- (Focus Area) Environment
- Author: Maggie Swanson
My name is Maggie (she/her), HREC's newest GrizzlyCorps fellow, alongside Brenda. Under the mentorship of Hannah Bird and John Bailey, I will be supporting the REC in land management projects and youth education programs.
I hail from Milton, Massachusetts, a town just south of Boston. I lived in New England through my early twenties, graduating from Middlebury College in Vermont in February, 2023 with a degree in Conservation Biology and minor in Computer Science. I spent the summers tending a local organic farm; monitoring endangered shore birds; and diving for coral reef research in the Caribbean in an effort to immersively understand our planet's varied ecosystems. After graduation, I forged my way West and hiked the Pacific Crest Trail to witness our changing climate in a region defined by a scarred biosphere. I encountered unprecedented snowfall, heatwaves, and wildfire across the 2,650-mile trail which cemented an interest in working toward rural climate resiliency in California. Last spring, I returned to Marin County and studied Spotted Owls with Point Blue Conservation Science and am filled with gratitude to be back working in and among Hopland's beautiful oak woodlands here at HREC.
I am most excited to work alongside life-long learners: preschoolers bottle-feeding lambs for the first time; post-docs investigating biological and ecological data years in the making; and tribal leaders who have stewarded this land since time immemorial. Cheers to embarking on a new service year!
- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
YSP is a six-week summer residential program that introduces several dozen high-achieving high school students to original research within the fields of biological, agricultural, environmental, or the natural sciences.
The lab of nematologist Shahid Siddique, associate professor, UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, mentored Anderson Van Wang, a 17-year-old senior at California City High School, Kern County, and Mason Walline, now 18, and a senior at Harvard-Westlake School, Los Angeles.
Anderson worked with doctoral student Veronica Casey of the Siddique lab to investigate the effects of bacterial supernatant to plant parasitic nematodes. Walline worked with Ching-Jung Lin, a doctoral student in the Siddique lab and the lab of Professor Gitta Coaker, Department to Plant Pathology, to transiently express nematode proteins in the plant system.
Also mentoring them were Siddique and lab members Bardo Castro Esparza, a postdoctoral fellow; and Alison Blundell, a doctoral candidate.
Each scholar receives five units of University Group Study Credit. All work is graded. Not only do they engage in university-level course work, attend lectures, and work on their projects, but they experience “the climate and culture of living and learning on a university campus,” according to YSP director Megan Bettis.
Mason won second-place honors in the research competition, the "YSP Summer Slam" (Elevator Pitch or short-version), competing with some 35 other students. His topic: “Advancing Transient Nematode Peptide Expression: A Pathway to Co-Immunoprecipitation Optimization." Said Lin: "He delivered a compelling two-minute presentation with a single slide. His expertise and professionalism were evident, and he was awarded second-place among the six finalists."
Neither plans a career as a nematologist, but what an amazing program and what an amazing experience.
“Working in Dr. Shahid Siddique's lab was an absolutely amazing experience," Anderson said.
“The lab environment was very high energy and upbeat," said Mason. "I'm so glad I was a temporary part of such a strong and inclusive community.”
And they learned a lot about nematodes.
Siddique defines plant-parasitic nematodes as "destructive pests causing losses of billions of dollars annually. Economic, health, and environmental considerations make natural host plant resistance a preferred strategy for nematode control, but there are limitations to this approach. In many cases, the resistance conferred by resistance genes is partial, and some of the nematodes are able to survive. Similarly, nematode resistance genes are often effective against only one or a few species, whereas plants are exposed to several pathogens in the field. Another concern is the emergence of pathotypes that can overcome resistance. In view of all these limitations, it is important to identify additional mechanisms and tools that can be used to develop novel and sustainable approaches to the management of nematodes."
The 2025 YSP summer program is set June 22-Aug. 2, with applications opening Jan. 15. High school students can apply at https://ysp-app.ucdavis.edu/.
- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
Wings up! Let's go!
The monarch fall migration is underway.
"Unlike most other insects in temperate climates, monarch butterflies cannot survive a long cold winter. Instead, they spend the winter in roosting spots," explains Monarch Watch. "Monarchs west of the Rocky Mountains travel to small groves of trees along the California coast. Those east of the Rocky Mountains fly farther south to the forests high in the mountains of Mexico. The monarch's migration is driven by seasonal changes. Daylength and temperature changes influence the movement of the monarch."
"In all the world, no butterflies migrate like the monarchs of North America. They travel much farther than all other tropical butterflies, up to three thousand miles. They are the only butterflies to make such a long, two-way migration every year. Amazingly, they fly in masses to the same winter roosts, often to the exact same trees. Their migration is more the type we expect from birds or whales. However, unlike birds and whales, individuals only make the round-trip once. It is their children's grandchildren that return south the following fall."
Have you seen any migratory monarchs? It's basically a "no" for our scientists at the Bohart Museum of Entomology , UC Davis.
- UC Davis distinguished professor emerita Lynn Kimsey, who directed the Bohart Museum for 34 years until she retired Feb.1: No.
- Bohart Museum associate and UC Davis School of Medicine employee Greg Kareofelas: No. "I still have not seen a monarch (but I have not been 'out and about' much this summer)
- Jeff Smith, curator of the Bohart Museum's Lepidoptera collection: Maybe. "I may have seen 1 monarch in my yard (Rocklin) yesterday (Sept. 16) as a fly-by."
It's not so rosy in the Pacific Northwest (PNW), according to Washington State University entomologist David James, who studies migratory monarchs.
