Kuwait Times

BioBlitz scientists to survey California desert valley

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Scientists will fan out across a California desert valley this weekend to take an inventory of everything there that flies, hops, runs, swims or grows in the dirt. It’s been 45 years since researcher­s last scoured Amargosa Valley near the northern edge of the Mojave Desert. That accounting of species led to federal protection­s within the remote region and new scientific understand­ing of its biodiversi­ty.

Over three days, experts in a variety of fields will once again tally birds, bats, toads, crickets, coyotes, lichen and native plants, said Sophie Parker, a senior scientist with the Nature Conservanc­y. “We’re revisiting this area to determine how it has changed over the past several decades,” said Parker, who’s organizing the “BioBlitz” with officials from the federal Bureau of Land Management.

Researcher­s have kept a regular count of hundreds of bird species, two species of desert fish and a tiny endangered rodent called the Amargosa vole, she said. But the status of many other living things in the valley remains a mystery that some three dozen scientists hope to shed light on starting Friday. Entomologi­sts will tote nets while on the lookout for certain flies, beetles, crickets and grasshoppe­rs.

Botanists will search for two rare plants that may have emerged from dormancy following heavy winter rains that prompted rare desert blooms elsewhere in California. And mammologis­ts will track footprints and scat in the hopes of spotting bobcats, mountain lions, coyotes, rabbits and kit foxes. The valley stretches into Nevada but the Bio-Blitz will focus on a 26-mile section along the Amargosa River on the California side, east of Death Valley.

Living crust

Parker said she looks forward to hearing her colleagues’ shouts of excitement echo over the landscape as they make discoverie­s. “Since we don’t have a full and complete understand­ing of the area, it can be really gratifying when we’re able to do this kind of detailed work,” she said. Since the 1972 survey, the Nature Conservanc­y has worked with the land management bureau to protect the biodiversi­ty within the Amargosa River Watershed - employing scientific study and land acquisitio­n and restoratio­n.

The weekend’s base camp will be at a date farm that sits along a creek that feeds into the river, where herpetolog­ists are hopeful they’ll find the endangered Amargosa toad hopping around. Bats have been seen near the farm and researcher­s will use echolocati­on to determine where they forage and roost.

“The river has cliffs and canyons and caves along it where there may be bats,” Parker said Wednesday. “This would definitely be adding knowledge, to get an understand­ing of exactly where they are.” Parker, a soil ecologist, plans to spend most of her time on hands and knees, digging for what she calls a “living crust” of lichens, mosses and bacteria common along certain riverbanks. “It’s a very small-scale ecosystem, and that’s what gets me individual­ly excited,” she said. “But it’s the collective effort that this whole thing is all about.”—AP

 ?? —AP ?? CALIFORNIA: This photo provided by the Nature Conservanc­y shows scientist Maurice Hall along the wild and scenic stretch of the Amargosa River, which is BLM land east of Death Valley, California.
—AP CALIFORNIA: This photo provided by the Nature Conservanc­y shows scientist Maurice Hall along the wild and scenic stretch of the Amargosa River, which is BLM land east of Death Valley, California.

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