Summer in Carson City

Hey there! I’m a bit late posting this. And by late I mean like 3 or 4 weeks, so my bad CLM internship. Guess you know who’s busy working! So much has been going on lately. Fire monitoring, a lot of seed collecting, and educating high school kids, which is what I’m going to talk about, but I warn you, this blog will not be as long as my previous blogs.

So late June and early July, we were working with “Dean’s future scholars,” or, the DFS students. They had been working with the Carson City botany team, as well as other BLM specialists. We took them on a variety of trips with us, each day showing them different aspects of our job. We took them seed collecting in Smith Valley and Sand Mountain. Sand Mountain is a beautiful sand dune system about a half hour east of Fallon, NV. Not only are the sand dunes such a unique ecosystem, but the Stillwater range nearby is quite beautiful. It was great to take them there. We also did fire monitoring in Washoe Valley, and got to introduce them to a variety of techniques to assess the impact of fire on vegetation and soil. We also did a utilization exercise with them that none of us, not even our supervisor, had ever attempted prior to this summer. We basically took grass clippings,dried them, got the biomass, and used a variety of formulas to investigate the utilization value. It is difficult to explain in a blog, so I won’t get into it, but we put a lot of work into it, and it ended up a success! This data is actually going to be used by the BLM because the particular grass species we worked with didn’t have a utilization value, so it was great to do that activity and have the students be a part of that. Ultimately It was a cool experience working with the DFS students, and we hope they enjoyed it as much as we did.

Kangaroo rat trapping in Panoche Hills

Hello!

Finally after weeks of running GUD feeding trials for kangaroo rats I got to get up close and personal with these little guys! Another group of researchers is conducting genetic studies on kangaroo rats and the endangered giant kangaroo rat and they invited us out to lend a hand trapping and of course to hold any that they catch!

They look a lot like a hamster, have the tail of a rat, and hop like a kangaroo (hence the name!) After catching the kangaroo rat they were weighed, tagged and hair samples were taken for DNA analysis.

We didn’t have much luck trapping. We only caught one kangaroo rat (the one being held in the pictures) but that was still quite exciting!

Me holding a kangaroo rat Me and another researcher with the kangaroo rat

My last month in Palm Springs

A few years ago, I started keeping a bucket list. Being a predictable person, about half of it is just places I want to go hiking. The rest of the list ranges from the mundane (cook Thanksgiving dinner – check) to the cartoonish (throw something into a volcano – not yet accomplished), and it keeps growing about as quickly as I can tick things off. I bring this up because when I came out to Palm Springs, I made a desert bucket list composed of all the things I want to do before I leave, and I am sad to say I have less than a month left to work on it.

But stars must have aligned, because recently I’ve been able to make good progress on my desert list. This weekend I felt my first earthquake (check), which still counts even if I initially thought it was just a particularly heavy truck driving past my apartment. And then the week before, I was lucky enough to get to help our office’s interpretive specialist with some family outings, where I caught a scorpion (check) and saw my first ever wild sidewinder (check). Somehow, the kids were even more excited to find the rattlesnake than I was, and I had to step in and keep them from poking at the poor potentially lethal critter. It was an amazing time, and seeing kids excited to learn about nature never fails to make me smile. Hopefully I managed to get at least one kid interested in botany by showing off how desert willow fruit bursts open and releases a puff of winged seeds into the wind, but my bit on how to identify the features of an animal skull was predictably more of a crowd pleaser.

At work, we got to go out and see the Salt Creek (check), the waterway that connects my oasis to the infamous Salton Sea. I spent a fair while poking at the thick layer of salt covering parts of the creek: as water evaporates, the salt precipitates out to form a surprisingly thick crust – much like a horribly unpleasant crème brulee. But despite that obvious hardship, the water itself is teeming with life: pond skaters, tadpoles, swarms of brilliantly colored damselflies laying their eggs in the water, tiny fish that dart out from cover just long enough to grab an insect. It is absolutely amazing to see that this tiny trickle of salt-saturated water, surrounded by so much empty space, can support so much life. Reading that desert life is dependent on rare water sources is one thing, but it’s entirely another to go to an actual oasis and see first-hand just how stark the contrast is. That’s one experience I am very thankful to be able to tick off my list.

I’ll be taking care of a few more bucket list tasks in the coming weeks (Joshua Tree, here I come), but my work time has been occupied with the usual end-of-field-season duties. I have herbarium samples to prepare and mail, a heap of data to enter and start to analyze, maps to make or update, and a next adventure to arrange. It was great to meet so many of you at the workshop, and I hope you all enjoy your internships as much as I have.

Joe

Traveling the State and Doing Work!

