The Mercury News

Animals return to California parks burned by Glass Fire

- By Hayley Smith

LOS ANGELES >> When the Glass Fire seared through portions of Sonoma County’s Hood Mountain Regional Park in September, it left little in its wake: Once- stately pines and oaks stood starkly amid seared chaparral, and the ever-present chatter of chirping birds was replaced by an eerie silence.

The fire burned more than 80% of the 2,000acre park, according to Sonoma County Regional Parks spokeswoma­n Meda Freeman, and countless animals either died or fled.

“They don’t always make it out,” Freeman said. “Some go undergroun­d, and some can run out ahead of it, but there were sightings of deer that died in the fire.”

Now, two months after the devastatin­g blaze chewed through the region, life is beginning to reemerge.

“Our staff are happy to report they’ve seen signs of wildlife returning to many areas,” Sonoma County Regional Park said in an update on its Facebook page, along with a video showing a jackrabbit hopping along a fire-ravaged Hood Mountain trail.

The park’s wildlife cameras also recorded deer, bobcats and a skunk returning to the charred trail. ( With the volume turned up, birds can be heard chirping too.)

“It’s always good for the public to see those images,” Freeman said, “and get some reassuranc­e that the wildlife are moving about in the park after the fire.”

Similar sightings have occurred in nearby Sugarloaf Ridge State Park, which also burned in the Glass fire. Trail cameras focused on a creek in the park captured birds, deer and mountain lions emerging for a drink of water in the weeks following the blaze.

Caitlin Cornwall, senior project manager at the Sonoma Ecology Center, said animals were often clever when it came to wildfire defense. Some run far from the flames, while others take shelter in hollow stumps, build dens out of downed trees or burrow undergroun­d.

“An amazing thing after a wildfire is to see how many holes in the ground there are,” Cornwall said, adding that rabbits, foxes, raccoons, small rodents, spiders and lizards are known to go undergroun­d to avoid flames. “I have this mental pictures of all these different creatures crowding into someone’s den.”

Although there are often deaths during a fire, one of the hardest times for wildlife is the period between the flames and the first rain, Cornwall said, when there is very little food on the ground.

But nature is resilient. According to Cornwall, perennial grasses start to regrow within two weeks of a fire, chaparral in four. Often, trees grow new sprouts quickly — not on higher branches but lower down, where animals can reach them.

“A lot of the regrowth is lush and fast and easy to get to if you’re an herbivore,” she said, noting that almost all of California’s plant and animal communitie­s have evolved with fire.

Still, the f lames take their toll. California’s wildfires have burned through a record 4.2 million acres in 2020, and rescue teams have reported a variety of animals injured, including a young bobcat burned in the El Dorado fire and a barn owl that lost most of its feathers in the Silverado fire.

In the North Complex Fire in Butte County, one bear’s paw pads were burned so severely they had to be sutured with tilapia skin.

 ??  ?? Mr. Roadshow Gary Richards is on vacation through Nov. 23.
Mr. Roadshow Gary Richards is on vacation through Nov. 23.

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