Los Angeles Times

Can we save the animals?

Fires, storms threaten protected species in San Gabriels

- By Louis Sahagún

Up until a few weeks ago, the West Fork of the San Gabriel River was one of the most abundant wildlife habitats in Los Angeles County, a secluded and rugged area defined by steep peaks, lush canyons and a range of rare and endangered species.

Recently, however, federal biologists and forest rangers were aghast when they visited the stream following the Bobcat f ire, which has burned more than 115,000 acres in the heart of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument.

Terrain that once resembled a High Sierra granite gorge looked like ground zero after a nuclear explosion, and the usually clean mountain air was sharp with the stench of smoke.

Particular­ly unsettling were the bare and ashen slopes that were primed to dissolve under pounding winter storms. A heavy mudslide, experts said, could reverse decades of conservati­on efforts by inundating the last outposts for such federally protected species as the Santa Ana sucker fish and the mountain yellowlegg­ed frog.

“There’s nothing left,” muttered U. S. Geological Survey biologist Adam

Backlin as he surveyed the barren, ugly mountains overlookin­g Cogswell Dam, which controls the f low in an eight- mile stretch of the stream that provides some of the best f ly- f ishing in Southern California and helps recharge the metropolit­an aquifer in the f latland below.

“Armageddon,” said Leslie Welch, district wildlife biologist at the Angeles National Forest.

The Bobcat f ire was 92% contained Tuesday, Forest Service officials said.

The exact toll on wildlife along the West Fork and throughout much of the range will not be known until the Forest Service’s emergency response teams determine the extent of the damage in severely burned areas, which, for safety reasons, could remain closed for months, federal forest officials said.

Even without that informatio­n, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, the U. S. Geological Survey, the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U. S. Forest Service are scrambling to devise post- fire rescue operations to ensure the survival of protected species in the event canyon bottoms are buried this winter in a slurry of rocks, uprooted trees and sediment.

Their options include dispatchin­g teams of state and federal biologists armed with electrosho­ck wands and nets who would scoop up as many fish and frogs as possible, then release them into suitable streams elsewhere.

Finding clear streams with cool, rocky pools devoid of predatory invasive species will not be easy in an area within one of the most dangerous wildfire environmen­ts in the United States.

“Moving these sensitive creatures around in order to keep them one step ahead of the next environmen­tal disaster is not a strategy — it’s a last- ditch effort,” Welch said. “In an era of almost back- to- back wildfires and mudslides, we haven’t had the time to develop comprehens­ive survival plans for each one of our protected species.”

The preemptive rescues being proposed across the San Gabriels highlight the difficulty facing biologists and land managers in ensuring the survival of species clinging to existence in Southern California’s patchwork of isolated habitats — areas already hemmed in by urban developmen­t and scorched by more frequent and intense wildfires.

Looking ahead, they can only surmise that things will get worse. In a warming world, California will be among the places that experience whiplash shifts between extremely dry and wet periods — factors that exacerbate­d the unpreceden­ted

f ire season this year across the state.

The life and times of mountain yellow- legged frogs embody the challenges facing endangered species — and biologists — in Southern California.

For thousands of years, yellow- legged frogs thrived in hundreds of streams across the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains. Over the past eight decades, the species has been decimated by wildf ires, mudslides, pesticides, fungal infections, loss of habitat, f lood- control facilities and the appetites of nonnative trout, bullfrogs and crayfish.

Today, fewer than 400 of the frogs are believed to exist in isolated population­s, including a group of about 150 in a two- mile stretch of Little Rock Creek, near the resort community of Wrightwood.

Federal wildlife authoritie­s in 2010 launched an ambitious recovery program that included captive breeding at institutio­ns including the Los Angeles Zoo, trout removal in some of the frogs’ ancestral haunts and, in certain areas, barring public access.

The recovery program is a collaborat­ive effort funded by donations, grants and California Department of Transporta­tion funds to mitigate the effects of emergency work stabilizin­g a slope near frog habitat on California Highway 330 in the San Bernardino Mountains.

Backlin, who has been monitoring Southern California’s yellow- legged frog population­s since 1998, could scarcely believe his

eyes two weeks ago as he watched televised footage of f lames marching down into the refuge at Little Rock Creek.

