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Lassen Is ٺƵ’ Newest Natural Reserve

Landscape of Volcanoes, Forests Offers Unique Research and Outreach Opportunities

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Mt Lassen
Lassen Peak, also known as Mount Lassen, at Lassen Volcanic National Park, California. It is the southernmost active volcano in the Cascade Range. (Getty)

With a terrain covering volcanoes, steaming fumaroles and forestlands, the Lassen Field Station became the newest addition to the University of California, Davis’ Natural Reserve System today (May 16), following approval by the UC Board of Regents.

The addition marks the in a system that now spans Northern California from its alpine forests and across grassland prairies to the shores of . It is among 41 reserves in the UC-wide reserve system. 

In partnership with the National Park Service, the Lassen Field Station will be based at the headquarters of Lassen Volcanic National Park in the Tehama County town of Mineral. The partnership offers researchers access to a variety of park facilities such as cabins, classroom space and camping. The reserve will streamline the research permit process and open new avenues for research, teaching and public outreach.

“This field station is part of a much larger gateway to other managed forest lands,” said Jeffrey Clary, associate director of the ٺƵ Natural Reserve System. “In some ways, it’s not just the park but the region that is becoming available. We are all really excited to have more research in that part of the state.”

Volcanoes, forests and snow

Lassen’s volcanic landscape, forests and steep, often snow-covered terrain provide new research and field class opportunities in disciplines including geology, wildfire and forestry, climate change, snowpack and water resources, and polar ecology.

Bumpass Hell at Lassen Volcanic National Park
Bumpass Hell at Lassen Volcanic National Park, where boiling springs, hissing steam vents and fumaroles make for a geologically active landscape ripe for research, outreach and education. (Getty)

“The Lassen Field Station fills a big ecological and geographical gap in the UC Natural Reserve System and extends ٺƵ field stations into completely new ecosystems,” said Professor Andrew Latimer of the ٺƵ Department of Plant Sciences. “Access to this whole gradient — from the tree line to the tide line — is important for studying how the state’s ecosystems change and shift in response to rising temperatures and increasingly variable rainfall.”

Community outreach

The field station also expands ٺƵ’ presence in an underserved region in northeast California. Researchers hope to make science education opportunities available to the community through hikes and talks led by visiting researchers, as well as becoming part of K-12 outreach programs already in place through the National Park Service.

“The park already has a number of programs tying local schools to park-based learning experiences, and we want to loop in researchers at the new field station to share their knowledge with this public,” said Jim Richardson, park superintendent. “It’s exciting to bring the expertise of these scientists into our mix, with each partner contributing their strengths.”

The UC regents , which will be operated by UC Berkeley.

ٺƵ natural reserves are a unit of the 

Media Resources

Jeffrey Clary, ٺƵ Natural Reserve System, 530-752-9178, jjclary@ucdavis.edu

Andrew Latimer, ٺƵ Plant Sciences, 530-309-9111, amlatimer@ucdavis.edu

Kat Kerlin, ٺƵ News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu

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