On Aug. 31, he posted this on his Facebook page, "Monarchs in the Pacific Northwest": One month ago, things were looking very rosy in the PNW monarch world with an 82% increase in sightings during June and July compared to the same months in 2023. Sadly, things are now not so rosy if the number of reported sightings are a good barometer of what's happening out there (and they have been in the past few years). During August 2023 there were 172 confirmed monarch sightings in the PNW. This year there has only been 108 and most of these (80%) were in the first two weeks. The second half of August has seen very few monarchs reported in the PNW. I-Naturalist, the reporting site most used by monarch recorders, has had NO monarch sightings posted in OR, WA, ID or BC since August 12-16. This is concerning because the second half of August into September is when the third PNW-bred generation should be emerging and migrating. There is still time for sightings to pick up and hopefully they will. So please keep watching and reporting your sightings to I-Naturalist or Journey North."
One of his WSU-tagged monarchs (from citizen scientist Steve Johnson) fluttered into our garden on Sept. 6, 2016 from Ashland, Ore. (See Bug Squad)
Hoping to see another tagged monarch.
Migrating monarchs began arriving in our Vacaville pollinator garden this year on Sept. 17 for some flight fuel on their way to their overwintering spots in coastal California.
They love the Mexican sunflower, Tithonia rotundifola. It's a great fall nectar source...and the colors are a perfect match...
Wings up! Let's go!
- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
What we've been waiting for all season...
A migratory monarch butterfly fluttered into our Vacaville garden at noon today (Tuesday, Sept. 17) and nectared on a Mexican sunflower, Tithonia rotundifola.
Then she treated us to a butterfly ballet.
The Danaus plexippus touched down, nectared, shot up, dropped down, and did it all over again, while male territorial longhorned bees tried to make her stay short.
But she hung around for and hour.
Wings up...and she was gone.
And then another flashed by...
It's migratory monarch season.
- Author: Daniel K Macon
Writing my last blog post as the Livestock and Natural Resources Advisor for Placer, Nevada, Sutter, and Yuba Counties is bittersweet. When I became the advisor in 2017 (filling Roger Ingram's enormous shoes), I assumed I would stay in this job until I retired. Life had other plans for me.
As many of you know by now, I lost my wife Samia to brain cancer in August 2023. Around the same time she was beginning treatment, we learned that my mother had been diagnosed with dementia. As a result, in January of this year, I requested a transfer to the vacant Livestock and Natural Resources Advisor position in the Central Sierra UC Cooperative Extension office, closer to Tuolumne County (where most of my family still lives). I'm grateful that UC Ag and Natural Resources (UCANR) granted my request; I start this new position on October 1 (just two weeks away!). I've sold our home in Auburn and am in the process of relocating to the small town of Mountain Ranch in Calaveras County, where I'll be much closer to my parents and to my sister.
Sami and I became part of the Placer County agricultural community in 1994, when we moved to Penryn. Leaving our community – and the Auburn home we'd purchased in 2001 – is difficult. We raised our daughters in Auburn. We still have some many friends and connections in Placer County. But I'm excited about this new opportunity, too – I'll be based out of the San Andreas office, so I'll just be a couple of hours south on Highway 49!
And I will maintain my Ranching in the Sierra Foothills blog and my UCCE Foothill Sustainable Ranching Facebook page. And you can still find me on X (or Twitter) as @flyingmulefarm (or Sheepherder Scientist). I look forward to reconnecting with ranchers and rangeland managers in the communities where I was raised! Stay tuned for the next chapter!
Finally, I'm very pleased to announce that UCANR has named my replacement for Placer, Nevada, Sutter, and Yuba Counties! Andrea Warner will join UC Cooperative Extension on October 1! I hope you'll join me in welcoming Andrea!
Andrea was born and raised in Nevada County, California, where she was active in youth sports and the 4-H program. Her interest in livestock and agriculture started when she had the opportunity to rise and show market pigs for the Nevada County Fair. Once in high school, Andrea's interest in agriculture increased as she became more involved in her school's FFA chapter through speaking competitions, extracurricular courses, and continuing to raise market pigs. She knew that she wanted to pursue a career in agriculture after high school and started by enrolling at Sierra College.
During her time there, Andrea developed an excitement for animal science, and started an internship at the UC ANR Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center. There, she assisted with a variety of beef cattle research projects and calving out the UC Davis cow herd. Andrea then transferred to California State University, Chico, where she earned her B.S in Animal Science in 2018. Following her passion for livestock research, Andrea decided to continue her education at Oklahoma State University. There, her research focused on feedlot nutrition and feeding cotton byproducts to finishing cattle, and she worked on several commercial cow/calf operations while attending school. Following the completion of her M.S in 2020, Andrea accepted a position at Langston University as the Research Farm Manager at the American Institute for Goat Research. At Langston, Andrea managed a large herd of dairy and meat goats, and hair sheep which were used for nutrition, health, and management research at the facility.
For the past year and a half, Andrea has been the Staff Research Associate at the Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center where she has worked on many research projects related to beef cattle production, natural resources, climate change, and rangeland management. Becoming a farm advisor was Andrea's long time career goal, and she is most excited about building relationships with local producers and community members in the industry while continuing to address challenges with a research-based approach. When she is not working, Andrea enjoys taking full advantage of the outdoor recreation our area has to offer; some of her favorite activities include hiking, riding dirt bikes, hunting, fishing, and spending the day at the lake or river with friends and family.
Andrea will be based out of the Auburn office. She can be reached at (530) 889-7385 or alnwarner@ucanr.edu.