Hello again!
In case you were wondering, our SOS team here in Lakeview, Oregon has had much more success since my previous post. So far we have about twelve seed collections either completed or in progress and we haven’t had any more cows eating our plant populations. The first part of my internship has been focused on collecting forbs, but now we finally get to start collecting grasses! This past Thursday we made a collection of Achnatherum thurburianum (Thurber’s needlegrass) and next week we plan on collecting Festuca idahoensis (Idaho Fescue). No need to crawl from plant to plant when you can walk by and easily grab a spikelet; it’s the seed collector’s version of a cakewalk.

As for the weekends, I have traveled quite a bit! I got to check Crater Lake National Park off the bucket list along with going to the redwood forest in Crescent City, California and bopping around towns like Cave Junction and Bend, Oregon. I’m so thankful that I work in a place where I’m only a few hours from such great stuff! I’m getting much better at camping and I am continually amazed at how gorgeous this part of the country really is. That’s all I have to say for now and I’ll let you all know how I handle temperatures as they finally approach 100 degrees.

Monitoring Plant Populations

I have recently returned from an excellent training experience in Billings, Montana. The class is titled Measuring and Monitoring Plant Populations and Vegetation.

I attended the class as an alternative to the CLM workshop at the Chicago Botanic Garden. It was during the 2013 CBG workshop, that I first met John Willoughby, one of the primary instructors for the course. In Chicago we had a brief 1-day introduction to the material; In Billings the material was greatly expanded. The class in Montana met every day (including the weekend) for an entire week. In attendance were botanists, wildlife biologists, and rangeland management specialists, from the BLM and NPS, across the Intermountain West.

In addition to lectures there were ample opportunities to work in groups with fellow classmates, both in the classroom as well as in the field. Some aspects of the curriculum included:
• Management objectives and monitoring objectives, differentiating between both, and important aspects of each.
• Vegetation measurements: a range including frequency, cover, and density.
• Data recording and management methods.
• Statistical analysis techniques and which are most appropriate for various types of data.

The technical reference used for the course contains a lot of complex and detailed information, yet is easily approachable. It is available at the following link: http://www.blm.gov/nstc/library/pdf/MeasAndMon.pdf

Technical Reference

Technical reference used during course

Back on the job, I have already been able to apply some of what I learned, conducting rangeland trend assessments, and designing a protocol for invasive species monitoring.

Vegetation monitoring transect for rangeland trend study

Vegetation monitoring transect for rangeland trend study

The class is offered most years. I recommend it to all who enjoyed the introductory experience at the CLM workshop and want to learn more, or for anyone else with a need to design or implement vegetation monitoring programs.

Marcus Lorusso

BLM Ridgecrest Field Office

 

EMERGENCY ALERT: Flash Flood Warning. Avoid Low and Flooded Areas.

Howdy y’all!

I hope you are enjoying your summer, wherever you may be. I certainly am here in Needles. This week in the desert was an especially memorable one, thanks to a visit from an old friend – rain. And a happy reunion it was. After two months in Needles, I’ve seen a grand total of 1.02 inches of rain. And it all came on Tuesday of this last week! So I guess that means we have come to the much-anticipated summer monsoon season!

 

Now here's a plant that would be happy to see a little rain.

Now here’s a plant that would be happy to see a little rain.

Now, I’ll try to give you a little bit of science here. But here’s my disclaimer: I’m no meteorologist. So I’ll keep it simple and hopefully correct. The Mojave Desert usually has winds that come from the west and northwest. Those winds carry moisture from the ocean, but as they pass over mountain ranges before they reach the Mojave, they drop most of it. When they get to us, those weather systems have little moisture left, and so this place ends up as a desert because it sits in the mountains’ rain shadow.

In the summer months here, that can change. Temperatures climb, high pressure systems move north, and the lower atmospheric pressure in the Mojave causes winds to come from Mexico to the south, instead of from the over the mountains to the west. Those southerly winds carry moisture from the Pacific Ocean or Gulf of Mexico. The result? Large monsoon thunderstorms that move through the area from time to time and can drop a lot of rain in a hurry.

Rain in the desert! That will make some thirsty plants very happy.

Rain in the desert! That will make some thirsty plants very happy.

It is so cool to see that rain in the desert when it finally does show up! When the storm came through on Tuesday we saw pouring rain and high winds for several hours. Much of the ground here is very dry and hard, so it doesn’t absorb water well like the Midwestern soil that I’m used to. That means that rain water runs off the soil into sandy desert washes, which can become filled very quickly and violently with flash flood waters during rainstorms.

A double rainbow!

A double rainbow!

