#11 – Critical Mast: The Hidden Cycle of Oak Abundance

Have you ever noticed that oak trees sometimes have bumper crops of acorns, and sometimes hardly produce a thing? What causes this? And why?

Join host Griff Griffith and producer Michael Hawk on an exploration of acorn masting (bumper crops), with a special deep dive into one species that profoundly benefits – the charismatic Acorn Woodpecker.

Guided by our special guests, Dr. Walter Koenig (both a masting and Acorn Woodpecker researcher), and Dr. Doug Tallamy (author of The Nature of Oaks), we tell the tale of acorn masting, and the importance of oaks in general.

This episode is part of a playful exercise in community podcasting, with 6 different shows each producing their own stories about or inspired by the mystery of masting, and releasing them at (approximately) the same time. 

For other masting stories, check out:

We’ll populate this Spotify playlist with all our stories as they come out!

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Links to Topics Discussed and Supporting Resources

Calscape – find hyper-local native plants in California

NWF Native Plant Finder

Homegrown National Park and their Map

The Nature of Oaks

Related Podcast Episodes

Credits

This podcast episode was written and produced by Michael Hawk. Our host and co-writer is Griff Griffith. Kat Hill provided editing support for the interview with Dr. Walter Koenig.

Some of the music used in this production is through creative commons licensing:


Transcript (Click to View)

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[00:00:00] Griff Griffith: Growing up my grandma was my best friend. We even made up our own religion called the Church of whatever and Oak Trees. We were the only two members. The Valley Oak was our symbol. We even had a sacred book that only existed in our heads, but it was called the Gospel of the Oak as an 8-year-old. My most sacred place was on a wooden palette that was lodged in the branches of an ancient valley oak.

My grandma couldn’t climb this tree, and anyone else who tried was pummeled with acorn grenades and or oak gall bombs.

We chose the oak as our religion symbol, not just because they’re beautiful trees, but also because my grandma told me that our ancestors only survived Ireland’s potato famine because they ate acorn mush up until the moment they stepped on the boat that brought them to America.

Grandma assured me that the more time I spent among the oaks, the more mysteries I would discover. And she was right first time I found an acorn Woodpecker’s Grainery, I thought that someone had [00:01:00] shot that dead tree with a machine gun that used acorns as bullets. But it wasn’t long before I noticed Acorn Woodpeckers standing guard over them even fitting the seeds into place.

I called the old snag woodpecker’s kitchen and gave the birds plenty of space.

Years later, as a Nature Conservancy restoration intern. Part of my job was to collect acorns for our restoration site . . My boss said we were lucky ’cause the oaks along the Sacramento River were masting that year. I nodded. Like I understood, but I really didn’t. It was the first time I remember hearing that word, but once I was crawling around in the grass and Finding tons of acorns to drop into the bucket . I figured out what Masting meant. It wasn’t just one oak tree producing a monster amount of acorns that year. It was all the trees in the area.

If each acorn were a quarter ,, I would’ve been a millionaire.

It took little time to fill 10 buckets and I never felt like I was stealing wildlife’s food. There were more than enough acorns for all of us.

These [00:02:00] synchronized boom years or masting events are a fluke of nature, a manifestation of weather.

Or a carefully derived strategy among oaks. Wherever the evidence takes you, you will immediately see that the benefits to the oaks is obvious, overwhelm the scene, with numbers, and some acorns are bound to sprout.

In the gospel of the oak chapter 10, verse 15, it says, an oak or a grandson that tries to mast every year wears itself out. Learn when to store your energy and when to share it.

That’s how you last long enough to shade others.

Today’s episode is part of a playful experiment in community podcasting.

Six different shows are each producing their own stories about, or inspired by the mystery of masting and releasing these episodes at approximately the same time. It’s a critical mast of podcast, if you will.

so be sure to check out Future Ecologies, Golden State Naturalist, Outside/ In and Learning from Nature, [00:03:00] the Biomimicry Podcast for their releases. And you can hear the full interviews with our guest today on the Nature’s Archive Podcast. And by the end of this episode you will be a master about masting. Get it? Okay. Sorry. Let’s jump in.

I’m Griff Griffith, and welcome to Jumpstart Nature.

Quick heads up. Our founder and producer Michael Hawk is the one who facilitated these original interviews. So to give you the most cohesive story today, Michael’s going to personally guide us through the clips. Take it away, Michael.

[00:03:47] Michael Hawk: Do you remember childhood encounters with acorns? They’re Robust and polished, like a classic artist carving with cute caps that can hardly be ignored and from the acorn grows a tree sometimes immense, sometimes [00:04:00] living hundreds of years. Other oaks might only grow a few feet tall when considering the 90 species of oaks native to the United States and the 500 worldwide.

I could rattle off superlatives all day long. But some of the most important facts about oaks are harder to see. Life on earth nearly always begins with sunlight, and somehow the sunlight’s energy has to be converted to calories for plants and animals. Of course, that begins with photosynthesis.

When ecologists look at ecosystems, they estimate that about 10% of the energy produced by plants gets passed along to herbivores the plant eating animals.

[00:04:38] Doug Tallamy: The 10% is a general estimate that has been challenged for about 50 years, . Um, it could be somewhere around there

[00:04:46] Michael Hawk: You might recognize that voice. It’s Dr. Doug Tallamy, author of The Nature of Oaks.

[00:04:52] Doug Tallamy: but yeah, I, I would say definitely the oaks are punching above their, their weight class. You know, it’s about how much of the energy [00:05:00] from the sun you are willing to share with other organisms.

Oaks share a lot.

there are other plants, even other native plants that share very little, like ferns, for example, ancient, ancient plants. But they, they’re really good at protecting themselves.

They, they grab that energy and they don’t share it. So, uh, if you’re trying to support a food web in your local ecosystem, you’re not gonna do it with ferns. You are gonna do it with, with oaks

[00:05:24] Michael Hawk: I know one big area of focus is their larval food plants for, a great variety of insects.

[00:05:31] Doug Tallamy: Right. And that is, that’s really, uh, one of the primary reasons, , I got interested in oaks. It’s not just insects, it turns out it’s caterpillars. Um, caterpillars transfer more energy from plants to other organisms than any other type of plant eater.

So if you don’t have a lot of caterpillars in your ecosystem, you, you essentially have a failed food web.

Why do we need so many caterpillars? Well, let’s just focus on birds. It takes thousands and thousands of caterpillars to make one clutch of breeding bird. You know, we, we got a lot of data for chickadee, but there’s data on a [00:06:00] number of other things.

6,000 to 9,000 caterpillars to get one clutch of a bird that’s a third of an ounce through to independence, actually just to, to fledging. And then the parents continue to feed them caterpillars another 21 days. So you’re talking about tens of thousands of caterpillars required to make a nest of chickadees.

nationwide Oaks support more than 950 species of caterpillars

[00:06:22] Michael Hawk: The impact of caterpillars is undeniable, but one of my favorite things about oaks are growths called galls. Sometimes tiny and cryptic. Other times, boastfully large and colorful.

They can sometimes adorn an oak tree by the thousands. Now, just a few seconds ago, I called them growths. But that simple characterization really shortchanges what they are.

[00:06:43] Doug Tallamy: People have likened galls to cancerous growths on plants, but I don’t like that analogy because cancers grow.

I mean, tumors just keep growing in an uncontrolled way

[00:06:55] Michael Hawk: It all starts with a tiny wasp. In fact, it’s a special group of wasps who rather than [00:07:00] sting have unique ovipositors. Think of it like an egg laying tool. These wasps seem to emerge at just the right time when the oak tree has buds at just the right stage or when a leaf is at the perfect stage.

[00:07:14] Doug Tallamy: the female wasp injects into the buds of the. The ma thematic tissue. The bud of an oak is like, like stem cells. You can make it into anything you want.

And they inject, hormones in different ways that create the shape and the size of this species specific gall. So it’s, it’s highly defined. You can identify what species of wasp it was that made the gall just by the shape of the gall.

[00:07:38] Michael Hawk: Yes, the wasp through some sort of chemical alchemy developed through eons of evolutionary experimentation, instructs the tree to grow a very specific growth inside of which the wasp larva set up shop in their new home. They have protection and free food courtesy of the tree. And the galls, depending on the species, [00:08:00] can look like strawberries, tiny red volcanoes, little convoluted brains or large apples, just to name a few of the shapes and sizes.

While oaks haven’t covered the gall real estate market, there are other trees that do this as well, and other plants for that matter, they are some of the most prolific gall supporters and where there are defenseless larva, there are sure to be predators of all shapes and sizes as well.

I’ve even seen woodpeckers probing inside of Galls looking for a treat. Maybe a bit like nature’s gumball machine, but when we think of woodpeckers and oak trees, one species stands out.

That’s the sound of an acorn woodpecker, a gregarious bird found in the southwest and western United States. And in fact, all the way through Mexico and down into Colombia.

[00:08:53] Dr. Walt Koenig: they are quite vocal They make a lot of fun noises that make them very conspicuous,

acorn [00:09:00] woodpeckers are typically described as being clown faced. They do have a clownish type of visage, if you will

[00:09:09] Michael Hawk: Dr. Walter Koenig is perhaps the world’s leading expert on acorn woodpeckers.

I

[00:09:13] Dr. Walt Koenig: they have these tongues, that go all the way around their heads so that they can stick them out, strikingly long distances. Back when I used to have a bird that I could show people, I would pull out his tongue and, it would go an amazing distance given that,

as birds, they aren’t that big.but they use that. They have a little barbs at the end. Uh, most woodpeckers, which are wood boring and are pecking into wood, looking at wood, trying to find wood boring insects will use that to pull out those insects

Acorn woodpeckers are what we call cooperative breeders. Cooperative breeding is, not terribly unusual, but pretty interesting social behavior [00:10:00] found in maybe 10 percent of bird species, but it’s quite uncommon in North America.

[00:10:06] Michael Hawk: Part of the reason why acorn woodpeckers love oak trees is because old mature oaks often have lots of holes, perhaps where branches fell off or maybe where other woodpeckers excavated.

[00:10:17] Dr. Walt Koenig: Acorn woodpeckers are cavity nesters, and they also roost together in cavities throughout the year.

They are communal roosters. They live in family groups, and In some cases, the entire group will roost together in the same nest cavity, though sometimes they’ll split among more than one roost cavities on their territory.

[00:10:39] Michael Hawk: and surprisingly,

[00:10:40] Dr. Walt Koenig: Acorn woodpeckers are largely fly catchers, so they’re spending a lot of time fly catching up in the air.

They also leaf glean and bark glean in particular. One of the old names for them was ant woodpecker, and in fact they eat a lot of ants, which are often on the trees, living up in [00:11:00] the trees around here.

[00:11:01] Michael Hawk: oaks in their habitats support lots of insects. So it makes sense. But their name, Acorn Woodpecker came about from a much more obvious reason. Yes, they do eat acorns too.

In fact, acorns are their foundational food, perhaps like rice and wheat are for people.

[00:11:18] Dr. Walt Koenig: Acorn woodpeckers are tied to acorns and oaks, and part of it is that they have developed a striking habit of drilling individual holes in,

[00:11:30] Michael Hawk: And was that a pun by the way, a striking

[00:11:33] Dr. Walt Koenig: I mean, well, yeah, okay, I’ll accept it. A striking habit of drilling these These individual holes in the dead tissue of trees. Uh, and other structures. They, of course, are well known for doing this in buildings and, and people’s houses Telephone

poles. so they’ll drill these individual holes that they’ll then harvest acorns in the fall as they’re [00:12:00] maturing and put them in these little holes. Now, the point of that. as I said, is that it has to be in the dead tissue of a tree. So it’s always in dead limbs or the bark. It has to be in a species of tree that has relatively thick bark where they aren’t piercing into the living tissue of the tree, because they, the whole point is that they’re doing this in the late fall, early winter, when around here in California, uh, that’s when it starts getting wet and cold and rainy. And the whole point is to allow these acorns to dry out and to not rot and mold during the winter

[00:12:42] Michael Hawk: Now when you think of woodpeckers, of course you imagine them drilling holes, but surprisingly,

[00:12:47] Dr. Walt Koenig: They aren’t really good at drilling holes, cavities, but they, they do it. And so they’ll drill a few dozen hundred of these a year, and they’ll just keep doing it. They’ll reuse these [00:13:00] these holes over and over again during the winter and each year when the acorn crop matures. And so if they happen to have a nice. tree, that is going to be around for a while, they can end up with a, granary, as we call them, that has tens of thousands of holes. These big granaries, , which end up being kind of famous because they can be pretty striking,are not all that common because These birds are trying to drill these holes as fast as they can, just to make up for holes that are being lost for one reason or another, because often the limbs are falling during the winter, the tree is falling apart, You know, they have to work pretty hard to maintain a granary that’s going to have a thousand, a couple thousand holes, and allow them to last through the winter and the spring.

[00:13:54] Michael Hawk: kind of like with gall larvae, we’re now talking about a great food source stuck in one place. [00:14:00] No wonder Acorn woodpeckers live in family groups.

They need labor to protect and manage the granary.

[00:14:07] Bernard: Good Morning Ralph

[00:14:08] Vernon: Good Morning Sam

[00:14:10] Dr. Walt Koenig: They certainly check on the acorns. as they dry out, they shrink, and the birds spend a lot of time in in the winter just sort of checking on them, and if they don’t fit very well anymore, they will pull them out and move them to a hole where they fit better, because then they do also spend a lot of time defending them against the titmice and the quail and the ground squirrels. And everything else that might come and want to steal those acorns when they are no longer available on the oaks themselves. Because by the time you get to January, and February, and March, and later, in a typical year, those are the only acorns that are going to be around. And so there are a lot of animals out there that would like to get those acorns. And of course, having them, Carefully packed in those [00:15:00] granaries makes them difficult for anybody else to get them, and the birds then defend them against all these other species. As well as other acorn woodpeckers that might want to come and try to steal them.

One of the really interesting things about the geographic distribution of acorn woodpeckers, is that they are not, strictly speaking, restricted to places where there are oaks. They tend to only be found in places where there are at least two species of oaks,

[00:15:30] Michael Hawk: And this brings us back to masting.

[00:15:32] Dr. Walt Koenig: The reason for that oaks, are masting species. They produce a lot of acorns, a lot of seeds some years and very few seeds other years. And if you’re living in a place where there’s only one oak species, you’re going to have what amounts to an acorn crop failure fairly regularly, once every three or four years, which is basically once a generation, if you’re an acorn woodpecker. And acorn woodpeckers just apparently are not able to make it [00:16:00] in most such places. Whereas if there are two or more species, the species do not necessarily produce acorn crops synchronously.

[00:16:07] Michael Hawk: Dr. Koenig has spent many years studying masting.

[00:16:11] Dr. Walt Koenig: So masting is the variable and synchronized production of seeds of plants, and so, I’ll talk mostly about trees because that’s where it’s been most studied and what I’ve been most interested in.

So the interesting thing about masting is it’s not strictly speaking something that an individual tree does. So a tree may produce a lot of acorns one year and not very many or no acorns another year. But masting is a population level phenomenon. It’s something that all the trees in the population are doing more or less at the same time. So in a good mast year, all the individuals Of whatever species we’re talking about, are going to produce a relatively good acorn, crop whereas in a bad mast year. [00:17:00] none none of them, or very few of them, are going to produce any acorns at all.

how does a population of trees decide when it’s going to produce to put all its energy into acorn production?

[00:17:11] Michael Hawk: I’m sure that’s the question we were all thinking.

[00:17:14] Dr. Walt Koenig: those factors can be similar among some species so that you can get some synchrony in acorn production among different species. But one of the things that really sparked my interest early on was this definition, which was synchronous production of seeds by a population of trees, but what no one seemed to really care too much about or have spent a lot of time studying was how big a population we were talking about. So was it just the trees right here at Hastings? These trees that we have here, including Valley Oaks and Blue Oaks, found all around the state, around the Central Valley of California. So they cover millions of [00:18:00] acres. And so if it’s a good acorn year for Blue Oaks here in Hastings, is it a good year up in the Bay Area around Oakland and the Berkeley Hills?

