
A note from Bay Nature’s executive director, Wes Radez, as we launch into a new era.

East Bay Regional Park District is primed to remove the creosote-treated wood of Richmond’s Ferry Point Pier this year after two years of delays.

The death knell for the sooty crayfish probably sounded with the introduction of its cousin from the north.

“We’re in a place where we have more money than we have applications,” says Brandon Bates, assistant state conservationist with NRCS. And the agency really doesn’t want to have tosend this money back to Congress.

Death caps and Western destroying angels, both common in the Bay Area, thrive after rainfall, the East Bay park district warns.

The city’s draft urban forest plan has drawn more than 800 comments—many clamoring for more native trees.