Exploring Nature in the San Francisco Bay Area

When Summer Heat Arrives in March

In an unprecedented heat wave, we check in on the newts, the bears, the mussels, and all those flowers that just woke up for spring.

  • The Mount Diablo Buckwheat One Year Later

    The Mount Diablo Buckwheat One Year Later

    Botanists and nature lovers celebrated good news this spring as the Mount Diablo buckwheat (Eriogonum truncatum)—presumed extinct until its rediscovery in 2005—germinated and bloomed for a second year in the wild for and for the first time in carefully-tended greenhouse pots. Prior to its rediscovery in May 2005 by UC Berkeley graduate student Michael Park,…

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  • The Offshore Drilling Debate

    The Offshore Drilling Debate

    With our strong state Coastal Commission, major public support for ocean protection, and thousands of square miles protected in marine reserves, California’s bountiful coastal waters might seem amply protected from major industrial uses like offshore oil drilling. But a bill that would allow individual states to opt out of a ban on drilling on the…

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  • A Guide to Northern California Tidepooling

    A Guide to Northern California Tidepooling

    This story was updated on March 1, 2017. Fitzgerald Marine Reserve is home to some of the most diverse and accessible tidepools in the state, but there are many other good tidepooling destinations along California’s more than 1,000 miles of coastline. As a rule, tidepools are most exposed and best explored at low tide. Consult…

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  • Explore Ocean Upwelling Firsthand!

    Explore Ocean Upwelling Firsthand!

    To really see marine upwelling up close, you’d need to put on SCUBA gear and jump into the frigid Pacific to swim with the humpback whales, dolphins, sharks, and salmon that thrive off the upwelling-fueled food chain. But here are some less adventurous ways to get a little closer to the world under the waves:…

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  • Ano Nuevo and Farallones Seabird Nesting Update

    Ano Nuevo and Farallones Seabird Nesting Update

    As we reported in our July-September 2006 feature The Ups and Downs of Coastal Upwelling, last year’s delayed coastal upwelling event proved catastrophic to animals that depend on this annual cycle of marine nutrients, and indications when we went to press in early June didn’t bode well for this year either, particularly for sensitive species…

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  • Hit the Trail and Lend a Hand

    Hit the Trail and Lend a Hand

    It doesn’t take much to enjoy a well-built trail, but it takes a lot of elbow grease to actually build one. From the logistical nightmares of avoiding washouts, poison oak, and sensitive resources to the deceptively simple question of where a trail should lead, there is a lot to think about before the trail-blazing begins.…

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