Is it a good year in the foothills of the Sierras?

so it took us a long time before we kind of realized that, in fact, the population we were dealing with was much larger than people had suspected. And, in fact, for some of the species, at least, it pretty much encompasses their entire geographic range

[00:18:32] Michael Hawk: So what is driving this large scale event?

[00:18:35] Dr. Walt Koenig: the 2 things that are the most important for, say, the valley oaks, or the blue oaks, uh, which are species, which at least a lot of your listeners here in California will be familiar with, conditions during the spring, when they’re flowering, so these are species that are flowering in February and March and April, and then those flowers that are what, then mature into [00:19:00] acorns the next, fall. And so the conditions during the spring are very important. And then the complicating factor and the one that sort of really makes things difficult is that it also depends on, what the acorn crop was the year before

So if they put a lot of energy into and had a very good acorn crop last year, then they tend not to have a very good acorn crop this year. And this is what really tells us at some level that part of the story is that they’re storing energy somewhere in the tree

[00:19:34] Michael Hawk: so the weather’s the main driver,

[00:19:37] Dr. Walt Koenig: In fact the weather is probably the main driver of what’s going on.

[00:19:42] Michael Hawk: So the oak trees need to have the right weather conditions to build up energy and the right conditions to allow for pollination and production. Of course, the cycles might be a bit different where you live, but the principle remains the same.

We only talked about acorn woodpeckers, but so many other animals partake in [00:20:00] acorn treats from blue jays and scrub jays to crows and turkey, squirrels, wood rats, and mice love a good acorn too. But did you know that white-tailed deer are some of the most prolific acorn eaters? And black bears can gorge up to 10 pounds of acorns per day when preparing for hibernation?

But despite all of the connoisseurs, a great many acorns will end up lost, buried by a squirrel or a jay and sprout into the next generation of oaks continuing this ancient cycle.

[00:20:30] Griff Griffith: So what’s the big lesson we can take from today? Well, masting is a reminder that the natural world operates on long, complex cycles that we don’t often even see. It takes years for an oak tree to budget its energy for that giant synchronized boom year, and when it happens, the entire ecosystem from the smallest ground squirrel to the amazing Acorn woodpecker is riding that wave.

We’re all part of this massive, invisible, critical event.

My call to you is [00:21:00] simple. If you want to support this whole, beautiful, ancient, complex system right outside your window, plant an oak. It’s a gift to the future and a keystone home for hundreds of species.

Be sure to check out our show notes for links to resources to help you find the right sized and right species of oak for your area. check out the full interview with Dr. Walter Koenig over on Nature’s Archive Feed right now. There is so much more to the fascinating story of acorn Woodpeckers that you just have to hear to believe.

[00:21:29] Michael Hawk: The Jumpstart Nature Podcast was created and produced by me, Michael Hawk.

Special thanks to Kat Hill who provided editing support on the Walter Koenig interview, and of course, Griff Griffith, our host.

Thanks for listening.

[00:02:41] Mike Armer: They’re perfect little killing machines.

[00:02:43] Griff Griffith: That’s Mike Armer.

[00:02:45] Mike Armer: I’m a small animal veterinarian, so 99 percent of what we see is cats and dogs.

[00:02:50] Griff Griffith: And like everyone in this episode, Mike is also a cat owner and cares deeply for cats. Even our producer, Michael Hawk, cares for three cats in his home.

[00:02:59] It’s estimated that there are around 60 million pet cats in the United States, and about one quarter of households own at least one cat. And there are as many as 60 to 100 million stray and feral cats. That’s 120 to 160 million cats in total in the United States.

[00:03:16] Obviously it’s hard to census stray and feral cats, and many sources imply that these numbers may be underestimated.

[00:03:22] Allison Fluty: I would say the thing that always surprises me, is the number of cats that will be at a place versus the number of cats that someone has reported. For example, the, there was one big colony that I was working with for a while, It initially started with just one person asking for help near her work.

[00:03:42] Which was up against a creek and she was worried about the cats that were around there. She said, there’s probably like 20 cats and there’s a lot of coyotes around there. She wanted to see if someone can help. , There was more like a hundred cats in that, that whole area. and. It’s the same thing no matter where you go, you know, it’s just the proportions.

[00:04:05] It’s usually like five times more cats than are reported. If I go to a house and they say, I think there’s, you know, four or five cats, it’s like, okay, there could be 15 to 20.

[00:04:15] Griff Griffith: Alison Fluty, who you just heard from is perhaps the ultimate cat lover. She educates the community about outdoor cats and volunteers with a TNR organization in multiple capacities.

[00:04:26] What’s TNR? We’ll come back to that in a moment. But it does not take a mathematician to realize the impact 100 million cats have on wild animals and our ecosystems.

[00:04:36] Mike Armer: Cats are not a wild species. These are a domesticated animal, and so these aren’t ever found in nature. definitely seen a lot of different studies estimating,

[00:04:53] how many animals cats kill, it’s really quite disturbing. The numbers I’ve seen most recently are more than two billion, with a B, birds per year, and more than 12 billion small animals. You know, mice, rats, rabbits, things like that.

[00:05:09] Griff Griffith: Stop and think about those numbers. 14 billion birds and small animals per year killed by outdoor cats, which aren’t even native to our environment. And 100 million outdoor cats, that means there is an incredible density of predators on the landscape, an unnatural density, a density of threat that wild birds and other small animals have never had to contend with before.

[00:05:33] But with 25 percent of American households owning cats and many more caring for outdoor cats, we can make a difference. In fact, what we have to share today might be the most impactful way that you can help biodiversity right after planting native plants, of course.

[00:05:49] I’m Griff Griffith, and welcome to Jumpstart Nature.

[00:06:03] It seems like whenever I bring up the topic of outdoor cats, one of two things happen. People either get really defensive or they get really angry, sometimes both. And it doesn’t matter whether they are conservationists, cat owners, or both.

[00:06:26] Cats trigger polarizing responses in the world of environmental stewardship.

[00:06:31] No matter how you look at it, cats are amazing creatures. They’re independent, yet lovable and loving.

[00:06:37] They are meticulously clean they are stealthy, yet communicate with an incredible diversity of vocalizations and mannerisms.

[00:06:44] They can keep your house or barn free of rodents and help you keep warm at night. And I love getting to know each cat’s personality. Some are playful. Others just love to cuddle. Others are more reclusive. My two cats personalities are so different, it’s almost like they’re two different species of cat. One wakes me up every morning by sitting on my chest and biting my nose. And then as soon as my feet hit the floor, she’s herding me towards the snack jar.

[00:07:09] The other wonders why I live in her house and finds little use for me besides filling her food dish. I love them both.

[00:07:15] Our goal today is to approach this hot button topic with an open and compassionate mind. As you know, I’m both a cat lover and a wildlife lover. If you have an outdoor cat now or care for outdoor cats, there are things you can do to help.

[00:07:31] And after your current outdoor cat goes to the great cat tree in the sky, where there’s everlasting supply of catnip, you can make a pledge that your next feline best friend will be indoors only.

[00:07:42] And speaking of cat compassion, one of the first things I think about is being compassionate for my cat’s health.

[00:07:48] Mike Armer: Indoor cats have been shown time and time again to have longer, healthier lives. The average lifespan for an indoor cat is in the 10 to 15 year range. The average lifespan for an outdoor cat is only two to five years. So there’s a huge difference there. And that’s just lifespan. Quality of life, um, I believe is better for indoor cats.

[00:08:08] They’re far less likely to get sick. They’re far less likely to have significant wounds. It really is a huge difference.

[00:08:16] Outdoor cats, are prone to some infectious diseases, feline leukemia virus. Feline Immunodeficiency Virus, which is cat AIDS. There are others as well. Toxoplasmosis, I know you want to talk about that in a little bit. Wounds, so cats get into fights with other cats. They get attacked by wild animals.

[00:08:38] Raccoons, things like that. Dogs will attack cats when they’re outside. And it’s unfortunately not uncommon for cats to get hit by cars, and that’s almost always a fatal interaction.

[00:08:49] Griff Griffith: Wow. Being an outdoor cat cuts eight to 10 years from their life. And it’s a hard life. That’s for sure.

[00:08:56] Mike Armer: I would say most people have some sense that keeping a cat indoors is better for them and better for the environment. I don’t think very many people have a sense of how extreme the difference is for the cats and for the wildlife.

[00:09:14] Griff Griffith: How do all these cats get outdoors anyway? Well, it’s a combination of things. Sometimes cats are simply allowed to roam free by their owners. Cats might escape , or get lost, or be left behind by owners who are unable to care for them. Just like with other pets, sometimess well meaning owners drop their cats off in natural areas thinking that it’s the best solution. That’s actually how I got my first cat, Meow Meow. She was the daughter of some cats that were dropped off in a city park.

[00:09:41] those abandoned cats aren’t spayed and neutered, then they can, and probably will, start having kittens.

[00:09:48] Each cat litter can have as many as six kittens in it, and those kittens are mature enough to have kittens of their own by the time they’re four to six months old.

[00:09:56] Once there are a few cats in an area, a mature female can have anywhere from two to five litters a year. Well, that’s a lot of numbers, so I’ll do the math for you. A mature female can have as many as 8 to nearly 30 kittens per year.

[00:10:12] You can see how populations can explode this way, and you can see why animals like coyotes might be attracted to these cat colonies.

[00:10:22] You may have heard terms like feral, stray, or community cats, so let’s take a moment to get these terms straight .

[00:10:28] Community cats encompass all free roaming cats, whereas feral represents cats that have little or no human contact. Feral cats tend to fear people and hide and can rarely be socialized That means they usually can’t be adopted.

[00:10:42] Stray cats are typically former pets, so they may be more approachable.

[00:10:46] The reason why these classifications are important is because they remind us that it’s not as simple as just catching an outdoor cat and then adopting it out to a new owner.

[00:10:55] And regardless, there are way too many outdoor cats for shelters and adoption services to handle. Not to mention people willing to adopt them. That’s not to say that adoption isn’t helpful. It certainly can be a piece of the puzzle to solve our cat problems.

[00:11:09] How do stray and feral cats get taken in and adopted out? Very often this process begins through TNR groups.

[00:11:17] Allison Fluty: TNR stands for trap, neuter, and return. Basically trapping a cat, neutering or spaying them, and then returning them to where they came from.

[00:11:26] Griff Griffith: TNR, on the surface, sounds pretty simple , but remember what Allison said earlier?

[00:11:31] Allison Fluty: It’s usually like five times more cats than are reported. You know, if I go to a house and they say, I think there’s, four or five cats, it’s like, okay, there could be 15 to 20.

[00:11:41] Griff Griffith: And Mike Armer adds another wrinkle.

[00:11:43] Mike Armer: From my understanding, TNR works in select situations, specifically where there is a, um, defined community of cats that doesn’t have new cats coming in from the outside. So rural areas that are isolated and don’t have adjoining towns where cats might be coming over from. It can actually work really well there because you can essentially, with time, catch the entire population.

[00:12:13] In more urban areas or larger areas, it’s virtually impossible to get a sufficient number of them to where it makes a difference. From what I understand.

[00:12:25] Griff Griffith: And that makes sense. If you have a large intermingling population, a one and done TNR effort probably won’t be effective in the long run.

[00:12:33] However, people committed to TNR, like Allison embrace much more than a one time trapping effort. Our producer, Michael Hawk calls it full spectrum TNR.

[00:12:44] Some people will also say that returning cats, which are not native to our ecosystems , is inhumane. They will say that we’re picking winners because those cats will continue to hunt and kill native animals. Others say it is inhumane to not return these unadoptable cats because there are no other viable alternatives. And as we stated before, these outdoor cats live short, hard, and often unhealthy lives.

[00:13:10] As you can see, there are no ideal solutions here. But this is where we are in 2025. Facing a situation, where there are millions of free roaming outdoor cats, supported by millions of cat lovers, pitted against wildlife lovers who want to eradicate the cats from the landscape.

[00:13:28] If I could snap my fingers and solve this, I would. But until I gain those magical powers, we have to work with what we have.

[00:13:35] And part of the problem with TNR is that many past TNR efforts have not been full spectrum.

[00:13:42] But in cases where full spectrum processes are embraced, which Allison describes in a moment, it has been successful.

[00:13:49] We’ve linked to a few studies in our show notes. Some of which were done in conjunction with Audubon chapters and bird observatories. One study tracked a population of cats near a city adjacent to the San Francisco Bay. An initial population of 175 cats declined by 99. 4 percent over the 16 year program period. Of the 258 total cats enrolled , only one remained at the end of the program period.

[00:14:17] Allison Fluty: There are a lot of, you know, misunderstandings or why a lot of people think that it just doesn’t work because when you’re doing TNR, you need to get like a hundred percent of the, you want to fix a hundred percent of the is close to a hundred percent. you know, a lot of studies say think like around 80 percent is when you’re going to see, the population start to decline,

[00:14:37] but we always try to do a hundred percent, as close to a hundred percent as possible. And it also requires ongoing management. and so that means that, you know, whoever’s caretaking the cats, the, the feeder, that they’re, feeding responsibly. That’s where a lot of the education comes in again. you know, we tell them don’t just dump food and leave.

[00:14:57] You know, you’re doing it, on a schedule. You’re picking up any uneaten food and taking it with you or throwing it away, and not leaving it out. and that way all the cats in the colony are coming during the times that you’re there and you can monitor them for, any injuries or illness or any new cats that might show up and they’re able to get those cats, and fix them or return them to their owners if they were lost pets

[00:15:21] it is an ongoing thing that requires a lot of education, but if it is done, um, full spectrum, as you say, I like that term, it is successful.

[00:15:29] Griff Griffith: Successful TNR requires getting a handle on the population.

[00:15:33] Allison Fluty: The whole process goes back into like, you have to kind of assess the situation, find out, how many cats are there, find out who’s feeding them.

[00:15:42] A lot of times there’s a lot of different people feeding them that don’t know each other. Provide education to feeders. Depending on the type of area, if it’s like residential, I’ll be going like to all the neighbors houses on the streets and knocking on the doors to ask them if they have outdoor cats or if they’re feeding cats, and leaving flyers if I’m not able to speak to someone in person.

[00:16:14] Using cameras, that we place, they’re kind of like trap cameras. They, they record when it’s, when they sense motion. but you can access them, you know, from an app on your phone. You don’t have to physically get the card out from the camera. All that really is just a, just. to figure out how many cats there are and how many people are feeding them and to get everybody on the same page.

[00:16:34] One of the important things is to establish a routine feeding schedule. You want the cats to be used to eating at one or two times a day. lot of feeders just leave food out and it lets cats come whenever they want. So really shy cats might not show up until 2am or something. There’s a lot of coordination that, that goes into, into that lot of prep before the actual trapping.

[00:17:01] Griff Griffith: Another reason to not leave food out all the time is that you are likely to attract other animals and pests, perhaps roaches, crickets, ants, raccoons, even coyotes.

[00:17:11] Well, meaning people who feed cats take on an extra responsibility as a caretaker, but they don’t always realize this. They need to monitor their feeding stations, clean the stations and ensure that they are not causing more harm. And with this monitoring, people can identify when new cats enter the neighborhood and alert their local TNR group to come back.

[00:17:30] Okay, so when Allison and her TNR group, Bay Area Cats, are engaged, they start with education, establish a feeding schedule, and monitor the population.

[00:17:39] Then it’s time for trapping. Producer Michael tagged along on a recent trap.

[00:17:44] To set the scene, the location is behind a hotel, along a creek, right next to a busy highway in the heart of San Jose, California. After a period of monitoring, Allison assessed that there were 12 to 14 cats, and has been slowly trapping cats over the previous few weeks.

[00:17:59] Allison Fluty: I have two appointments for tomorrow, so I’m going to try to catch two cats. I have my remote control trap, because some of the cats are already fixed. And so, I’m going to selectively trap ones that haven’t been fixed yet. Then transfer it into the other trap so I can use the robo trap again.

[00:18:19] It has this. This battery is connected to a little switch that triggers this actuator, they use them for car doors.

[00:18:30] Griff Griffith: The setup Alison is using is advanced yet. Its design is elegantly simple. Imagine a cage trap that has remote control door triggered by a key fob like what you use to open your car door.

[00:18:41] Allison Fluty: have a little camera that I put out, and then I just kind of sit in my car. And these cats are, they’re not super shy, so I’ve been able to sit, like, right here while they’re eating right here to trap them.