“I was yelling at the screen,” he recalled. “‘ No! No! Stop!’ ”

State and federal biologists are also worried about the loss of habitat for 150 federally endangered unarmored threespine sticklebac­k f ish that were rescued after the 2016 Sand f ire burned through Soledad Canyon in northweste­rn L. A. County, then were released in carefully selected areas of the Angeles National Forest.

Now, with those translocat­ed f ish threatened by mudslides in new burn areas, state and federal biologists plan to recapture

most of them and return them, yet again, to Soledad Canyon, which over the past four years has become suitable for repopulati­on.

Then there are the descendant­s of an estimated 23,000 native f ish that were captured in the upper San Gabriel River in 2006 and relocated near the conf luence of the West Fork and Bear Creek to make way for a massive sediment removal project in the San Gabriel Reservoir, about 18 miles north of Azusa. They included federally threatened Santa Ana suckers; Santa Ana speckled dace, a California species of special concern; arroyo chubs, also a California species of special concern; and thousands of unidentifi­ed minnows.

If the West Fork gets bur

ied in mud, Forest Service officials said, it could hasten the decline of the fish species already on the verge of extinction.

In the meantime, in the mountains surroundin­g Cogswell Dam where the Bobcat f ire started Sept. 6, rare and common animals alike — Nelson’s bighorn sheep, mule deer, mountain lions, foxes and southern Pacific rattlesnak­es — continue searching for food and shelter amid the snags and ashes.

“It broke my heart to see a bear with an injured paw and shoulder staggering out of a burned area,” recalled Steven Morgan, operator of the 95- year- old reservoir owned by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works. “There’s no place

for smaller critters to hide anymore, either. Rodents and squirrels have become easy pickings for owls and hawks.”

Aquatic creatures such as f ish, frogs and western pond turtles, a state- listed species of special concern, face an even sadder and more diminished future when their domain downstream is slammed by winter f looding.

Overall, wildlife stands to lose in the collision of competing interests across the f ire- scarred range, an oblong mass from Santa Clarita to San Bernardino that attracts 3.5 million visitors a year. County f lood-control authoritie­s have made a priority of safeguardi­ng critical infrastruc­ture, including catch basins and several man- made dams that provide water and safety for millions of people in downstream communitie­s.

“The business of saving human lives and rare wildlife is suddenly more complicate­d than ever,” said Rossana D’Antonio, incident commander for the Department of Public Works’ Bobcat fire recovery effort.

“But our No. 1 goal is to protect constituen­ts down mountain, secure our critical infrastruc­ture and steer mud off the roadways,” she said.

Welch would not argue with any of that.

“Hastily packing up endangered f ish and amphibians, then moving them out of harm’s way, is not an ideal solution,” she said. “But it can buy us time to care for them for decades, or longer, if possible.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? ANN BERKLEY, biologist at San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, surveys damage from the Bobcat f ire, which reduced to ashes decades’ worth of federally funded efforts to protect endangered species.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ANN BERKLEY, biologist at San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, surveys damage from the Bobcat f ire, which reduced to ashes decades’ worth of federally funded efforts to protect endangered species.
 ?? Jamie Pham Los Angeles Zoo ?? FIRES, mudslides and nonnative predators have helped decimate the mountain yellow- legged frog.
Jamie Pham Los Angeles Zoo FIRES, mudslides and nonnative predators have helped decimate the mountain yellow- legged frog.
 ?? A DEER Photog r aphs by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? searches for food after its habitat was devastated by the Bobcat f ire. “The business of saving human lives and rare wildlife is suddenly more complicate­d than ever,” said an L. A. County Department of Public Works commander for the f ire recovery effort.
A DEER Photog r aphs by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times searches for food after its habitat was devastated by the Bobcat f ire. “The business of saving human lives and rare wildlife is suddenly more complicate­d than ever,” said an L. A. County Department of Public Works commander for the f ire recovery effort.
 ?? A SOUTHERN PACIFIC RATTLESNAK­E ?? looks thin, according to a biologist. The “smaller critters” the snakes eat are also suffering from loss of habitat.
A SOUTHERN PACIFIC RATTLESNAK­E looks thin, according to a biologist. The “smaller critters” the snakes eat are also suffering from loss of habitat.

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