 

The power and beauty of the thunderstorm was impressive to watch from our house. Streams of water gushed down the street into the river. Lightning filled the sky. A double rainbow made a brief appearance. The road was washed out within half a mile in both directions from our house, so we were stuck at home without power, but no matter. Our porch was as good a place as any to watch the storm. And I ended my night reading Macbeth by candlelight in our dark house, with rain pounding the windows, and thunder shaking the house. That is certainly a pleasant way to spend an evening.

The thunderstorm this week was a most welcome change to our desert weather. Hopefully, there will be a number of plant species that bloom in the coming months in response to rain as well!

 

Until next time!

 

-Steve

 

Needles Field Office, BLM

Just started at Ford Ord National Monument

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So I just started working at Fort Ord National Monument in Marina, California a couple of weeks ago and it has been a blast so far. Bruce Delgado (my mentor) has taught me so much about California flora and has let me get right into the mix from day one. He allowed me to drive the F-450 flatbed truck loaded down with 4500lbs of water, translate for a radio show interview with Philipe the sheep herder, and get smelly re-baiting the pig traps.

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I drove the flatbed truck loaded down with water on gravel roads up steep terrain to Oil Well restoration site, planted in 2013. The view alone was totally worth it and it was  relaxing to look out over the rolling hills. You can almost forget you are working when watering the plants surrounded by the scenery. I also found this mantis camouflaged amongst the dying Avena barbata at Oil Well which was awesome.

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Philipe uses border collies to herd the sheep into locations for grazing, and while I was watering the Oil Well restoration site he let me hold one of the puppies!

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All in all, it’s been a really fun and awesome experience. I’m excited to continue learning about California’s rich natural history and natural resource management at Fort Ord National Monument.

Cheers,

Manuel Casanova

Missoula, Montana

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Hello All,

This past month I have continued my work for the Missoula Montana BLM office, and I have had the opportunity to visit many interesting areas around the city of Missoula. I attended a training session along with several of my coworkers in order to better understand the habitat types of Western Montana. The training session was both informative and interesting, and I feel that my habitat typing skills have improved vastly over the last month. My day to day activities have included forest inventory as well as searching for five needle pines and special status plants. To follow are some pictures from our work sites!

– Vince

 

 

 

Saying Goodbye to the Mojave

It is hard to believe that one week from today will mark the last day of my 5 months here in the Mojave Desert. The time has absolutely flown by as it often does when you stay busy. As I read through the blog posts of my fellow CLM interns just beginning their internships I feel excited for them knowing that they are likely to have adventures similar to those I have experienced over the past few months.

One of the things I enjoyed the most about my internship was having the ability to completely immerse myself into an ecosystem that I was totally unfamiliar with before moving here. It is strange to think that only 5 short months ago I had no idea what a Joshua Tree or Creosote Bush was and the extent of my desert knowledge was: “It’s hot, dry, and home to cacti.”. This particular internship enabled me to delve into a variety of different research projects and do fieldwork in several states spanning the Mojave Desert. In the process I developed not only a familiarity with the desert but a fondness for it.

Additionally, I have been fortunate to work with so many inspiring, passionate, and hard-working USGS scientists and other CLM interns. I have learned so much from all of the individuals that I have had the pleasure of working with during my time here. I am grateful that this internship has given me the opportunity to create such meaningful personal and professional connections.

This internship has been an absolutely fantastic experience and I am sure to take the memories and lessons with me on all of my future adventures.

Thanks for reading!

-Renee Albrecht

Big Bear Lake June-July

 

Phacelia mohavensis

Mojave phacelia

Castilleja lasiorhyncha

San Bernardino Mtns. owl’s clover

San Bernardino Mountains bladderpod (fruit)

San Bernardino Mountains bladderpod (fruit)

We have been surveying for sensitive species and weeds within the area burned by the Grass Valley fire (2007).  One of the most interesting parts of the project area is a riparian zone along the north edge of the burn perimeter, where there’s a rich diversity of forbs, grasses, and sedges.  Two of our sensitive species –  (Castilleja lasioryncha, San Bernardino Mountains owl’s clover) and Phacelia mohavensis (Mojave phacelia) – occur in this area.  As another part of this project, we’re also training members of the Urban Conservation Corps (UCC) to use GPS mapping units. 

We’ve been continuing to edit and gather comments on our guide to non-native invasive plants of the southern California mountains, which will be printed in the fall.  Here and there I’ve been doing other monitoring, surveys, and mapping, and especially revisiting older occurrences of some of our threatened and endangered species.  That included some locations of the adorable Physaria kingii subsp. bernardina (San Bernardino Mtns. bladderpod).

Botrychiums should be appearing soon in many of our meadows, and I’m excited about looking for them!