[00:18:54] And then, so this is a Reolink camera and it uses um, a SIM card that I just buy data for.

[00:19:00] Griff Griffith: She aims the camera at the trap and can watch real time video on her phone. This allows her to sit in the car, using it like a blind , so as not to disturb the cats. The cat’s preferred food is set in the trap. if a new cat or a known cat that has not been caught before wanders in, she triggers the trap.

[00:19:15] Allison Fluty: So this is where a lot of the trapping Just Sitting, They’re coming out now, huh?

[00:19:21] My camera is lagging so now I

[00:19:24] can’t tell if the cat that’s going in there tipped or not?

[00:19:28] Griff Griffith: Tipping refers to whether the cat has a small portion of the tip of one of its ears surgically removed, which is a universal sign that this cat has been spayed or neutered. Allison doesn’t wanna re trap a cat that has already been fixed. She watches closely as the cats approach .

[00:19:41] Allison Fluty: Oh, there we go. tell who. I can’t tell who it is. oh, I do need that, that one. So one of the is going in the kitten’s, like probably months old. I’ll get this one Let’s get this ready.

[00:20:10] Griff Griffith: Allison covered the trap to keep the cat calm.

[00:20:13] Allison Fluty: And so, I’m going to transfer into this empty one. You’re okay. Oh, I’m sorry.

[00:20:21] Griff Griffith: Allison had prearranged two appointments in the next morning with a vet that aids in TNR efforts. .

[00:20:32] Appointments take time and cost money for an already overworked veterinary industry. When a vet sees a cat that has been trapped, there are several things that happen.

[00:20:42] Mike Armer: Cats are brought in in a specific type of cage. They are always scared, and they’re tend to be much more aggressive than pet cats. And so, uh, unfortunately we absolutely have to sedate every single one that comes in. And so we’ll sedate them, do an evaluation looking for, fleas and whatnot.

[00:21:02] do the, the neutering process. Um, depending on the exact details of the program, they’re usually given, vaccines, at least the rabies vaccine.

[00:21:12] The surgery depends on whether it’s a male or female. Male cats, are very easy to sterilize. It only takes five minutes. Female cats, it’s more complicated, more technically involved, and so it’s probably, depending on your experience, anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. The whole process from presentation, to going home, probably a minimum of a couple of hours, but, most often it’s a bring the cat in, in the morning, pick it up in the evening type situation. After the neutering process, they get, uh, an ear crop, which is just a little notch out of the ear so that you can very easily from a distance, identify which ones have or have not been spayed or neutered.

[00:21:57] Allison Fluty: Through TNR, you’re also identifying cats that are friendly, and can be adopted, and so they are, you know, getting better lives I know some trappers have, found pets that had been lost for, two or three years and able to return them to their owners .

[00:22:12] , and if an area is, deemed to be too dangerous, for a cat to be returned to, for whatever reason, like if it’s Like a heavy construction site, or, if it’s, an ecologically sensitive area, that’s considered also, and, if it wouldn’t make sense to release the cat there, if or the cat’s going to have, too much of a negative impact on the area,

[00:22:36] , then that’s when they’ll also consider, you know, is this cat a candidate for like a barn cat or a garden cat program? There, there’s a lot more that goes into it than I think a lot of people are aware.

[00:22:48] Griff Griffith: But in light of a nationwide vet shortage, and since much of this work is volunteer driven and time consuming, it doesn’t scale well, but it certainly does work in targeted efforts. Of course, more public funds or donations to humane societies and TNR organizations would really help too.

[00:23:05] So far, we’ve been focused on the harm outdoor cats do to wild animals and how it impacts cat’s health as well. But did you know that outdoor cats can harm people and their owners too?

[00:23:19] Mike Armer: Toxoplasmosis is a parasite, and specifically it’s a protozoal parasite, and it’s pretty common. Cats are considered to be what’s called the definitive host, meaning that’s the host that the parasite can reproduce in and spread, but it actually can affect any warm blooded animal, so that includes humans.

[00:23:41] It is actually spread through the feces of the cat, so the outdoor cat, that’s infected defecates outside, it’s gonna go into the ground, other animals are gonna come along, be exposed to it, , and then it can infect those animals if, say, that was a mouse, and a, um, Wild animal comes along and eats that mouse.

[00:24:02] That other animal is going to most likely get infected as well, and it travels pretty much anywhere. It’s, in, it can spread by water and actually even go out into the ocean. Sea otters were very severely affected by it.

[00:24:15] Toxoplasmosis can cause a whole host of different symptoms. It can affect pretty much any part of the body, liver, intestines, lungs, kidneys, heart, skin, eyes. It even affects the central nervous system and can cause behavior changes in cats and humans as well, actually.

[00:24:35] Griff Griffith: In our Nature’s Archive podcast, episode 102 we discussed Toxoplasmosis with biologist Sophie Osborn as well.

[00:24:43] Sophie Osborn: A growing body of research is showing that the disease might be associated with a variety of mental disorders, including depression, bipolar disorders, schizophrenia, things like that.

[00:24:55] There was a study in Europe where women who had toxoplasmosis were twice as likely to commit suicide as women who didn’t have toxoplasmosis. So it’s seeming like it could be much more harmful to people than we initially realized. It also, in rats, makes them not fearful. It makes them bolder and braver.

[00:25:16] And we’re finding that it has that effect on other animals too. So a lot of animals including people that contract toxoplasmosis are more prone to having accidents and trauma.

[00:25:27] Mike Armer: Pregnant women are the highest risk because it affects the fetus. It can cause abortion or fetal death, but it can affect, you know, anything in the human just like it can in the cat. So one of the more common things in children is that it affects their eyes. can cause vision problems.

[00:25:43]

[00:25:44] Griff Griffith: As a conservationist, I’ve been so focused on how cats might harm the environment that I haven’t even considered toxoplasmosis. And this gets us to the main point. The best solution to the outdoor cat problem is prevention. If you have a new cat, please keep it inside.

[00:26:01] People might let their cats outside simply because that is what they grew up with and are used to, and they haven’t even considered the bigger picture.

[00:26:08] Others feel like letting cats outdoors is the only way to let the cat have a full enriching life. But is this true?

[00:26:14] Mike Armer: There are so, so many different things that you can do to enrich the indoor environment. There are tons of products you can buy. There are many websites devoted to ways you can do that without buying products, and in the end, when you’re spending time trying to make your cat’s life better, it becomes a better relationship with the cat. Absolutely, you can have cats that are completely satisfied and happy, strictly indoors.

[00:26:41] If you can train a cat to be on a leash, kudos to you. They seem to generally be happy and are much less likely to be getting injured, though not 100 percent risk free. are great for protecting wildlife, but they’re not necessarily going to prevent the cat from infectious diseases.

[00:27:01] But they allow the cat to go outdoors, smell the smells, see the sights, all that sort of thing.

[00:27:06] Allison Fluty: Sometimes simple things like just pushing a cat tree up against the window and putting up a, a bird feeder or, Playing with your cat is a of enrichment that’s also really, really important.

[00:27:17] You know, finding what your cat likes to play with. Um, some people will say, oh, my cat doesn’t like to play. There’s so many different toys, you can be creative, just find what, what’s enriching to your cat. You know, sometimes bringing something from outside indoors and letting the cat smell it, scent enrichment is another type of enrichment that exists.

[00:27:38]

[00:27:38] Griff Griffith: Scent enrichment, what a great idea. We tend to look at animals through a human perspective, but many animals rely much more on scent than we do, so give it a try. If you have windows, consider making a pedestal or placing a stand near the window so your cat can look outside.

[00:27:54] And move your cat tree or stand around from time to time to give the cats a new perspective. And just like with kids, periodically take toys away or reintroduce older toys. And of course, new and different shape boxes and bags and containers are perennial favorites.

[00:28:09] If you currently allow your cat outdoors, yes, it might be hard to retrain it to be indoors only. Try limiting the hours you let it out to the least impactful hours.

[00:28:18] And of course, make sure your cat is fixed. If you can’t afford the procedure, there may be organizations that can help.

[00:28:24] And speaking of trying to keep your cat indoors, did you know the bird migration is as predictable as the weather?

[00:28:29] In fact, there is an amazing resource called Bird Cast that shows anticipated migration volumes. So birds tend to migrate only on the best weather nights by keeping your cat indoor during those nights and the 24 hours that follow, you could give those migratory birds a chance. You can sign up to receive local migration alerts from BirdCast. Go to birdcast. info and search for Migration Tools or check our show notes.

[00:28:53] And there are other simple things you can do!

[00:28:56] If you have an outdoor cat today, make a pledge that your next cat will be an indoor cat.

[00:29:01] If you see a lot of outdoor cats in your neighborhood, seek out organizations like Bay Area Cats that come out and do TNR. .

[00:29:08] And remember, if you find kittens, there is only a narrow window in which they can be socialized for adoption. Eight weeks is typically the cutoff, so don’t delay.

[00:29:18] And perhaps you can educate your neighbors? Try online neighbor forums. And remember, most people don’t respond well to lecturing. Perhaps take an approach of, I just learned this and thought you’d like to know too.

[00:29:29]

[00:29:29] Griff Griffith: Unfortunately, progress has been slow or non existent in the overall outdoor cat problem, because too many people take an idealized point of view depending on whether they identify as a conservationist or as cat lovers.

[00:29:41] Allison Fluty: There’s the bird people that are very against the TNR, , and against outdoor cats , and then there’s the, cat people, , who feel, that the bird people are vilifying the cats and, just seems silly to me, you know, that , they kind of make each other out to, be , the villain, but really I’m like, we all kind of have the same, goal.

[00:30:05] We all want cats to be healthy. We all want a healthy environment. We don’t want to see, one animal suffering and the other one thriving. We want, them all to be, safe and healthy. My dream is to bring the birders and the cat people together to realize they’re on the same team.

[00:30:21] Griff Griffith: Sophie Osborn adds:

[00:30:23] Sophie Osborn: And so if each of us does one thing, if you can’t cope with having your cat indoors, maybe keep it in for five days when you think a nest might be hatching or fledging in your home.

[00:30:33] And if, 10 million people keep their cat inside for a week, that’s something more than nothing,

[00:30:40] Griff Griffith: Thankfully, I’ve seen that our listeners are open minded and open to the nuances that are inherent in nature.

[00:30:45] So let’s be part of the same team and help our cats and help biodiversity. In my case, Meow Meow and I moved several times, and I did my best to limit her hunting, but it wasn’t until she was like around 9 that we moved into a place with a tall fence that the killing stopped. And I knew that I’d get another cat someday.

[00:31:03] And I made a silent promise to the dozens, maybe hundreds of birds, lizards and snakes that Meow Meow killed, that my next cat would live indoors.

[00:31:11] Now I have two indoor cats named Mimi and Sister. With toys, cat trees, and a catio, their lives are as safe and stimulating as I can make them, and boy, are they cute. We sleep together every night and they still hunt. But now it’s laser lights and stuffed mice, and no one has to die.

[00:31:29] What did you think of today’s episode? We’d like to hear from you. You can email us at podcast at jumpstartnature. com or leave a comment on one of our social media pages. You can find us on Blue Sky , Facebook, and Instagram at jumpstartnature.

[00:31:46] And please share this episode with three of your friends or groups that you think would benefit from hearing it. A big thanks to Allison Fluty, Dr. Mike Armer and Sophie Osborn for their insights in today’s episode.

[00:31:58] Jumpstartnature. com slash cats has a transcript and full show notes , including links to topics we mentioned and additional resources to help you learn more about outdoor cats.

[00:32:08] Michael Hawk: Jumpstart Nature was created and is produced by me, Michael Hawk.

[00:32:12] Miles Ewell provided sound design and our host is Griff Griffith. Thanks for listening.

Angry Activist, Rural Landowner: Finding Common Ground for Nature with Griff Griffith

Have you ever found it tough to talk about big issues, especially when people already have strong ideas? In the world of nature and climate, we often see communication that feels more like telling people what to do, or how to think. It’s easy for us all to dig in our heels, even if we’re wrong, and shut down new ideas. Today, we’re exploring a different path.

Griff Griffith

Griff:  I was very radical and um, had really bad ecological depression because was from the Bay Area and watched all my favorite places get destroyed.

So I was, you know, really felt like the only thing left to do was to fight. And that’s where I was at at 18, 19, 20. Pretty much all the way until 23, I was in a very radical mind state. Mostly angry and depressed.

That’s Griff Griffith, someone many of you know as a passionate environmental communicator and a key collaborator with Jumpstart Nature. Like many, Griff once felt that fighting and lecturing were the only ways to defend the places he loved. But a surprising encounter on a work site with a farmer named Pops changed everything. Griff realized that truly saving biodiversity needed a different approach.

Today, Griff shares his remarkable personal transformation, revealing the power of nuance in communication and how embracing a different approach can yield incredible results for nature. It’s a candid and thought-provoking conversation we can all learn from. We also dive into how even dandelions can have a surprising place in conservation—another vivid example of how our perspectives can evolve.

Because this conversation embodies the spirit of both our shows, I’m excited to release it on both the Nature’s Archive and Jumpstart Nature feeds! If you’re listening on Nature’s Archive, know that Jumpstart Nature usually takes you on an immersive journey into thought-provoking topics that help you save biodiversity. 

And if you’re on the Jumpstart Nature feed, Nature’s Archive brings you deep-dive interviews with top minds in ecology, biodiversity, and nature more broadly. Get ready, because this summer we’re gearing up for many new episodes across both feeds! Our new team of volunteers is hard at work, and we already have several amazing interviews recorded that I can’t wait to share with you. 

For now, let’s lean in for Griff’s truly inspirational story of personal transformation.

Beyond a podcast, Jumpstart Nature is a movement fueled by volunteers, igniting a fresh approach to reconnecting people with the natural world. In the face of our pressing climate and biodiversity challenges, we’re on a mission to help you discover newfound purpose and motivation.

Join us in this vital journey towards nature’s revival. Explore more and show your support at jumpstartnature.com, and follow us on FacebookInstagramLinkedIn, BlueSky and YouTube.

For even deeper nature insights, delve into our companion podcast, Nature’s Archive.

Sign up for our short, bi-weekly (and solutionary!) newsletter called It’s All Connected! Get recommendations for books, podcasts, articles, and more, as well as analysis and recommendations of things YOU can do to help nature.

Credits

This podcast episode was written and produced by Michael Hawk. Our host and co-writer is Griff Griffith.

Some of the music used in this production is through creative commons licensing:

The following music was used for this media project:
Music: Horde Of Geese by Alexander Nakarada
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/9835-horde-of-geese
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Transcript (Click to View)

Jumpstart Nature owns copyright in and to all content in transcripts.

You are welcome to share the below transcript (up to 500 words but not more) in media articles (e.g., The New York Times, LA Times, The Guardian), on your personal website, in a non-commercial article or blog post (e.g., Medium), and/or on a personal social media account for non-commercial purposes, provided that you include attribution to “Jumpstart Nature Podcast” and link back to the jumpstartnature.com URL.

No warranty of accuracy of the transcript is provided or implied. There may be typos.

[00:00:00] Michael Hawk: Have you ever found it tough to talk about big issues? Especially when people already have strong ideas? In the world of nature and climate, we often see communication that feels more like telling people what to do or how to think. It’s easy for us to dig in our heels, even if we’re wrong and shut down new ideas.

Today we’re exploring a different path.

[00:00:19] Griff Griffith: I was very radical and had really bad ecological depression because was from the Bay Area and watched all my favorite places get destroyed.

So I was, really felt like the only thing left to do was to fight. And that’s where I was at at 18, 19, 20. Pretty much all the way until 23, I was in a very radical mind state. Mostly angry and depressed.

[00:00:43] Michael Hawk: That’s Griff Griffith. Someone many of you know is a passionate environmental communicator and a key collaborator with Jumpstart Nature. Like many Griff once felt that fighting and lecturing were the only ways to defend the places he loved. But a surprising encounter on a work site with a farmer [00:01:00] named Pops changed everything.

Griff realized that truly saving biodiversity needed a different approach. Today, Grif shares his remarkable personal transformation, revealing the power of nuance and communication, and how embracing a different approach can yield incredible results for nature. It’s a candid and thought provoking conversation we can all learn from.

