ARE associate professor Meredith Fowlie is quoted in this NBC News article on California's environmental policies as they correlate with economic growth. "GDP growth in California has outpaced the U.S. as a whole in recent years. Over this same time period, the state has implemented the most ambitious climate change policies in the nation. And CO2 emissions in the state have fallen. California is demonstrating how economic growth can continue amidst more ambitious climate change policy," Fowlie said.
ESPM professor Scott Stephens is quoted in this Los Angeles Times article on resident evacuations in the wake of the Blue Cut fire. Stephens commented, ""People that evacuate late in a fire when the fire is reaching them are the most vulnerable to being killed. Most people underestimate the fury that comes."
MDP alum Anna Mance (M.S. '16) co-authored a research paper on climate change and its future effects on the Summer Olympic games. The paper was featured in this Washington Post article, which discusses heat and humidity as it could pose a major heat illness danger to athletes.
ESPM professor Steven Beissinger is featured in this UC Newsroom article on the UC Berkeley Grinnell Resurvey team, who have been retracing Joseph Grinnell's path across the iconic landscapes of Yosemite, Death Valley, and other CA national parks. “We’re now faced with managing toward a future of constant change,” said Beissinger.
ESPM professor Scott Stephens is featured in this ABC7 video segment on Lake County's Clayton Fire, which has been rapidly spread by flying embers. Stephens explained that "there are huge areas of chaparral around this fire, and chaparral under a bad day will burn 100 foot flame lengths."
ESPM associate professor Rodrigo Almeida is featured in California Magazine for his recently published research on the impact of Xylella fastidiosa on olive trees in southern Italy. As Almedia wrote in Science in July, “…The EC aims to address the threats of X. fastidiosa as a plant pathogen, demanding management and containment measures. But the reality to Apulians is different: Cutting down their olive trees means destroying the physical embodiment of their families and history.”
ESPM professor Scott Stephens is quoted in this Sacramento Bee article on the Clayton Fire. Stephens is reluctant to connect Lake County's consecutive damaging wildfire seasons to long-term trends, noting he wouldn't say it's different than nearby counties. "t just seems Lake County has had a lot of ignitions that have impacted people,” Stephens said.
ESPM professor Scott Stephens and alum Lenya Quinn-Davidson (B.S. '04) are featured in this KQED radio segment on the 2016 fire season. Stephens notes that "“higher temperatures do really big things like reduce snowpack time on the ground. You melt the snow off earlier, that means you have a longer period where you have drier soils.” Quinn-Davidson comments on the Soberanes Fire in Monterey County: “In Big Sur, they had the perfect storm of an ignition at a bad time and really inaccessible, steep terrain, on top of a lot of dry fuels.”
ESPM lecturer Tina Mendez (Ph.D. '07) is highlighted in this KQED Science article on the caddisfly and its ability to spin waterproof silk "tape." Unlike typical glues, caddisfly glue bonds more readily to biofouled surfaces.
Emeriti ESPM professor emeritus Reginald Barrett is featured on this Scientific American blog article on wild turkeys that are infiltrating urban/suburban neighborhoods. Barrett notes that "we can't really complain about the havoc turkeys cause since it was the Department of Fish and Game that brought them into the state in the first place and the public that keeps feeding them."