Fruitful California-Catalonia Exchange

Parc treesStrolling through Can Bal­asc Field Sta­tion in Parc de Collserola, Cat­alo­nia, Spain. Image credit: Jef­frey Clary

Cal­i­for­nia and Cat­alo­nia, in north­east­ern Spain, are like sib­ling land­scapes. Both expe­ri­ence the warm, dry sum­mers and mild, rainy win­ters com­mon to Mediterranean-climate habi­tats. From a dis­tance, their oak-studded hill­sides and drought-resistant shrub­lands are hard to tell apart. And both regions strug­gle with dense human pop­u­la­tions, sum­mer fires, and inva­sive vegetation.

So it should come as no sur­prise that an exchange between staff of nat­ural pre­serves in both areas has sparked promis­ing inter­na­tional rela­tion­ships. The exchanges were made pos­si­ble with fund­ing from the UC Nat­ural Reserve System.

In spring 2011, the NRS launched the Mediter­ranean Reserve Man­agers Inter­na­tional Coop­er­a­tive (MRMIC) with sci­en­tists and land man­agers from the five Mediterranean-climate ecosys­tems. The NRS then spon­sored $5,000 MRMIC Fel­low­ships to sup­port the inter­na­tional exchange of reserve man­agers, sci­en­tists, and oth­ers involved in the con­ser­va­tion and man­age­ment of pro­tected areas in Mediterranean-climate ecosystems.

Quail pondRobert Savé and Car­men Biel of Cat­alo­nia tour a pond at the NRS’s Quail Ridge Reserve in March. Image credit: Jef­frey Clary

UC Davis reserve man­ager Jef­frey Clary was awarded a MRMIC Fel­low­ship enabling an exchange between staff at the UC Davis reserves and land man­agers in Cat­alo­nia. Clary, UC Davis reserve direc­tor Vir­ginia Boucher, and reserves ana­lyst Shane Wad­dell trav­eled to Barcelona last April. They toured Parc de Collsera, an exten­sive nat­ural area adja­cent to the city, vis­ited a research sta­tion, and met with sci­en­tists study­ing ani­mal track­ing, fire sup­pres­sion, veg­e­ta­tion man­age­ment, and oaks.

Parc mapParc de Collserola Envi­ron­men­tal Direc­tor Lluis Cabaneros explains part­ner­ships with pri­vate landown­ers in Collserola. Image credit: Jef­frey Clary

The UC Davis staff were able to lever­age the MRMIC Fel­low­ship to obtain fund­ing for addi­tional travel within Europe. After leav­ing Barcelona, they met with researchers from the Max Planck Insti­tut für Ornitholo­gie in Ger­many devel­op­ing an auto­mated animal-tracking sys­tem in par­al­lel with Quail Ridge Reserve, and sci­en­tists at the Cen­tre d’Ecologie Fonc­tionelle et Evo­lu­tive in France study­ing dor­mancy in grasses from Mediter­ranean regions.

This March, Clary and col­leagues rec­i­p­ro­cated by host­ing sci­en­tists from Cat­alo­nia in the Cen­tral Val­ley. The vis­i­tors toured the NRS’s Quail Ridge and Bodega Marine reserves, pro­tected lands along the Amer­i­can River, and the UC Davis cam­pus. Along the way, they learned about native plant­ing and land­scap­ing pro­grams, inva­sive plant man­age­ment ini­tia­tives, and research on ani­mal track­ing and small mam­mals being con­ducted at the reserves.

Land man­agers, by the nature of their work, may often feel iso­lated and over­whelmed,” Clary wrote in his fel­low­ship report. “Our visit … in Barcelona last spring was the first such inter­ac­tion many of the land man­agers had had. They were engaged and encour­aged by sim­i­lar work that was being done else­where in the world. There is strong desire to main­tain and (where pos­si­ble by joint fund­ing requests) expand the rela­tion­ships that have been established.”

2012–2013 Graduate Student Research Grants Available

Math­ias Award win­ners are invited to present their research find­ings at a sym­po­sium held every other year at Bodega Marine Reserve. Image credit: Lob­sang Wangdu

Field research can be an expen­sive under­tak­ing. The gaso­line needed to travel to research sites, out­door gear such as back­packs, and sup­plies in the form of nets, fenc­ing, sam­pling con­tain­ers and other equip­ment can take a big chunk out of a new scientist’s income.

That’s where the Mil­dred E. Math­ias Grad­u­ate Stu­dent Research Grants come in. The grants are avail­able to all Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia grad­u­ate stu­dents, with the excep­tion of stu­dents at UC San Fran­cisco, work­ing at one or more of the 38 sites of the Nat­ural Reserve System.

A max­i­mum of $38,000 is awarded each year, with each appli­cant receiv­ing up to $3,000. Stu­dents from all aca­d­e­mic dis­ci­plines are eli­gi­ble and encour­aged to apply.

The grants com­mem­o­rate Mil­dred E. Math­ias, a for­mer pro­fes­sor of botany at UC Los Ange­les and a cofounder of the NRS.

How to Apply

Appli­ca­tions must be sub­mit­ted by Octo­ber 8, 2012, at 8 a.m.

Sup­port­ing mate­ri­als, includ­ing let­ters of rec­om­men­da­tion and reserve per­mis­sions, must be sub­mit­ted by Octo­ber 17, 2012, at 8 a.m.

All appli­ca­tions and sup­port­ing mate­ri­als are sub­mit­ted electronically.

For more infor­ma­tion and to request appli­ca­tions materials

Alter­na­tively, con­tact Mike Dor­ward, UC Nat­ural Reserve Sys­tem, at mike.dorward@ucop.edu