We also dive into how even dandelions can have a surprising place in conservation. Another vivid example of how our perspectives can evolve. Because this conversation embodies the spirit of both of our shows. I’m excited to release it on both the Nature’s Archive and Jumpstart Nature Feeds. If you’re listening on Nature’s Archive, know that jumpstart Nature usually takes you on an immersive journey into thought provoking topics to help you save biodiversity.

And if you’re on the Jumpstart nature Feed, Nature’s Archive brings you deep dive interviews with the top minds in ecology, biodiversity, and nature more broadly,

Get ready because this summer we’re gearing up for new episodes [00:02:00] across both feeds. Our new team of volunteers is hard at work, and we already have several amazing interviews recorded that I can’t wait to share with you. For now, let’s lean into G Griff’s.

Truly inspirational story of personal transformation.

All right. Hey, Griff, it’s nice to see you today.

[00:02:17] Griff Griffith: Hello?

[00:02:18] Michael Hawk: You and I have known each other for what, probably like four or five years now. And I’m constantly learning from you in a lot of different ways.

what has surprised me is, in the time I’ve known you, you’ve really had this focus about collaborating with people and reaching beyond the choir to connect people to nature.

And I’ve heard you tell some stories though, that that has not always been the case. So I wanted to dig into that a little bit and learn about like what has transformed you over the years.

[00:02:49] Griff Griffith: Well, you know Michael, you’re from Nebraska and a lot of people in the United States are from different parts, and so they haven’t seen the growth that I witnessed growing up in the Bay area of California. So California has doubled [00:03:00] more than doubled. Much more than doubled since I was born. I think by the time I was 40 it had doubled, and I know that’s true ’cause I watched it double in my surroundings.

I, I grew up all over California. My dad moved us every three years, but mostly right around the Bay Area, especially Fairfield’s, California and Vacaville California. And when I was a kid, and I’ve heard other conservationists say this before, but I would see those stakes go in with the orange spray pan or the pink ribbon tide around them pink flagging.

And , I would know that that meant that I was about to lose my favorite creek. I was about to lose my turtle pond. I was about to lose the field where I chased jackrabbits in. I was about to lose these places. And when they would come in, I would see them injure wildlife and ended up getting a relationship with the Wildlife Care Center in my area by the time I was 12.

So I was a volunteer the time I was 12 because I was watching nature be destroyed and there being orphaned animals. By the time I was 18 and joined the CCC, I moved to Ukiah, and that was during Redwood Summer. I met this woman named Betty Ball at Mendocino, environmental Center and [00:04:00] my life changed at that point because I went from angry watching the ponds. I caught turtles in be buried. No one caught the turtles out and rescued them, watching the creeks get put in culverts and no one getting out the stickleback and the frogs and everything else.

when I moved to Mendocino County and got introduced to Earth first as a 18-year-old, it was an outlet for all this anger, all this mourning, all this grief that I had from watching nature get destroyed around me. And so I didn’t question it. I was angry. I reacted and I joined Earth first and I was pretty active So Earth First is an organization that’s not really an organization. It’s kind of more of just like a way of thinking that many different people in conservation groups would tap into at the time. Their slogan was no compromise in the Defense of Mother Earth.

And so I became an earth firster and supported tree sits and blockades and did protests and stuff like that. I wasn’t anti logger, because my, several of my family [00:05:00] members were loggers, but I was anti-big corporation, clear cutting. And I did have some anti logger sentiment ’cause a lot of them were like our jobs. And I was like, it’s more than just your jobs. And I had a few experiences around that with my family and stuff. But I was very radical and had really bad ecological depression because was from the Bay Area and watched all my favorite places get destroyed.

So I was, really felt like the only thing left to do was to fight. And that’s where I was at at 18, 19, 20. Pretty much all the way until 23, I was in a very radical mind state. Mostly angry and depressed.

[00:05:39] Michael Hawk: you told me recently, I think 23 was the magic age about a story of someone that you had met, named Pops and, and being part of this. So yeah. tell me again about that.

[00:05:51] Griff Griffith: who knew that the, what would, what would you call the person who changed my life? The pivot point of my life or whatever would be an old redneck on a quad. Like a [00:06:00] 80 something year old redneck on a quad with a hat that red pops. But I got a job with the Nature conservancy when I was 23. And you know, I was radical, I was more radical than them.

So when they interviewed me, they were like, would you use herbicide? No, I won’t use that. No, you can’t believe you got, I was. And they’re like, oh, okay. And they’re like, okay, we’re gonna hire you anyways. So, even though at the time they were using herbicides, they just told me that I wouldn’t be applying them and I’m not.

Anti judicious use of herbicides anymore. but at the time I was anti every, everything that wasn’t absolutely natural. And we went out to this site where they were like, this is only a 10 acre site, but we can’t get it to grow because someone keeps cutting the drip line. Someone keeps sabotaging the, well, someone pulls out the plants like we just, we don’t know.

We’re about to give up. And then all of a sudden we hear this and down the levy. ’cause we’re right on the Sacramento River. this is part of the Sacramento River Project for the Nature Conservancy.

so down the levee comes this, Quad and there’s like, [00:07:00] I don’t remember how many of us, there was like six and they were showing the three new interns around and this guy came and he is like, what are you guys trying to do? Save the spotted owl, you guys trying to save some fish. And he talked down and humiliated our, my nature, my new nature conservancy bosses.

And I could tell they were scared of him. Like they were like physically frightened of this guy, even though he was 80 and on a quad. and he had pops on his hat and, you know, and pops looked at me and just didn’t even take me seriously because I still looked like a earth firster. I had long hair, I had red, black and green beads on bunch of ’em for anti-apartheid protests.

I had on a, you know, probably some kind of radical t-shirt. Probably was wearing moins or sandals or something. Long hair, huge beard. Didn’t shave for years He just disrespected us and, and then left and they were like, this is why we can’t get it to grow. And they were all kind of like tail between their legs.

[00:08:00] So I wasn’t totally unfamiliar with old redneck men. In fact, I had several of them in my family. So I went to my grandpa’s house that night and told him what happened. And my grandpa was like my mentor, not until I was 16 ’cause he couldn’t relate to little kids. But once I turned 16, my grandpa and I became best friends and he, he looks at me and he is like, you know, I love you, my grandson.

That’s why I would listen to you talk about all the things you talk about. He’s like, but if I didn’t know you and you’re some hippie coming in with long hair beads smelling like peti oil with, you know, all your protest t-shirts, I would not take you seriously. I wouldn’t take you seriously at all.

I wouldn’t listen to you. So you have to like, and that’s why this guy pops, is not taking you seriously. ’cause you guys all look like a bunch of unemployed pot smokers and you have to decide, you know, what do you want? Do you want to make a fashion statement or do you want to protect nature? trying to be a model for some hippie clothing line or are you trying to get [00:09:00] people to embrace ecological restoration? You have to decide. And I realized how right he was. And so that week I cut my hair off, I shaved, I got a bunch of his Ben Davis shirts and a bunch of his other button up shirts

[00:09:19] Michael Hawk: What? What’s a Ben Davis shirt?

[00:09:21] Griff Griffith: So just like it’s a California brand that a lot that associated with a lot of like, you know, farm workers, farmers and loggers and stuff. I put on all that, cut my hair, got a baseball hat and boots, and went back to Nature Rinse, and they went, whoa, a makeover.

And I was like, yeah, I want the Loman sight, I want the sight out there with pops. ’cause it was just like, if I can’t reach pops, we’re doomed. if I can’t reach my grandpa’s people, my fam like, people like my family, we’re doomed. We’re not gonna save nature. And I think at the time there was like 4% of the riparian forest left on the Sacramento River and, you know, there was species like the yellow bill cuckoo go and extinct.

[00:10:00] And my grandpa made me realize that I was in the way of restoration because I did not look like anybody that these farmers would wanna collaborate with. And, you know, just changing the way I looked made. All the difference in the world. It was a crazy lesson. I’m sorry.

The world is like that folks. ’cause I, I can feel the hackles raising on people. ’cause my, my friends were not happy about this at all and called me a sellout even . and so I went back there and pops came out here and he warned me when I went out to the project, he came up and warned me there was a bunch of hippies out here that would probably do something to me.

Like they caught me trespassing. And I was like, I actually work for the Nature Conservancy. And he’s like, what you trying to say? The spotted out. I said, spotted owls wouldn’t live out here, pops. I was like, but there’s barn s gopher getters that would, and he was like, ah, you know, Al and blah, blah, blah.

and I was like, how long have you lived here? And he is like 80 something years. And I was like, what did it look like when you’re a kid? [00:11:00] That was the right question, Michael. That was the right question. It was a forest when he was a kid. He used to fish and go off rope swings. He was there before most of the levees, you know, that were in that area.

And I found out that pops, the person that they all s wore was the anti environmentalist, had several wood duck boxes on his property and that he missed the salmon that he used to fish for as a kid. And I would listen to him and, I’d ask him to help me fix the well, he somehow knew exactly what was wrong with it, and we fixed it really fast and somehow, and the line stopped being cut.

Pretty soon he was teaching me how to do better drip irrigation, how to, you know, check, pumps And we stopped having a pro stop having issues. And when you go out there now, and that was like 31 years ago when you go out there now, you would never guess that that forest was only 31 years.

Unless you knew plants, [00:12:00] unless you knew riparian trees, you would think that that was a hundred, 200, 300 year old place. Because riparian trees grow really thick and it’s really dense in there.

[00:12:10] Michael Hawk: So I wanna dig into a couple things that you said a little bit. I’m guessing, so you’re talking about being on a levee. They, they, you know, as this happened in many parts of the world, You know, wild waterways have been channelized so that it used to be like a Delta or, what was it like back when Pops was a kid?

[00:12:28] Griff Griffith: Well, you know, there was some levees up when he was a kid. but it was much more meandering. There was a lot more meanders. There’s a lot more oxbows, which are like when the river meanders out and then say it switches some, for some reason something happens up river and it switches and it goes another way.

It leaves this river shaped pond. So there’ll be this pond that’s river shaped, which is a, you know, like an abandoned channel. And there used to be a bunch of those all over the valley used to flood a lot. some of the first literate people who, you know, stood on the [00:13:00] mountains and overlooked the valley, thought it was a giant lake, because it flooded so much during the winter.

And there’s just a lot more water. We’ve channelized and deepened the river in a lot of places and stuff. And so the water doesn’t, it’s not what it used to be. And that’s a huge shame. And then we’ve built, and in those places, so it’d be very, very expensive to set those levees back, which is a shame because it would solve so many of our problems.

But that’s what happens when you don’t have regulations. And back then there wasn’t as near as many regulations as there is today. So people got rich by, building right behind the levee. And now we have to deal with flooding issues, millions and millions of dollars of flooding issues ever since.

[00:13:36] Michael Hawk: Yeah. So I’m guessing like back then, you know, it wasn’t like a swampy delta area, but with all these meanders, these oxbow lakes and all that, there were probably a whole lot more wood ducks. And I’m wondering, you know, when you said that he had wood duck boxes, was he still getting wood ducks or like, kind of trying to reminisce for the old days when he used to see ’em?

[00:13:55] Griff Griffith: No, he would get wood ducks and he would tell me about them. I can’t remember exactly everything he said, ’cause [00:14:00] this is 31 years ago. But I remember being astounded at his knowledge of wood duck behavior, which like, I knew that he watched them. It wasn’t just something he had and was checking a box, like, oh, yep, there’s a wood ducks.

Yeah, no, he would sit out there and watch ’em. They tied him to his childhood. And he also told me about the salmon that he used to catch in the creeks around, the Sacramento River that don’t exist anymore. and we would talk about why, ’cause I had already been doing salmon surveys for like four seasons by that time. And so we talked a lot about salmon and stuff and he became an ally and it was a huge life lesson because I had been fighting those kinds of people, you know, except for the ones in my family. But like out in public, I had been fighting those kinds of people and that was the turning point.

And since then, I ha haven’t been fighting those kinds of people. And, I have learned that they just have different approaches and that if I really wanna save biodiversity, I have to connect with them. And that building a wall [00:15:00] between me and them is not going to save the yellow bill cuckoo or the salmon or the wood duck.

It’s not going to. And so, you know, I’m having a relationship with them. I might not get everything that I want better is better than bad and worse, The relationship him and I had, we didn’t agree on everything, but it got so much better and I was able to meet the goals of the Nature Conservancy by cutting my hair and getting outta my own way.

And that’s been a lesson for me ever since and I’m guessing, like, there were a couple pivotal moments there. how many times did you talk to pops over the years and kind of start to build that rapport?

over nine months. We, him and I talked all the time. He would see the truck, he would see my Nature Conservancy truck out there and when he, he would see them from his house ’cause there’s nothing else out there.

It was just kind of in the middle of nowhere.

So every time I went out there, pops would come find me and we would go, we would talk. He was lonely, you know, he was out in the middle of nowhere. He was lonely. And, the only thing better than an enemy to, to vibe, you [00:16:00] know, to fill your time is to have a friend. So we became friends.

[00:16:04] Michael Hawk: So like kinda thinking about the, what happened here over that period of time, you made this conscious decision to look different, and that sounds like that was a difficult decision because you were alienating some of your friends and maybe going against the identity that you had built

[00:16:18] Griff Griffith: My sense of belonging, my tribe. you know, back then, this is before the internet and stuff, young people, if you’re listening, it was a different world, a lot of hitchhiking going on. I would hitchhike and I would immediately get picked up by someone who looked like me,

So it was really easy to travel through Northern California for me, and, I loved it. I loved being part of that tribe. I’m tribal by nature, you know, so. it felt like I was cutting myself off in a lot of the ways.

and then people didn’t recognize me. So after that, I still went to some protests, like especially over headwaters up here, headwaters forest. But I always looked like the redneck guy or the cowboy that was there. I didn’t look like them anymore because I felt like I didn’t need to preach to the choir.

I felt like the choir was taken care of. I mean, sometimes the choir [00:17:00] needs to learn the lyrics to a new song, but I felt like they were all good and, and I felt like our divisiveness, our building walls between us and our partners, and our partners being like quote unquote rednecks or farmers or normal people or whatever you wanna call ’em,

We were kind of all wearing a flag that was in opposition to them,

[00:17:17] Michael Hawk: what I’m getting at or driving towards is when you made that change, that physical change, the clothing, the haircut, all that, were you treating it kinda like an experiment? Like for example, if you hadn’t had those encounters with Pops and actually seen that you, in this case were more effective in your conservation goals, would you have stuck with it, do you think?

or would you have, gone back to, your previous ways?

[00:17:42] Griff Griffith: No, I think I learned the lesson and for me, it was a little bit different than I think it was for a lot of other people because I already had pop’s culture was a culture I was familiar with already, even though I grew up in the Bay Area and my family in the Bay Area wasn’t like that.

I had a lot of family in Southern Oregon, Northern California, Eureka, uncles and cousins and stuff that were [00:18:00] laggers. And so I knew that they weren’t bad people. And I think a lot of other, the earth Firsters who came from San Francisco thought that loggers and stuff were bad people.

I knew they weren’t. I knew that, I was carrying a flag that made them already not take me seriously. And from that lesson, I’ve learned that about a lot of, a lot of places. Like I still will wear a lot of nature shirts, but they’re not aggravating, they’re not, triggering.

They’re like, look how cool this flower is, or look how cool this snake is, or look how cool this lizard

[00:18:27] Michael Hawk: Yeah, they’re kinda like conversation starters,

[00:18:29] Griff Griffith: conversation starters. Yeah. So I, I do dress like that and because dressing can be a way of showing people what tribe you belong to.

Especially if you’re trying to make the world a better place. Like you gotta be able to like, talk to people on both sides of the aisle or on all this, all the sides of the aisle.

[00:18:45] Michael Hawk: you have clear priorities and saving biodiversity is like near the top for you. I’ve definitely heard it. And that, I think puts you in that mindset where you’re open to engaging with people that we need on board to save biodiversity. And

I agree with [00:19:00] the concept at least of, you know, we can’t do it alone. And, so you have to have whatever is ethically, morally safe for yourself. You know, that sort of priority stack to decide, okay, who am I gonna engage with? I’m sure you have a line and you won’t cross a line, and engage with someone who is, downright evil.

