McLaughlin Reserve Content / McLaughlin Reserve Content for ºÙºÙÊÓƵ en KiDS, a Volunteer Program, Empowers the Next Generation of Scientists /climate/news/getting-kids-discovering-science ºÙºÙÊÓƵ volunteers get 5th graders into the field at McLaughlin Natural Reserve as part of Kids Into Discovering Science, or KiDS. November 29, 2023 - 3:20pm Malia N Reiss /climate/news/getting-kids-discovering-science Trails Reopen at Reserve Near County Fire /news/backfires-slow-advance-county-fire <p>Hiking trails have reopened at Stebbins Cold Canyon Natural Reserve as firefighters make progress against the nearby County Fire.</p> July 06, 2018 - 2:40pm Cody Kitaura /news/backfires-slow-advance-county-fire Reserve, Vet Med, Fire Crew Respond to Blaze /news/campus-responds-county-fire <p>As the County Fire near Guinda ballooned to more than 44,000 acres over the weekend, ºÙºÙÊÓƵ faculty, staff and students not only responded to the fire but also took steps to protect one of the university’s natural reserves and safeguard animals.</p> <p>Saturday afternoon (June 30), a three-person campus fire crew joined the initial attack on the fire in western Yolo County, and has since returned safely — sent back because other crews had arrived from elsewhere in the state, and officials needed to restore coverage in the rest of Yolo County.</p> July 02, 2018 - 4:04pm Cody Kitaura /news/campus-responds-county-fire Native Wildflowers Bank on Seeds Underground to Endure Drought /news/native-wildflowers-bank-seeds-underground-endure-drought <p>Native wildflowers were surprisingly resilient during California’s most recent drought, even more so than exotic grasses. To see this resilience, ºÙºÙÊÓƵ researchers of a new study had to look underground to the seed bank. Native wildflowers increased the seeds they stored underground by 201 percent during the drought.</p> March 01, 2018 - 4:15pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/native-wildflowers-bank-seeds-underground-endure-drought Burning Questions /climate/news/burning-questions <p>When wildfire ripped through two ºÙºÙÊÓƵ natural reserves last summer, scientists conducting research there first took a pained look to see if their months or years of research just went up in flames. Then they did what one would expect from scientists: They began to study the effects.</p> May 10, 2016 - 10:33am Jocelyn C Anderson /climate/news/burning-questions