The Bio-Blitz Is a Bio-Blast in
Malibu’s Bio-Backyard
More that 1300 school children and many
adult volunteers joined teams of top scientists on Friday for a
24-hour field inventory of living organisms in the Santa Monica
Mountains National Recreation Area that included two field
stations in Malibu.
The event, sponsored by the National
Geographic Society, is the second in a series of annual
BioBlitz events that will take place in a different park each
year, leading up to the National Parks Centennial in 2016.
Congressmember Brad Sherman, Director of
State Parks Ruth Coleman, Director of the Santa Monica
Mountains Conservancy Joe Edmiston, SMMNRA Superintendent Woody
Smeck, and former Malibuite and environmental activist Margo
Feuer were at the opening ceremony. The event was
dedicated to lifelongSanta Monica Mountains advocate Jill
Swift, who died earlier this year.
Coleman talked about Governor
Schwarzenegger’s decision to keep all California State
parks open despite budget shortfalls. She also had a message
for the children attending the event.
“So I know a lot of you guys, you
kids, you hear about the environment, climate change, it can be
a little scary, you wonder what your future is going to be
like, but the purpose of today is for you to get involved,
because you’re going to make a difference,” Coleman
said. “Because you should never let the grown-ups make
you feel that there’s no future for you, or that the
environment is just going to disappear. You can make a
difference. You can save it. It’s going to be up to
you.”
Congressmember Sherman, unfazed by the
state’s budget woes, outlined the ongoing federal plan
for a Rim of the Valley National Corridor project, that would
more than triple the area of the SMMNRA.
“Now we need to go forward,”
Sherman said, “We have to buy a lot of land inside the
SMMNRA borders to preserve the parcels that will allow for
wildlife diversity.” Sherman spoke of an “organic
whole,” saying that “we need to expand the borders
of the SMMNRA through the Rim of the Valley Corridor, so all
mountains surrounding the Los Angeles Megalopolis will be
preserved.”
In an interview with the Malibu Surfside
News after the opening ceremonies, Sherman expressed more
optimism about his ambitious plan, which would incorporate
large areas of the Santa Monica, Santa Susanna, San Gabriel and
Verdugo mountain ranges, and entirely encompass a number of
communities, including the City of Malibu. Sherman said that
the study to assess the potential impact of the expansion is
progressing and that the plan is realistic and can be achieved.
The hundreds of children, age 8 to 18,
didn’t care much about the speech making but they were
fascinated by the exhibits set up throughout Paramount Ranch,
the BioBlitz base camp.
“Many of these kids have never been
to a park before,” said State Parks Interpreter
Karma Graham. She was on hand to greet volunteers with her
reptile goodwill ambassador, a California king snake named
Richard. “Not only do they get to spend some time out
here, they’re going to have a chance today to go out and
participate in real scientific field research with the
scientists. It’s a great opportunity,” she said.
Scientists from all over the country were
at the event, including top experts in the various fields: Seth
Riley, National Park Service mountain lion biologist gave a
presentation on radio telemetry and GPS collars, Duke
University professor Stuart Pimm, a conservation biologist
international respected for his research on biodiversity,
species extinction and habitat loss, led a bird walk.
UCLA’s Arthur Gibson, an authority on Southern California
flora, talked about his work researching documenting the plant
life of the local mountains.
Over in the main science tent where experts
prepared to identify and document specimens from the field,
Gibson told The News he was expecting some 125-150 species to
be brought in. The plant teams in the field would end up
bringing in over 495 species.
“I’m not as pessimistic about
extinction as some of the some of the people you’ll talk
to here. I don’t think we’ve lost any [plant]
species in the Santa Monicas,” Gibson said. “I
think we haven’t looked everywhere yet.”
At the field stations, teams were already
spreading out to begin the BioBlitz inventory. Two sites
in Malibu were important survey locations. At the
Malibu Lagoon, teams used seine nets to hunt for fish,
identified and counted bird species and searched for plants,
terrestrial and aquatic insects and invertebrates, reptiles and
amphibians.
At Leo Carrillo State Park, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service biologist Michael Glenn was setting out
with the reptile and amphibian team. The aquatic insect team,
however, had to head for Malibu Creek—the stream at Leo
Carrillo was already too dry to yield results. “I camped
here just last week, too,” the team leader, complained
ruefully.
A woman and her son who came all the way
from Santa Barbara were anxious to hunt for something called a
tardigrade, which turned out to be a tiny, segmented animal
related to the arthropods. “I’m not sure what a
tardigrade is,” confessed a volunteer. “Neither am
I, that’s why it’s so interesting,” replied
the woman. “I’m looking forward to learning
something new.”
Kimball Garrett, a bird expert from the Los
Angeles Natural History Museum, led an inventory team in a
coastal bird and marine mammal count. Perched high on a windy
cliff above the beach, Garrett’s team learned how to tell
the western gull from the California gull—the western
gull estimateguess the age of brown pelicans—juveniles
are brown, adults have lighter feathers on their heads. A large
pod of bottlenose dolphins and a sea lion were a bonus for the
team.
“It’s a little late for the
migratory birds, this is the tail end for the year,”
Garrett said. His team did spot some long distance travelers,
including surf scooters (pronounced, Garrett said, with a long
o, like scope, not scoop), western loons and sooty shearwaters.
“The shearwaters are on their way to the arctic for the
summer. They’re up from Chile or even New Zealand,”
Garrett said.
“People think that birds fly north to
breed in the summer, but that isn’t necessary true. These
birds breed in the southern hemisphere during our winter and
spend the summer in the northern hemisphere feeding,”
Garrett explained. Sea birds travel huge distances.
Garrett pointed out that this makes setting aside a small
reserve pointless. Only global conservation efforts can help
save far travelers like the shearwaters.
Down on the beach, marine biologist Dennis
Lees, an expert in the littoral or intertidal zone, led a
search for marine invertebrates, algae (seaweed), and other
organisms. “Nothing south of Santa Barbara is really
pristine,” Lees said, adding that, even so, there were
still plenty of interesting things to be found. The biologist
entered into the hunt with even more enthusiasm than his Boy
Scout assistants, making announcements such as:
“That’s a kelp crab. It’s just the shell, see
how the crab backed out of it, leaving it behind? That’s
the holdfast of macrocystis pyrifera, the giant kelp. It
anchors the kelp to the sea floor, see? Like the roots of the
tree.”
A fern-like seaweed with small air bladders
proved to be a cystoreisa. Another was a member of the sargasso
family, but a furry pinkish algae defied field identification
and would have to be brought back to the field station. All
specimens were put in bags and jars and carefully noted. A
large bag of trash was also collected during the course of the
walk that might have shed some light on the homo sapiens
species if it, too, had been cataloged.
Back at BioBlitz base camp scientists
worked through the night identifying and recording, while the
night teams hunted for nocturnal species like bats, owls and
spiders. At 10:30 a.m. on Saturday the results were in: 1364
species located and identified by 1400 volunteers within 24
hours—almost one species per participant.
Here’s the breakdown: algae—22,
amphibian–4, arthropod–628, bird - 86,
fish–6, lichen–3, mammal–12, marine
invertebrate –91, other invertebrate–2,
plant–495, Reptile–15. The count provides a rich
picture of the biodiversity of the local are.
Who knows what else is in Malibu’s
backyard?