But,

[00:19:21] Griff Griffith: Or yeah, just not willing to listen no matter what you say.

[00:19:24] Michael Hawk: and I think it’s important to think about that in advance. Like, you know, who am I trying to reach? Where is that line? So you can be more open and more prepared when you encounter people who maybe in 50% of the rest of your life you disagree with.

[00:19:39] Griff Griffith: Yeah. And, you know, people don’t have to do what I’m doing. like, if you wanna stay tribal and have your community, like the community needs strength and support too, like, you know, don’t feel like you have to do what I’m doing. But if you’re gonna be an advocate, you have to ask yourself, am I being exclusionary ?

You know, am I excluding people from this conversation Am I trying to have a conversation with the same time making them feel [00:20:00] Excluded. Like, you gotta ask yourself that.

[00:20:02] Michael Hawk: right. So as a, public communicator, an advocate, a conservationist, what would you like people to take away from your story? How might they apply some of the bits and pieces that you’ve learned?

[00:20:14] Griff Griffith: What I would like people to take away from this, it’s like, it’s not just clothing. I’m not saying like, get your hair done so you can be a better conservationist. I’m saying that, We have to prioritize.

And sometimes there’s a lot, there’s like say like, I had 20 very, you know, very important things, but there was one that was by far more important, but that maybe, you know, maintaining all 19, all other 19 important things was gonna distract from that most important message. So, you know, like over the years, I don’t talk about politics.

I try not to get into very many controversial issues publicly because I’ve dedicated my life to helping people connect to nature and diversity. And so that’s where I stay. And, you know, we don’t have to be experts or have a comment about everything in life. You can prioritize what’s important to you and keep it there.

And then just try to [00:21:00] seek common ground with people. So, you know, as a conservationist, I’ve met very few people who are like, oh, I don’t care about native bees. They can all die. I don’t care about blah, blah. there’s not a lot of those.

I feel like just if there’s something that’s getting in the way of you doing a good job with something, then address it and see if you can change it to be more effective for nature.

[00:21:19] Michael Hawk: Changing topics here, changing gears. We had an interesting conversation, I don’t know, that was a couple weeks ago.

Our Jumpstart Nature newsletter. And if anyone listening is unfamiliar with it, you can sign up right on our website. it’s pretty short. Usually one or two short articles. A couple of tidbits of interesting things that you might be able to check out, online. documentaries, things like that.

that’s sort of what the newsletter is about. And we focus on our mission of, you know, saving biodiversity, connecting people to nature. But one of the stories that we had was about dandelions and it generated, a fair amount of discussion. And I think it was really open to [00:22:00] interpretation, kind of colored by people’s personal, perspectives on, what dandelions are all about.

And, the premise of the article for those who didn’t read it was how, in certain cases, dandelions might have a place, even in your yard. so I’d like, you know, before I say anymore, I’d like to get your insights because you didn’t review the article. we published it, separate and what was your.

Interpretation of it when you saw it.

[00:22:30] Griff Griffith: Initially, my first response was, why in the world are we using space to talk about dandelions? so many native plants? That we should be investing our time towards. And let me explain where that comes from. I have been pulling invasive weeds, invasive plants since I was 18. Like for so many different, you know, nature Conservancy, California Conservation Corps, forest Service, volunteering, like state [00:23:00] parks. I’ve, I have pulled invasive plants so many places and I’ve watched endangered species come back right behind us within a year.

You like the beach Lee? or the Humboldt Wallflower When I’ve pulled, European Beach grass off the dunes, I’m very well aware of how bad invasive plants reduce biodiversity. At first, they increase it because they add themselves to the overall mix, and then they decrease it because they end up out competing everybody and shrinking that, the footprint of native species and all the things that depend on them.

So I’ve never understood the dandelion craze. And advocacy because I haven’t lived in suburbia since I was a teenager. But then after I, I read that article and I thought about it and I was like, you know, there’s something here. And then I remembered I had this memory of my grandma when I was a little boy and standing in our front yard and we had, you know, we were in suburbia by the time I was eight or nine I think. [00:24:00] And there was a dandelion with a flower on it. And my, I remember my grandma saying, good thing that dandelion is there ’cause the bees need something to eat.

Okay. My grandma was a major gardener and she’s the reason why I got interested in plants. But I remember that conversation I had with her because of this, you know, lawn that was an. All along my street, and this is after, you know, they buried the creeks and the ponds and plowed through the fields and destroyed all the plants.

And then everybody planted their, you know, landscape that was full of plants from Asia and Europe and here comes the dandelion, which is also from Europe. And the bees would, the European honeybee would land on it, but I didn’t know that it wasn’t native at the time. And this dandelion was the one place that had food.

But you know, if that dandelion wouldn’t have been there, I may have never seen European honeybees. So I’m starting to think about this differently now. So not as a person who’s been doing invasive species removal for 30 plus [00:25:00] years, but as someone who’s hasn’t spent a lot of time outside of suburbia, doesn’t know the difference between native and non-native plants.

Dandelion are kinda like the gateway drugged wildflowers, so. When you see dandelions and it’s the only thing in your vast sea of cut green that can sprout flower quickly enough to, you know, capitalize on your mowing rotation. You know, because usually dandelions are the ones that can do that.

So I can see why people love and celebrate dandelions. ’cause that’s the wildflower they know.

[00:25:35] Michael Hawk: Yeah. It’s a gateway in a lot of different respects. So like, you know when, when we were putting this article together. I thought about how, I think there were some studies out of Europe because as you said, what we think of as a dandelion is typically the European dandelion. But just like with any common name, you know, the, the non-Latin, the non botanical name of something, there are lots of other dandelions as well.

And when I say [00:26:00] dandelion, different species might be coming, you know, to people’s minds in, in fact,

there are native flowers here in California that have common names of dandelion in them. but I don’t think most people are thinking about

[00:26:13] Griff Griffith: and central US, there’s the false dandelion that grows from Montana to Missouri,

just like a dandelion,

[00:26:18] Michael Hawk: yeah, exactly. So, so like there’s that level of nuance. But anyway, where I was going with this was there were some studies out of Europe.

Showing the benefits of dandelions. And I think a lot of well-intentioned people took that to mean like, okay, dandelions are great everywhere, and, and they overplayed it a little bit.

[00:26:37] Griff Griffith: That’s one of the things about social media that nature lover’s gotta be aware of is that a lot of things are true in their native. Habitats that aren’t true once that species becomes non-native, because, they have relationships where they’re from with things that have evolved over, millions of years or thousands of years, however you wanna think about it.

But when you bring them out here without their predators and competitors and the things that benefit from them, they become [00:27:00] weeds.

[00:27:00] Michael Hawk: so it was overplayed a little bit. Then there was some backlash, you know, against that overplay. But what made me really think that, yeah, this is still a good article for us, is right in line with the idea of kind of taking steps to connect with nature, to connect with biodiversity. Even if it’s a non-native plant, in some cases invasive.

So yeah, if they’re truly invasive, yeah, we should be getting rid of them. but if it convinces somebody not to blanketly apply herbicide, you know, on their lawns, like that’s a win, that’s a start. you know, it’s the first baby step towards embracing a more biodiverse suburban landscape.

[00:27:44] Griff Griffith: And also just recognizing relationships because you see that the bee is not benefiting from your grass, it’s going to your dandelion.

[00:27:52] Michael Hawk: Hmm.

[00:27:53] Griff Griffith: And so like you see like that’s how a lot of people learn about. That’s, you know, dandelions are a lot of [00:28:00] Americans first example of seeing like pollination.

[00:28:04] Michael Hawk: I remember seeing, like those late summer butterflies, the skippers, you know, the skippers can use some grasses as well, but they would also nectar on the dandelions. so yeah, you can start to notice some things with dandelions.

[00:28:18] Griff Griffith: That being said, dandelions is a good starter kit, but once you appreciate that dandelions have flowers and that. They have tons of medicinal properties, just like our native plants do. they do provide pollen, although it is a low, it’s not the pollen that our bees evolved for.

So it’s, you know, weaker in the protein section. And if it’s all your, pollinators have, they probably wouldn’t survive if it was, if it was just a dandelion world. A lot of our native bees may not survive. ’cause it’s like, it’s not the quality for North

[00:28:51] Michael Hawk: definitely. I think that’s proven.

[00:28:52] Griff Griffith: A lot of people don’t realize that pollen’s not like, you know, it’s like there’s not one flavor of Kool-Aid.

There’s a whole bunch of flavors of Kool-Aid and it’s the same thing with, [00:29:00] pollen and nectar. Nectar is different. You know, according to plant even has drugs in it. A lot of nectar has like caffeine or opiates and stuff in it. You know, they’re specified for the pollinators in their area.

Yes. Some nectar has drugs, , and they have different ingredients. Like there’s not one pollen recipe for the whole plant world. And so when a flower has lived someplace since time immemorial, the things that live with it have evolved for it.

[00:29:28] Michael Hawk: that’s one of those ecological concepts that if you’re a wild animal. You’re constantly managing your energy and, anything that is not giving you the energy you need or is causing you to expend energy that you may not have in reserve, is going to shorten your life, or make you less likely to be able to reproduce.

And I think that’s one of the kind of subtle nuances. I mean, this whole discussion has been about nuance, and that’s one of the things that I like to incorporate into jumpstart nature because [00:30:00] rarely are there, clear cut answers for the problems that we face. so many other aspects of ecology are gonna vary based on season, location, climate, you know, how other ways that we’ve disrupted a natural ecosystem, you know, so this is, this is a good sort of example.

of that and, and totally agree by the way that, you know, it’s a, gateway and, we don’t recommend that you make a lawn full of dandelions to restore biodiversity.

[00:30:30] Griff Griffith: But do not shame the dandelion lovers either because they are like, they’re people who are primed to level up in the biodiversity game. If they, if someone loves dandelions, it’s, means that they have the capacity to become an amazing conservationist, native plant gardener.

And so the last thing we wanna do is make them feel like they gotta, you know, like die on the dandelion island defending it, you know, it’s like shaming. We gotta stop the [00:31:00] shaming, across the board in the, in the conservation world. when we’re talking about fellow conservationists, and I, and I see this Michael in my own work, because we have to thin out these over planted forests, these tree plantations, but there’s people who are like, every tree life matters, you know?

And it’s like. I love that. You know, I don’t consider those people the enemy. there’re people who love trees, like we’re on the same page, they just don’t understand forest. So we need to help them understand that, you know, there was only 10 to a hundred trees per acre and that’s, you know, before the cutting started and now there’s 200 to a thousand.

And when you have a thousand trees per acre, you no longer have your flowering and plants and the plants that produce berries. So you no longer have your pollinators or your wildlife. And once you start talking to ’em like that, they eventually come around. It’s the same thing with the dandelions. Like dandelion levers are primed.

They’re like their, at their first year at Hogwarts, like if we keep them in school, they’re gonna be powerful native plant biodiversity wizards someday. And so we shouldn’t shame them [00:32:00] into quitting.

[00:32:01] Michael Hawk: So how might you help, you know, quote unquote level up some of those people?

[00:32:06] Griff Griffith: it’s kind of a yes and approach, like when I deal with, because I deal with a lot of people. ask ’em about their dandelions, like what do you like about dandelions?

and they could talk about how dandelions are early bloomer. So it’s helping the, bumblebee queens that are coming out and trying to get as much nectar and stuff to start their colonies.

But what they really want is they really want some of the native trees and bushes so you can keep your dandelions and your grass. But why don’t you plant some like Manzanita early blooming too. And they’re actually what the Bumblebee evolved with. And it’s a beautiful bush

For those of us who know native plants, help these dandelion people, reach the next level and if you’re in California, you can go to cal scape.org.

If you’re not in California, you can go to homegrown national park.org or native plant finders, but native plant finder. And you could have native blooms that the native bees, you know, evolved with native pollinators, evolved with. And in your lawn area, you can keep your dandelions. And [00:33:00] so even your lawn will have pretty flowers, but around it, you could have some native plants.

So using a yes and approach. And then if this person, you know, gets into it and they start reading Doug Tallamy books like, you know, bringing Nature Home and Nature’s Best Hope and that kind of stuff, then pretty soon they might not have any more dandelions in their yard because they realize that dandelions aren’t necessary.

And if they’re doing it for the medicinal uses, there’s a lot of other medicinal uses. Native Americans didn’t have dandelions, so they did their medicinal, investigations on all the other plants. So if you look and if you check out books like, braiding Sweetgrass, you can get an introduction to this mindset of like, our plants around us.

they’re interacting with animals, including ourselves, they can benefit us in lots of different ways. It’s not just dandelions. Dandelions aren’t the only super medicinal plant. There’s tons of them and many of them are native plants.

Like I tell people, the indigenous folks of North and South America didn’t have dandelions, And when dandelions came here, the tribes were like, oh my gosh, finally this plant has arrived. Like no one did that.

[00:33:58] Michael Hawk: Yeah. Now we can survive.[00:34:00]

[00:34:00] Griff Griffith: Now we can survive ’cause dandelions are here. You know, it’s not, that’s, my people are from Europe and so like, I’m sure that my genetic lineage has had a relationship with dandelions since time and Memorial. But I don’t live where my, where I’m indigenous to and there we’ve brought a lot of plants over and we can’t be perfect.

It’s kind of like what Zoe Weill says from the Institute of Humane Education. there’s always gonna be bad, but there can be better inside of bad. we might not be able to fix everything, but we can put native plants in our yard and make things better. We might not be able to fix everything, but we can reduce our lawn and our dandelions and plant some manzanitas or whatever is native to our area that will help the pollinators.

[00:34:40] Michael Hawk: I forget how long you’ve been at your current place, but you, started to re landscape the place you’re at now with native plants and, I’m just curious what surprises, have you found, like difficulties or things that have worked out better than you expected in your own place with native plants?

[00:34:56] Griff Griffith: I’ve only lived in like towns a couple times in my life and hardly [00:35:00] at all since I’ve been 18. And so a year ago I moved to this like densely populated part of Eure, Eureka Eureka’s a small town, but it’s pretty densely populated. It looks more like a neighborhood in San Francisco than a small town.

And I’m in a house that was built in like 1907. So this has been a neighborhood for a very long time. And in the backyard was a bunch of Victorian era landscape plants which I left because they’re tell us cultural story. they’re not invasive, but the invasive ones, which there were many.

I removed them, and I’m still removing them. It’s still a fight, especially the distortions and the European onion

, But what I noticed was there was a surprisingly amount of wildlife here already. There was a Cooper Hawk in my backyard, black Phoebe’s, all kinds of different birds.

’cause I use the Merlin app. If you guys don’t use the Merlin app, it’s free and it listens to bird calls for you. And we’ll tell you what they are

and then you can

[00:35:55] Michael Hawk: talk about helping people on their, you know, personal journey [00:36:00] to connecting with nature. Merlin is such a great way to do it. Like I’ve, I’ve had so many people who I had no idea they had any interest in nature, and somehow they tried out Merlin and they’re kind of addicted to it now they’ll,

[00:36:13] Griff Griffith: Oh yeah, Merlin makes, Merlin makes you interested in nature. It really does. Like, because it demystify these sounds you’ve heard all your life. And then you get to put a face to a, a name almost, you know, a face to a song. and then you can learn about how you can benefit that singer in your yard.

You know, you can keep your cats inside Episode 10 of Jumpstart Nature. You can plant Native Plants, episode one and two of Jumpstart Nature podcast. So, Merlin is another great gateway drug to, biodiversity. So. I got an idea what lived in my yard bird wise. And then, I noticed that I had native bees living in my house.

Like so they lived in this little hole and, and they don’t chew, they’re not like some of the carpenter bees or whatever, carpenter bees aren’t that bad. You can like give them, put some old wood out and they’ll stay outta your [00:37:00] house and they’ll go for the old one. Just as a side note, but I noticed there was native bees and there’s so much, there’s so many more native bees and syrphid flies, especially syrphid flies that live here. I mean, I got spittle bugs in my neighborhood. I’ve got all kinds of different moths. I had no idea that the insects would still be here. like they are. And the more native plants I planted, the more I noticed them. And I even have gall insects and stuff like that I had no idea they would be here ’cause I’m not really used to living in towns. But, There’s enough native plants close by. I think that’s kept populations and I think enough native plants in people’s yards. So we still have some of these populations. And so I think my yard now isn’t just a fragmented habitat.

