
December 19, 2012 by Claire Schoen
On the southern end of the San Francisco Bay, the Mexican-American community in the tiny hamlet of Alviso is realizing that wetlands may be needed to keep the sea at bay. VIDEO
October 11, 2012 by Dhyana Levey
In a polluted industrial area in southeast San Francisco, city agencies and naturalists are carving out a series of oases along the San Francisco Bay meant to bring back wildlife and visitors.
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
Wetlands and Water Resources, founded in 1996 by Stuart Siegel, Ph.D., provides a complete range of services for planning, design, implementation, and monitoring of restored and constructed wetland systems.
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
A national organization with more than 150,000 volunteers organized into about 400 chapters from Maine to Montana to Alaska. Also has expert staff at more than 30 offices nationwide, including one in Berkeley.
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
The central online connection to the agencies working on the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project, the largest tidal wetland restoration project on the West Coast.
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
Founded in 1961, Save The Bay is the oldest and largest organization working to protect, restore, and celebrate San Francisco Bay.
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
The Invasive Spartina Project is a coordinated regional effort among local, state and federal organizations dedicated to preserving California’s extraordinary coastal biological resources through the elimination of introduced species of Spartina (cordgrass).
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
The San Francisco Bay Joint Venture, established under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, brings together public and private agencies, conservation groups, development interests, and others to restore wetlands and wildlife habitat in San Francisco Bay watersheds and along the Pacific coasts of San Mateo, Marin and Sonoma counties.
July 20, 2012 by Bay Nature
With sites at Rush Ranch and China Camp, San Francisco Bay NERR is a partnership among NOAA, San Francisco State University, California State Parks, Solano Land Trust and the Bay Conservation and Development Commission.