I think it’s part of a corridor. I think. ’cause I, you know, I’ve walked around and stared in people’s yards. So if you’ve seen a big guy in a cowboy hat staring at your yard in Eureka, don’t be creeped out. It’s me looking at your native plants. And, so I found out that I’m part of corridors for insects, my native plants.

I’m not the only [00:38:00] one. So it’s really cool. There’s so many more here than I thought.

[00:38:03] Michael Hawk: Yeah, we’ve talked before about how insects are kind of the foundation. I mean, plants are the true foundation to everything, but insects are like

they’re right. Yeah. That half step above plants. and if you have insects, you’re gonna have all those birds that don’t eat seeds, around.

It’s been maybe three years since we’ve redid our yard with native plants.

And the things that we should have in our area are showing up now.

Like we never had a California quail in our

[00:38:30] Griff Griffith: Hm.

[00:38:31] Michael Hawk: and. We had a covey of quail in our yard for the first time last summer.

So like, that was a big milestone,

And similarly, I couldn’t understand why I’d hardly ever see Western Fence lizard, which is just sort of like the ubiquitous coastal lizard in our area. You see ’em everywhere, but you know, why not my yard?

And I, I know of, fence lizards in both my front and backyard now. So those are just a couple of small observations that I’ve had since, you know, taking the leap

every time I see [00:39:00] them, I feel good about, what we’re doing for biodiversity in our own little plot of land.

[00:39:05] Griff Griffith: Yeah. and thank goodness for Doug Tallamy and the folks like him. you know, the people that are, that are, out there. Teaching folks actively about native plants. ’cause you can really create a little biodiversity hotspot in your backyard, even on your balcony.

You know, it’s possible. And there’s so many cool tools now, like we talked about the Merlin app, which is free, iNaturalist seek, which will help you identify things for free , .

Once you start knowing the birds are around and you might be like, oh, I’ve got white crown sparrows. What do they eat in spring? Okay, they’re eating insects. ’cause they’re feeding insects to their babies. What do they eat in fall? Well now there’s gonna be more plant seed foods mixed in and so you can plant native plants to go with them.

I really like, how native plant finder and cal scape will tell you what butterflies lay their eggs on your plant to be host plants. ’cause a lot of people don’t realize the monarch and milkweed story where the monarch [00:40:00] has to have milkweed. That’s a common story. that’s not just Monarch story.

that’s a lot of their brothers and sisters like what, 95% of insects are like specific to like a family of plants. So when you plant plants, you can actually decide what moths and butterflies you wanna see and plant the plants that will attract them.

You know, it might take the moths and butterflies a while to find them if you’re in the middle of the city. Do you wanna see monarchs in your yard? if you got the money for it, buy a hundred milkweed plants and give them to your neighbors so that you have a lot of milkweed in your area for the butterflies to find.

[00:40:31] Michael Hawk: were talking about your place being kind of like a corridor, like a stopping point along a corridor and, you know, a lot of insects, , they can’t go very far. So they need these little stopover points that, you know, maybe every, hundred meters or so, sometimes certain insects, even less, like they can only go tens of feet,

[00:40:52] Griff Griffith: Yeah. 200 feet is like a max for a lot of native bees,

[00:40:55] Michael Hawk: Yeah. So I think, I think that helps, at least for me, it reminds me of the [00:41:00] importance of not just doing it in my own space, but, you know, advocating with others,

[00:41:07] Griff Griffith: if you have a yard and you wish your neighbors would, also have native plants, great gift idea. Hey, Merry Christmas, I brought you over some of these flowers. check with them first to make sure they’re not just gonna throw ’em away,

But like, do you have a little space in your yard? ’cause I have a gift in mind for you. It’s a native plant that attracts this beautiful butterfly. Are you game? If they’re like, yes. Oh, well here’s a plant. this attracts this butterfly. So, there’s things you can do to increase biodiversity in your neighborhood, outside of your yard too.

there’s these alleys behind my house that no one’s landscaping and they’re full of weeds and stuff. So I went and planted a lot of cuttings in them, like willow cuttings and twin berry cuttings and speria cuttings and stuff like that.

You know, I don’t know how many of ’em will survive, but if one of them survives, especially willow ’cause willow’s like the second biggest. Condominiums for [00:42:00] insects. you know, one big willow plant might be able to support a brood of native insects. I mean, a native bird, excuse me.

You know, it doesn’t take a whole lot of willow plants and oak trees to support a brood of baby birds. So, and that’s another thing if we’re gonna buy your neighbors that don’t really give a crap about native plants. If you wanna, if you wanna buy them native plant, trying to make sure it’s a keystone species.

You want to, define what a keystone species is for folks.

[00:42:25] Michael Hawk: Yeah, I mean, the famous Roman arches that many of which still exist today, what kept that arch up, you know, say it’s supporting a bridge or something like that, was this special wedge shaped stone at the very top called a keystone.

And if you take away that keystone, the whole thing collapses. And we can use that metaphor to, represent ecosystems. There are certain species that support the whole thing, that really support the entire ecosystem. And then the other pieces are needed as well. But without that keystone, [00:43:00] you can’t have any of it.

So, that’s what oak trees, that’s what willows, that’s what, golden rods in some places. Like there’s, there’s a lot of different ones. Large and Small. But I think oaks and willows are, right up there at the top.

[00:43:12] Griff Griffith: Yeah. And those make great gifts.

[00:43:15] Michael Hawk: Griff, you know, this is,has always been enlightening for me and I think something that might be helpful for listeners that want to get out and do something is, making it a little bit more actionable. Like some tips or some, observations of things that have worked well that maybe others could apply.

So do you have any tips or suggestions for people looking to. expand their native plant footprint.

[00:43:39] Griff Griffith: Yeah. remember not to shame the dandelion folks, but instead maybe introduce ’em to Golden Rod, some other beautiful flowers that have more connections for native wildlife. So don’t shame. let’s see. We, let’s make up a moniker for it or something. a dash or whatever. Don’t shame, up the [00:44:00] game.

[00:44:00] Michael Hawk: Not bad. For top of head.

[00:44:01] Griff Griffith: Don’t shame up the game. So they have dandelions and love dandelions and introduce ’em to native plants. Okay? Don’t tell ’em. Get rid of your dandelions. Tell ’em, oh, add these, and the bees will love you even more. and I guess the second one would be give people the gift of a native plant. especially, you know, if it’s a person doesn’t really care if they’re looking for a tree, buy them a native oak tree.

Buy them a native willow. You know, find out like what they want. Do they want evergreen or deciduous? And then buy it for ’em instead of wishing that they would do it, just do it for ’em. If you have the means, some of us don’t have the means, some of us do. If you have the means, then by all means do it. ,

[00:44:36] Michael Hawk: Something that, that I’ve been trying to do is, yeah, we, we bought some plants and pots and planted them, and that sort of was the basis for our transformation.

But I’ve been getting into the seeds a little bit more and trying to plant some native seeds. . And, you know, I’m, I’m gonna admit, it’s, it was harder than I expected to plant native seeds. And here in California there’s a lot [00:45:00] of, a lot of the annual flowers that, you just really, you know, it seems simple.

You drop the seeds on top of the soil, they need to be on top of the soil, they need to have the warmth and the UV from the sun to actually germinate. But when they’re on top of the soil, that means that birds can come along and eat them. Or ants, maybe if you have like harvester ants or something might come along and take them.

so, you know, I found that to be a little more difficult than I expected. so the tip that I would have for people is, put a few rocks, light mulch or something to have some nooks and crannies and, things like that to give more, like a less homogenous soil, like more places for seeds to potentially take hold.

and, and that’s not very hard to do.

[00:45:45] Griff Griffith: and also you can plant starter plants like I planted starter meta foam and poppies and pearly everlasting. I planted those plants in one area of my yard and they all seeded out really good. And I got, [00:46:00] even more plants this year. So, yeah, sometimes you gotta start with a plant and then you can even supplement.

So you can even plant more seeds to help your plant, like just to have it more there for the birds.

[00:46:11] Michael Hawk: of that. And that reminds me of, of a really interesting fact. So like in California we have the California poppy, which is one of the, the best known, it’s a state flower in fact. And what I learned is one poppy plant can produce between 10,000 and 200,000 seeds.

[00:46:28] Griff Griffith: I believe it.

[00:46:29] Michael Hawk: Yeah, so like when you think about buying a packet of 10 seeds or 20 seeds, and hoping that they’re all going to grow, one of the strategies that some of these plants have is they produce so much that those birds and ants can’t eat everything.

if you’re only planting a packet of 10 or 20 or 50 seeds, you kind of have to give them a little extra support to make it work.

[00:46:48] Griff Griffith: Yep.

[00:46:49] Michael Hawk: So, Griff, thank you so much. this, this was fun. This was a little different It was fun and, and maybe we’ll do some more in the future.

[00:46:56] Griff Griffith: right on. Talk to you soon.

#10 – Can We Save Cats and Wildlife? The Outdoor Cat Dilemma.

Cats are independent, lovable, and endlessly entertaining—but with nearly 100 million outdoor cats in the USA alone, they become one of the most devastating forces against wildlife, killing billions of animals each year. At the same time, outdoor cats face harsh, short lives filled with disease, injury, and danger. So how do we balance our love for cats with our responsibility to protect biodiversity?

Join host Griff Griffith as we explore the complex reality of outdoor cats with veterinarian Dr. Mike Armer, TNR (Trap-Neuter-Release) advocate Allison Fluty, and biologist Sophie Osborn. They’ll tackle tough questions, debunk myths, and reveal how cat lovers and wildlife advocates can find common ground. Whether you adore cats, cherish wildlife, or both, this episode will challenge your perspective—and offer real solutions.

Beyond a podcast, Jumpstart Nature is a movement fueled by volunteers, igniting a fresh approach to reconnecting people with the natural world. In the face of our pressing climate and biodiversity challenges, we’re on a mission to help you discover newfound purpose and motivation.

Join us in this vital journey towards nature’s revival. Explore more and show your support at jumpstartnature.com, and follow us on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, BlueSky and YouTube.

For even deeper nature insights, delve into our companion podcast, Nature’s Archive.

Sign up for our short, bi-weekly (and solutionary!) newsletter called It’s All Connected! Get recommendations for books, podcasts, articles, and more, as well as analysis and recommendations of things YOU can do to help nature.

Links to Topics Discussed

Outdoor Cat Facts

Did you know outdoor cats kill over 2 billion birds annually? Learn more from the American Bird Conservancy.

The Humane Society has a detailed FAQ on dealing with outdoor cats, such as what to do if you find kittens, and much more.

Seven Ways to Enrich Indoor Cat’s Lives – in addition to our suggestions in the episode, check out these easy ways to help your cats live enriching lives indoors.

Organizations and Resources

Bay Area Cats

BirdCast Bird Migration Alerts – sign up so you can keep outdoor cats inside during sensitive times (and turn off outdoor lights!)

United Spay Alliance – Find a local spay/neuter clinic. Their description: “United Spay Alliance is a national animal welfare organization dedicated exclusively to promoting affordable, accessible, and timely spay/neuter services as the solution to the crisis of cat and dog homelessness.” They also give grants to TNR organizations.

Studies on Targeted and “Full Spectrum” TNR

An Examination of an Iconic Trap-Neuter-Return Program: The Newburyport, Massachusetts Case Study

Better trap–neuter–return for free-roaming cats: Using models and monitoring to improve population management

Evaluation of euthanasia and trap–neuter–return (TNR) programs in managing free-roaming cat populations

The Impact of Targeted Trap–Neuter–Return Efforts in the San Francisco Bay Area

Related Podcast Episodes

Credits

This podcast episode was written and produced by Michael Hawk. Our host and co-writer is Griff Griffith. Sound design was by Miles Ewell.

Some of the music used in this production is through creative commons licensing:

The following music was used for this media project:
Cinematic Suspense Series Episode 009 by Sascha Ende
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/en/song/8224-cinematic-suspense-series-episode-009
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license

Imagefilm 018 by Sascha Ende
https://filmmusic.io/en/song/315-imagefilm-018
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license

Lockdown by Sascha Ende
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/en/song/7658-lockdown
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license

Miles Ewell Compositions
Principal Dean - Clic [C670 Records]
Principal Dean - ANX
Transcript (Click to View)

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[00:00:00] Griff Griffith: I was just 12 years old when I first started volunteering at the Suisun Wildlife Care Center. At that time it was in a dilapidated old white house in an otherwise abandoned block and it always smelled of barn, bleach, and thawing fish. I was volunteering there to help care for injured and orphaned wildlife.

[00:00:19] At the start of each shift, I’d check on the new arrivals, celebrate those who were released, and mourn those who didn’t make it. Over time, I noticed a pattern. Many of our patients were victims of cats.

[00:00:32] Growing up, my family didn’t have cats. My dad was allergic . But I knew they were skilled hunters. Their mix of curiosity and stealth made them expert stalkers. Their sharp eyes finely tuned to catch the slightest movement and their silent, padded footsteps gave them an edge.

[00:00:48] Combine that with lightning fast reflexes and you get a predator perfectly adapted to the hunt. In fact, like all cats, they are obligate carnivores.

[00:00:56] That means they must eat meat to survive. But I had no idea about the sheer number and diversity of their prey.

[00:01:04] Snakes, lizards, and countless birds were brought in by compassionate cat owners hoping to save the gifts their pets had delivered. Most didn’t survive.

[00:01:15] A decade later, while in college, I adopted a black and white feral kitten. I named her MeowMeow. And boy, was she cute. And I thought it’d be fun to let her roam the trailer park where I lived. Quickly thereafter, cats became my absolute favorite animal. They weren’t as needy as dogs, but they still made excellent play and cuddle partners.

[00:01:35] And I want to repeat that I love cats, because today’s topic can be a bit hard to hear if you’re a cat lover like me. From my time at the Suisun Wildlife Care Center, I knew that cats were gonna be cats. Like I said before, they must eat meat to survive. So all of their instincts and capabilities evolved to support this lifestyle. So to minimize Meow Meow’s impact on wildlife, I only let her out during the day.

[00:02:01] Afterall, what wildlife could a trailer park possibly have? I figured the odd English sparrow might be the worst of it. But I was wrong. One day she brought home a yellow warbler. Weeks later, it was a blue bellied lizard. I hadn’t even known they were there. Then came the big surprises, a gopher snake. And then, our state bird, the California quail.

[00:02:24] I tried keeping her indoors, but her relentless yowling made me feel so guilty. I thought I could make her less stealthy with a bright collar. It didn’t work. By the fourth trip to the wildlife care center, I realized these casualties were just a fraction of Meow Meow’s true victim count.

[00:02:41] Mike Armer: They’re perfect little killing machines.

[00:02:43] Griff Griffith: That’s Mike Armer.

[00:02:45] Mike Armer: I’m a small animal veterinarian, so 99 percent of what we see is cats and dogs.

[00:02:50] Griff Griffith: And like everyone in this episode, Mike is also a cat owner and cares deeply for cats. Even our producer, Michael Hawk, cares for three cats in his home.

[00:02:59] It’s estimated that there are around 60 million pet cats in the United States, and about one quarter of households own at least one cat. And there are as many as 60 to 100 million stray and feral cats. That’s 120 to 160 million cats in total in the United States.

[00:03:16] Obviously it’s hard to census stray and feral cats, and many sources imply that these numbers may be underestimated.

[00:03:22] Allison Fluty: I would say the thing that always surprises me, is the number of cats that will be at a place versus the number of cats that someone has reported. For example, the, there was one big colony that I was working with for a while, It initially started with just one person asking for help near her work.

[00:03:42] Which was up against a creek and she was worried about the cats that were around there. She said, there’s probably like 20 cats and there’s a lot of coyotes around there. She wanted to see if someone can help. , There was more like a hundred cats in that, that whole area. and. It’s the same thing no matter where you go, you know, it’s just the proportions.

[00:04:05] It’s usually like five times more cats than are reported. If I go to a house and they say, I think there’s, you know, four or five cats, it’s like, okay, there could be 15 to 20.

[00:04:15] Griff Griffith: Alison Fluty, who you just heard from is perhaps the ultimate cat lover. She educates the community about outdoor cats and volunteers with a TNR organization in multiple capacities.

[00:04:26] What’s TNR? We’ll come back to that in a moment. But it does not take a mathematician to realize the impact 100 million cats have on wild animals and our ecosystems.

[00:04:36] Mike Armer: Cats are not a wild species. These are a domesticated animal, and so these aren’t ever found in nature. definitely seen a lot of different studies estimating,

[00:04:53] how many animals cats kill, it’s really quite disturbing. The numbers I’ve seen most recently are more than two billion, with a B, birds per year, and more than 12 billion small animals. You know, mice, rats, rabbits, things like that.

[00:05:09] Griff Griffith: Stop and think about those numbers. 14 billion birds and small animals per year killed by outdoor cats, which aren’t even native to our environment. And 100 million outdoor cats, that means there is an incredible density of predators on the landscape, an unnatural density, a density of threat that wild birds and other small animals have never had to contend with before.

[00:05:33] But with 25 percent of American households owning cats and many more caring for outdoor cats, we can make a difference. In fact, what we have to share today might be the most impactful way that you can help biodiversity right after planting native plants, of course.

[00:05:49] I’m Griff Griffith, and welcome to Jumpstart Nature.

[00:06:03] It seems like whenever I bring up the topic of outdoor cats, one of two things happen. People either get really defensive or they get really angry, sometimes both. And it doesn’t matter whether they are conservationists, cat owners, or both.

[00:06:26] Cats trigger polarizing responses in the world of environmental stewardship.

[00:06:31] No matter how you look at it, cats are amazing creatures. They’re independent, yet lovable and loving.

[00:06:37] They are meticulously clean they are stealthy, yet communicate with an incredible diversity of vocalizations and mannerisms.

[00:06:44] They can keep your house or barn free of rodents and help you keep warm at night. And I love getting to know each cat’s personality. Some are playful. Others just love to cuddle. Others are more reclusive. My two cats personalities are so different, it’s almost like they’re two different species of cat. One wakes me up every morning by sitting on my chest and biting my nose. And then as soon as my feet hit the floor, she’s herding me towards the snack jar.

[00:07:09] The other wonders why I live in her house and finds little use for me besides filling her food dish. I love them both.

[00:07:15] Our goal today is to approach this hot button topic with an open and compassionate mind. As you know, I’m both a cat lover and a wildlife lover. If you have an outdoor cat now or care for outdoor cats, there are things you can do to help.

[00:07:31] And after your current outdoor cat goes to the great cat tree in the sky, where there’s everlasting supply of catnip, you can make a pledge that your next feline best friend will be indoors only.

[00:07:42] And speaking of cat compassion, one of the first things I think about is being compassionate for my cat’s health.

[00:07:48] Mike Armer: Indoor cats have been shown time and time again to have longer, healthier lives. The average lifespan for an indoor cat is in the 10 to 15 year range. The average lifespan for an outdoor cat is only two to five years. So there’s a huge difference there. And that’s just lifespan. Quality of life, um, I believe is better for indoor cats.

[00:08:08] They’re far less likely to get sick. They’re far less likely to have significant wounds. It really is a huge difference.

[00:08:16] Outdoor cats, are prone to some infectious diseases, feline leukemia virus. Feline Immunodeficiency Virus, which is cat AIDS. There are others as well. Toxoplasmosis, I know you want to talk about that in a little bit. Wounds, so cats get into fights with other cats. They get attacked by wild animals.

[00:08:38] Raccoons, things like that. Dogs will attack cats when they’re outside. And it’s unfortunately not uncommon for cats to get hit by cars, and that’s almost always a fatal interaction.

[00:08:49] Griff Griffith: Wow. Being an outdoor cat cuts eight to 10 years from their life. And it’s a hard life. That’s for sure.

[00:08:56] Mike Armer: I would say most people have some sense that keeping a cat indoors is better for them and better for the environment. I don’t think very many people have a sense of how extreme the difference is for the cats and for the wildlife.

[00:09:14] Griff Griffith: How do all these cats get outdoors anyway? Well, it’s a combination of things. Sometimes cats are simply allowed to roam free by their owners. Cats might escape , or get lost, or be left behind by owners who are unable to care for them. Just like with other pets, sometimess well meaning owners drop their cats off in natural areas thinking that it’s the best solution. That’s actually how I got my first cat, Meow Meow. She was the daughter of some cats that were dropped off in a city park.

[00:09:41] those abandoned cats aren’t spayed and neutered, then they can, and probably will, start having kittens.

[00:09:48] Each cat litter can have as many as six kittens in it, and those kittens are mature enough to have kittens of their own by the time they’re four to six months old.

[00:09:56] Once there are a few cats in an area, a mature female can have anywhere from two to five litters a year. Well, that’s a lot of numbers, so I’ll do the math for you. A mature female can have as many as 8 to nearly 30 kittens per year.

[00:10:12] You can see how populations can explode this way, and you can see why animals like coyotes might be attracted to these cat colonies.

[00:10:22] You may have heard terms like feral, stray, or community cats, so let’s take a moment to get these terms straight .

[00:10:28] Community cats encompass all free roaming cats, whereas feral represents cats that have little or no human contact. Feral cats tend to fear people and hide and can rarely be socialized That means they usually can’t be adopted.

[00:10:42] Stray cats are typically former pets, so they may be more approachable.

[00:10:46] The reason why these classifications are important is because they remind us that it’s not as simple as just catching an outdoor cat and then adopting it out to a new owner.

[00:10:55] And regardless, there are way too many outdoor cats for shelters and adoption services to handle. Not to mention people willing to adopt them. That’s not to say that adoption isn’t helpful. It certainly can be a piece of the puzzle to solve our cat problems.

[00:11:09] How do stray and feral cats get taken in and adopted out? Very often this process begins through TNR groups.

[00:11:17] Allison Fluty: TNR stands for trap, neuter, and return. Basically trapping a cat, neutering or spaying them, and then returning them to where they came from.

[00:11:26] Griff Griffith: TNR, on the surface, sounds pretty simple , but remember what Allison said earlier?

[00:11:31] Allison Fluty: It’s usually like five times more cats than are reported. You know, if I go to a house and they say, I think there’s, four or five cats, it’s like, okay, there could be 15 to 20.

[00:11:41] Griff Griffith: And Mike Armer adds another wrinkle.

[00:11:43] Mike Armer: From my understanding, TNR works in select situations, specifically where there is a, um, defined community of cats that doesn’t have new cats coming in from the outside. So rural areas that are isolated and don’t have adjoining towns where cats might be coming over from. It can actually work really well there because you can essentially, with time, catch the entire population.

[00:12:13] In more urban areas or larger areas, it’s virtually impossible to get a sufficient number of them to where it makes a difference. From what I understand.

[00:12:25] Griff Griffith: And that makes sense. If you have a large intermingling population, a one and done TNR effort probably won’t be effective in the long run.

[00:12:33] However, people committed to TNR, like Allison embrace much more than a one time trapping effort. Our producer, Michael Hawk calls it full spectrum TNR.

[00:12:44] Some people will also say that returning cats, which are not native to our ecosystems , is inhumane. They will say that we’re picking winners because those cats will continue to hunt and kill native animals. Others say it is inhumane to not return these unadoptable cats because there are no other viable alternatives. And as we stated before, these outdoor cats live short, hard, and often unhealthy lives.

[00:13:10] As you can see, there are no ideal solutions here. But this is where we are in 2025. Facing a situation, where there are millions of free roaming outdoor cats, supported by millions of cat lovers, pitted against wildlife lovers who want to eradicate the cats from the landscape.

[00:13:28] If I could snap my fingers and solve this, I would. But until I gain those magical powers, we have to work with what we have.

[00:13:35] And part of the problem with TNR is that many past TNR efforts have not been full spectrum.

[00:13:42] But in cases where full spectrum processes are embraced, which Allison describes in a moment, it has been successful.

[00:13:49] We’ve linked to a few studies in our show notes. Some of which were done in conjunction with Audubon chapters and bird observatories. One study tracked a population of cats near a city adjacent to the San Francisco Bay. An initial population of 175 cats declined by 99. 4 percent over the 16 year program period. Of the 258 total cats enrolled , only one remained at the end of the program period.

[00:14:17] Allison Fluty: There are a lot of, you know, misunderstandings or why a lot of people think that it just doesn’t work because when you’re doing TNR, you need to get like a hundred percent of the, you want to fix a hundred percent of the is close to a hundred percent. you know, a lot of studies say think like around 80 percent is when you’re going to see, the population start to decline,

[00:14:37] but we always try to do a hundred percent, as close to a hundred percent as possible. And it also requires ongoing management. and so that means that, you know, whoever’s caretaking the cats, the, the feeder, that they’re, feeding responsibly. That’s where a lot of the education comes in again. you know, we tell them don’t just dump food and leave.

[00:14:57] You know, you’re doing it, on a schedule. You’re picking up any uneaten food and taking it with you or throwing it away, and not leaving it out. and that way all the cats in the colony are coming during the times that you’re there and you can monitor them for, any injuries or illness or any new cats that might show up and they’re able to get those cats, and fix them or return them to their owners if they were lost pets

[00:15:21] it is an ongoing thing that requires a lot of education, but if it is done, um, full spectrum, as you say, I like that term, it is successful.

[00:15:29] Griff Griffith: Successful TNR requires getting a handle on the population.

[00:15:33] Allison Fluty: The whole process goes back into like, you have to kind of assess the situation, find out, how many cats are there, find out who’s feeding them.

[00:15:42] A lot of times there’s a lot of different people feeding them that don’t know each other. Provide education to feeders. Depending on the type of area, if it’s like residential, I’ll be going like to all the neighbors houses on the streets and knocking on the doors to ask them if they have outdoor cats or if they’re feeding cats, and leaving flyers if I’m not able to speak to someone in person.

[00:16:14] Using cameras, that we place, they’re kind of like trap cameras. They, they record when it’s, when they sense motion. but you can access them, you know, from an app on your phone. You don’t have to physically get the card out from the camera. All that really is just a, just. to figure out how many cats there are and how many people are feeding them and to get everybody on the same page.

[00:16:34] One of the important things is to establish a routine feeding schedule. You want the cats to be used to eating at one or two times a day. lot of feeders just leave food out and it lets cats come whenever they want. So really shy cats might not show up until 2am or something. There’s a lot of coordination that, that goes into, into that lot of prep before the actual trapping.

[00:17:01] Griff Griffith: Another reason to not leave food out all the time is that you are likely to attract other animals and pests, perhaps roaches, crickets, ants, raccoons, even coyotes.

[00:17:11] Well, meaning people who feed cats take on an extra responsibility as a caretaker, but they don’t always realize this. They need to monitor their feeding stations, clean the stations and ensure that they are not causing more harm. And with this monitoring, people can identify when new cats enter the neighborhood and alert their local TNR group to come back.

[00:17:30] Okay, so when Allison and her TNR group, Bay Area Cats, are engaged, they start with education, establish a feeding schedule, and monitor the population.

[00:17:39] Then it’s time for trapping. Producer Michael tagged along on a recent trap.

[00:17:44] To set the scene, the location is behind a hotel, along a creek, right next to a busy highway in the heart of San Jose, California. After a period of monitoring, Allison assessed that there were 12 to 14 cats, and has been slowly trapping cats over the previous few weeks.

[00:17:59] Allison Fluty: I have two appointments for tomorrow, so I’m going to try to catch two cats. I have my remote control trap, because some of the cats are already fixed. And so, I’m going to selectively trap ones that haven’t been fixed yet. Then transfer it into the other trap so I can use the robo trap again.

[00:18:19] It has this. This battery is connected to a little switch that triggers this actuator, they use them for car doors.

[00:18:30] Griff Griffith: The setup Alison is using is advanced yet. Its design is elegantly simple. Imagine a cage trap that has remote control door triggered by a key fob like what you use to open your car door.

[00:18:41] Allison Fluty: have a little camera that I put out, and then I just kind of sit in my car. And these cats are, they’re not super shy, so I’ve been able to sit, like, right here while they’re eating right here to trap them.

[00:18:54] And then, so this is a Reolink camera and it uses um, a SIM card that I just buy data for.

[00:19:00] Griff Griffith: She aims the camera at the trap and can watch real time video on her phone. This allows her to sit in the car, using it like a blind , so as not to disturb the cats. The cat’s preferred food is set in the trap. if a new cat or a known cat that has not been caught before wanders in, she triggers the trap.

[00:19:15] Allison Fluty: So this is where a lot of the trapping Just Sitting, They’re coming out now, huh?

[00:19:21] My camera is lagging so now I

[00:19:24] can’t tell if the cat that’s going in there tipped or not?

[00:19:28] Griff Griffith: Tipping refers to whether the cat has a small portion of the tip of one of its ears surgically removed, which is a universal sign that this cat has been spayed or neutered. Allison doesn’t wanna re trap a cat that has already been fixed. She watches closely as the cats approach .

[00:19:41] Allison Fluty: Oh, there we go. tell who. I can’t tell who it is. oh, I do need that, that one. So one of the is going in the kitten’s, like probably months old. I’ll get this one Let’s get this ready.

[00:20:10] Griff Griffith: Allison covered the trap to keep the cat calm.

[00:20:13] Allison Fluty: And so, I’m going to transfer into this empty one. You’re okay. Oh, I’m sorry.

[00:20:21] Griff Griffith: Allison had prearranged two appointments in the next morning with a vet that aids in TNR efforts. .

[00:20:32] Appointments take time and cost money for an already overworked veterinary industry. When a vet sees a cat that has been trapped, there are several things that happen.

[00:20:42] Mike Armer: Cats are brought in in a specific type of cage. They are always scared, and they’re tend to be much more aggressive than pet cats. And so, uh, unfortunately we absolutely have to sedate every single one that comes in. And so we’ll sedate them, do an evaluation looking for, fleas and whatnot.

[00:21:02] do the, the neutering process. Um, depending on the exact details of the program, they’re usually given, vaccines, at least the rabies vaccine.

[00:21:12] The surgery depends on whether it’s a male or female. Male cats, are very easy to sterilize. It only takes five minutes. Female cats, it’s more complicated, more technically involved, and so it’s probably, depending on your experience, anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. The whole process from presentation, to going home, probably a minimum of a couple of hours, but, most often it’s a bring the cat in, in the morning, pick it up in the evening type situation. After the neutering process, they get, uh, an ear crop, which is just a little notch out of the ear so that you can very easily from a distance, identify which ones have or have not been spayed or neutered.

[00:21:57] Allison Fluty: Through TNR, you’re also identifying cats that are friendly, and can be adopted, and so they are, you know, getting better lives I know some trappers have, found pets that had been lost for, two or three years and able to return them to their owners .

[00:22:12] , and if an area is, deemed to be too dangerous, for a cat to be returned to, for whatever reason, like if it’s Like a heavy construction site, or, if it’s, an ecologically sensitive area, that’s considered also, and, if it wouldn’t make sense to release the cat there, if or the cat’s going to have, too much of a negative impact on the area,

[00:22:36] , then that’s when they’ll also consider, you know, is this cat a candidate for like a barn cat or a garden cat program? There, there’s a lot more that goes into it than I think a lot of people are aware.

[00:22:48] Griff Griffith: But in light of a nationwide vet shortage, and since much of this work is volunteer driven and time consuming, it doesn’t scale well, but it certainly does work in targeted efforts. Of course, more public funds or donations to humane societies and TNR organizations would really help too.

[00:23:05] So far, we’ve been focused on the harm outdoor cats do to wild animals and how it impacts cat’s health as well. But did you know that outdoor cats can harm people and their owners too?

[00:23:19] Mike Armer: Toxoplasmosis is a parasite, and specifically it’s a protozoal parasite, and it’s pretty common. Cats are considered to be what’s called the definitive host, meaning that’s the host that the parasite can reproduce in and spread, but it actually can affect any warm blooded animal, so that includes humans.

[00:23:41] It is actually spread through the feces of the cat, so the outdoor cat, that’s infected defecates outside, it’s gonna go into the ground, other animals are gonna come along, be exposed to it, , and then it can infect those animals if, say, that was a mouse, and a, um, Wild animal comes along and eats that mouse.

[00:24:02] That other animal is going to most likely get infected as well, and it travels pretty much anywhere. It’s, in, it can spread by water and actually even go out into the ocean. Sea otters were very severely affected by it.

[00:24:15] Toxoplasmosis can cause a whole host of different symptoms. It can affect pretty much any part of the body, liver, intestines, lungs, kidneys, heart, skin, eyes. It even affects the central nervous system and can cause behavior changes in cats and humans as well, actually.

[00:24:35] Griff Griffith: In our Nature’s Archive podcast, episode 102 we discussed Toxoplasmosis with biologist Sophie Osborn as well.

[00:24:43] Sophie Osborn: A growing body of research is showing that the disease might be associated with a variety of mental disorders, including depression, bipolar disorders, schizophrenia, things like that.

[00:24:55] There was a study in Europe where women who had toxoplasmosis were twice as likely to commit suicide as women who didn’t have toxoplasmosis. So it’s seeming like it could be much more harmful to people than we initially realized. It also, in rats, makes them not fearful. It makes them bolder and braver.

[00:25:16] And we’re finding that it has that effect on other animals too. So a lot of animals including people that contract toxoplasmosis are more prone to having accidents and trauma.

[00:25:27] Mike Armer: Pregnant women are the highest risk because it affects the fetus. It can cause abortion or fetal death, but it can affect, you know, anything in the human just like it can in the cat. So one of the more common things in children is that it affects their eyes. can cause vision problems.

[00:25:43]

[00:25:44] Griff Griffith: As a conservationist, I’ve been so focused on how cats might harm the environment that I haven’t even considered toxoplasmosis. And this gets us to the main point. The best solution to the outdoor cat problem is prevention. If you have a new cat, please keep it inside.

[00:26:01] People might let their cats outside simply because that is what they grew up with and are used to, and they haven’t even considered the bigger picture.

[00:26:08] Others feel like letting cats outdoors is the only way to let the cat have a full enriching life. But is this true?

[00:26:14] Mike Armer: There are so, so many different things that you can do to enrich the indoor environment. There are tons of products you can buy. There are many websites devoted to ways you can do that without buying products, and in the end, when you’re spending time trying to make your cat’s life better, it becomes a better relationship with the cat. Absolutely, you can have cats that are completely satisfied and happy, strictly indoors.

[00:26:41] If you can train a cat to be on a leash, kudos to you. They seem to generally be happy and are much less likely to be getting injured, though not 100 percent risk free. are great for protecting wildlife, but they’re not necessarily going to prevent the cat from infectious diseases.

[00:27:01] But they allow the cat to go outdoors, smell the smells, see the sights, all that sort of thing.

[00:27:06] Allison Fluty: Sometimes simple things like just pushing a cat tree up against the window and putting up a, a bird feeder or, Playing with your cat is a of enrichment that’s also really, really important.

[00:27:17] You know, finding what your cat likes to play with. Um, some people will say, oh, my cat doesn’t like to play. There’s so many different toys, you can be creative, just find what, what’s enriching to your cat. You know, sometimes bringing something from outside indoors and letting the cat smell it, scent enrichment is another type of enrichment that exists.

[00:27:38]

[00:27:38] Griff Griffith: Scent enrichment, what a great idea. We tend to look at animals through a human perspective, but many animals rely much more on scent than we do, so give it a try. If you have windows, consider making a pedestal or placing a stand near the window so your cat can look outside.

[00:27:54] And move your cat tree or stand around from time to time to give the cats a new perspective. And just like with kids, periodically take toys away or reintroduce older toys. And of course, new and different shape boxes and bags and containers are perennial favorites.

[00:28:09] If you currently allow your cat outdoors, yes, it might be hard to retrain it to be indoors only. Try limiting the hours you let it out to the least impactful hours.

[00:28:18] And of course, make sure your cat is fixed. If you can’t afford the procedure, there may be organizations that can help.

[00:28:24] And speaking of trying to keep your cat indoors, did you know the bird migration is as predictable as the weather?

[00:28:29] In fact, there is an amazing resource called Bird Cast that shows anticipated migration volumes. So birds tend to migrate only on the best weather nights by keeping your cat indoor during those nights and the 24 hours that follow, you could give those migratory birds a chance. You can sign up to receive local migration alerts from BirdCast. Go to birdcast. info and search for Migration Tools or check our show notes.

[00:28:53] And there are other simple things you can do!

[00:28:56] If you have an outdoor cat today, make a pledge that your next cat will be an indoor cat.

[00:29:01] If you see a lot of outdoor cats in your neighborhood, seek out organizations like Bay Area Cats that come out and do TNR. .

[00:29:08] And remember, if you find kittens, there is only a narrow window in which they can be socialized for adoption. Eight weeks is typically the cutoff, so don’t delay.

[00:29:18] And perhaps you can educate your neighbors? Try online neighbor forums. And remember, most people don’t respond well to lecturing. Perhaps take an approach of, I just learned this and thought you’d like to know too.

[00:29:29]

[00:29:29] Griff Griffith: Unfortunately, progress has been slow or non existent in the overall outdoor cat problem, because too many people take an idealized point of view depending on whether they identify as a conservationist or as cat lovers.

[00:29:41] Allison Fluty: There’s the bird people that are very against the TNR, , and against outdoor cats , and then there’s the, cat people, , who feel, that the bird people are vilifying the cats and, just seems silly to me, you know, that , they kind of make each other out to, be , the villain, but really I’m like, we all kind of have the same, goal.

[00:30:05] We all want cats to be healthy. We all want a healthy environment. We don’t want to see, one animal suffering and the other one thriving. We want, them all to be, safe and healthy. My dream is to bring the birders and the cat people together to realize they’re on the same team.

[00:30:21] Griff Griffith: Sophie Osborn adds:

[00:30:23] Sophie Osborn: And so if each of us does one thing, if you can’t cope with having your cat indoors, maybe keep it in for five days when you think a nest might be hatching or fledging in your home.

[00:30:33] And if, 10 million people keep their cat inside for a week, that’s something more than nothing,

[00:30:40] Griff Griffith: Thankfully, I’ve seen that our listeners are open minded and open to the nuances that are inherent in nature.

[00:30:45] So let’s be part of the same team and help our cats and help biodiversity. In my case, Meow Meow and I moved several times, and I did my best to limit her hunting, but it wasn’t until she was like around 9 that we moved into a place with a tall fence that the killing stopped. And I knew that I’d get another cat someday.

[00:31:03] And I made a silent promise to the dozens, maybe hundreds of birds, lizards and snakes that Meow Meow killed, that my next cat would live indoors.

[00:31:11] Now I have two indoor cats named Mimi and Sister. With toys, cat trees, and a catio, their lives are as safe and stimulating as I can make them, and boy, are they cute. We sleep together every night and they still hunt. But now it’s laser lights and stuffed mice, and no one has to die.

[00:31:29] What did you think of today’s episode? We’d like to hear from you. You can email us at podcast at jumpstartnature. com or leave a comment on one of our social media pages. You can find us on Blue Sky , Facebook, and Instagram at jumpstartnature.

[00:31:46] And please share this episode with three of your friends or groups that you think would benefit from hearing it. A big thanks to Allison Fluty, Dr. Mike Armer and Sophie Osborn for their insights in today’s episode.

[00:31:58] Jumpstartnature. com slash cats has a transcript and full show notes , including links to topics we mentioned and additional resources to help you learn more about outdoor cats.

[00:32:08] Michael Hawk: Jumpstart Nature was created and is produced by me, Michael Hawk.

[00:32:12] Miles Ewell provided sound design and our host is Griff Griffith. Thanks for listening.

#8 – Saving A Valley: How Coyote Valley Inspires Conservation

Coyote Valley from Máyyan ‘Ooyákma (Coyote Ridge), with Tule Elk. Photo by Michael Hawk

On a 1983 morning, Steve Jobs scouted Coyote Valley for Apple’s new headquarters. Despite his plans, Coyote Valley remains one of the most important undeveloped landscapes near Silicon Valley.

This episode tells the story of its conservation through unexpected alliances, resilience, and the invaluable ecosystem services it provides. From critical wildlife connectivity to indigenous cultural significance, discover how perseverance and community action can protect cherished landscapes.

Join host Griff Griffith and our guests, Andrea Mackenzie, Amah Mutsun Chairman Valentin Lopez, Megan Fluke, Nick Perry, and Dr. Stuart Weiss as they provide unique and inspiring perspectives as they explore how to protect and steward unique lands like Coyote Valley, whether near Silicon Valley or your own backyard.

Some Of Our Guests

Beyond a podcast, Jumpstart Nature is a movement fueled by volunteers, igniting a fresh approach to reconnecting people with the natural world. In the face of our pressing climate and biodiversity challenges, we’re on a mission to help you discover newfound purpose and motivation.

Join us in this vital journey towards nature’s revival. Explore more and show your support at jumpstartnature.com, and follow us on FacebookInstagramLinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube.

For even deeper nature insights, delve into our companion podcast, Nature’s Archive.

Sign up for our short, bi-weekly (and solutionary!) newsletter called It’s All Connected! Get recommendations for books, podcasts, articles, and more, as well as analysis and learn what YOU can do to help nature.

Links to Topics Discussed

Amah Mutsun Land Trust

Amah Mutsun Tribal Band

Cars, Cows, Checkerspot Butterflies – Dr. Stuart Weiss’s paper

Creekside Science

Green Foothills

Obi Kaufmann

P-22, The Mountain Lion of Hollywood

Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority

Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing

Related Podcasts

Additional Credits

This podcast episode was written and produced by Michael Hawk. Our host and co-writer is Griff Griffith.

Some of the music used in this production is through creative commons licensing:

The following music was used for this media project:
Music: Joyful Waltz by MusicLFiles
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/6600-joyful-waltz
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license

Music: Suvaco do Cristo by Kevin MacLeod
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4449-suvaco-do-cristo
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Transcript (Click to View)

Jumpstart Nature owns copyright in and to all content in transcripts.

You are welcome to share the below transcript (up to 500 words but not more) in media articles (e.g., The New York Times, LA Times, The Guardian), on your personal website, in a non-commercial article or blog post (e.g., Medium), and/or on a personal social media account for non-commercial purposes, provided that you include attribution to “Jumpstart Nature Podcast” and link back to the jumpstartnature.com URL.

No warranty of accuracy of the transcript is provided or implied. There may be typos.

[00:00:00] Griff Griffith: On a crisp morning in 1983, Steve Jobs was on a mission.

[00:00:09] A helicopter carried him high above the rolling green hills just south of Silicon Valley as he searched for something that would change the future of Apple computers.

[00:00:20] With him was an Apple Vice President and a real estate consultant. Their objective? Find a new headquarters for the rapidly growing computer company.

[00:00:29] Jobs had found his site, the lush grasslands and oak savanna covered hillsides of Coyote Valley.

[00:00:36] Griff Griffith: Soon after, Apple owned the land and it looked like the headquarters project was off and running.

[00:00:42] Andrea Mackenzie: the Coyote Valley landscape has captured my heart.

[00:00:46] It’s

[00:00:46] a, in many ways, a forgotten landscape, a tortured landscape, and yet it survives and keeps coming back time and time again. It’s showing that resilience for nature and resilience for people.

[00:01:00] And turns out that the Coyote Valley is one of the most important undeveloped valley floor landscapes in the entire San Francisco Bay region. And so each day we’re discovering more and more about why this kind of a place adjoining the 12th largest city in the nation is so very important.

[00:01:20] Griff Griffith: , Andrea McKenzie is a general manager of the Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority, an organization that stewards much of the land in Coyote Valley.

[00:01:29] Now you might be wondering how she can refer to the space as undeveloped when a tech giant like Apple , with a driven and unstoppable leader like Steve Jobs was intent on developing it.

[00:01:40] This is an amazing story of an incredible land with equally incredible history.

[00:01:47] Chairman Lopez: And if you look west , you would see the peaks of the Santa Cruz Mountains, and one of the tallest peaks. That’s Mount Umunum, and that’s the location of our creation story .

[00:01:56] Griff Griffith: And the story of what happened to Coyote Valley is full of unexpected alliances.

[00:02:01] Megan Fluke: I jokingly suggested that he should start donating to, uh, support all of the work that they were creating for me and the team. well, wouldn’t you believe it? they’ve been an annual donor ever since

[00:02:13] Griff Griffith: A little luck.

[00:02:14] Stu Weiss: one of the things I noticed is that every time a coyote valley development started getting some momentum the economy would crash or there’d be a tech crash, and the plans would go away for a few years.

[00:02:27] Griff Griffith: And Incredible Perseverance.

[00:02:29] Megan Fluke: yeah, it was hard. But at the end of the day, we were working in community

[00:02:34] Coyote

[00:02:34] Griff Griffith: Valley’s Story is one of hope and inspiration and it’s a model for nature conservation of all kinds.

Theme Music Here

[00:02:40] Griff Griffith: I’m Griff Griffith, and welcome to Jumpstart Nature Okay. You’re here listening to Jumpstart Nature. That tells me one thing. You are a nature lover., and I bet there’s a landscape near you that you absolutely cherish.

[00:03:09] It might not be famous. It might even be overlooked. It’s beauty and importance unnoticed by most, but you see it, you feel it. You have a deep personal connection with that place. We all have these places, but my next question is the most important one. Is that land that you love threatened by habitat loss?

[00:03:27] Human encroachment or construction? Is that land protected? If not, why not? But first let’s paint the picture of Coyote Valley a bit more to make it real for you.

[00:03:38] Michael Hawk: I moved to San Jose in 2011. So San Jose is considered the heart of Silicon Valley, where tech companies employ hundreds of thousands of people. It’s part of the greater San Francisco metro area, which is home to nearly 10 million people.

[00:03:53] After I moved here, I hiked a hill very close to my house and I noticed this vast open space to the south. It was a valley with a mosaic of landscapes. There was agriculture, a river running through the middle of it, there was a massive wetland full of water just over the hill from where I lived. It looked beautiful.

[00:04:11] I wondered why it hadn’t been built in to suburbs and business parks like the rest of Silicon Valley. The iconic US 101 highway bisects the valley. But I was drawn to that wetland. I wanted to go explore it. I could see the mountain range on the other side of the valley. It’s called the Diablo Range, and it was poking its way across the valley floor almost connecting to the Santa Cruz foothills on the other side, and the hills were dotted with massive and ancient oak trees, bay trees, buckeye, trees, and so much more.

[00:04:42] I slowly realized I’d lucked into moving to what was perhaps the last suburb to have been built next to Coyote Valley.

[00:04:49]

[00:04:49] Griff Griffith: That’s Michael Hawk, who you probably know as the founder of Jumpstart Nature and the producer of this podcast.

[00:04:54] He’s been telling me stories about Coyote Valley for years, and that we had to do a podcast episode about it. Well, he convinced me. To show you why you should know the story of this land.

[00:05:06] Nick Perry: So I grew up door to my grandparents. and they came here during the Great Depression when my grandpa did. He was actually a migrant farm worker from New Mexico.

[00:05:15] And so he would take me places to show me what Santa Clara County looked like before it was Silicon Valley, one of the places we would come to.

[00:05:22] As we would keep driving south, out of San Jose and to Coyote Valley, and he’d be like, Nicholas, this is what Santa Clara County used to look like. This was a paradise before it all got developed. And this is, this is your glimpse of what it was before. And it just really fascinated me. I was like, wow, this place still exists. My name is Nick Perry. Coyote Valley Project Director for the Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority.

[00:05:44] Griff Griffith: Nick has a deeply personal relationship with this paradise.

[00:05:48] Just like Apple before, Cisco Systems, a global tech giant, wanted to relocate their headquarters to Coyote Valley.

[00:05:55] Griff Griffith: Nick, just a high school student at the time, couldn’t stand to see his paradise turn into another sprawling low rise office campus.

[00:06:02] Nick Perry: I created a Save Coyote Valley website, because I thought, well, you know, like there’s someone who needs to advocate for this place. When I created my little website, it got a lot of attention. And as a teenager I was getting emails from people, who were angry at me. I was just rereading some of them because I printed them out and put them in this folder that I’ve had since high school. But some of them were like, how could you stop progress?

[00:06:24] Griff Griffith: Politicians and real estate moguls like to call this “development”. You know, take some useless land and make it useful.

[00:06:32] Develop it. To developers, usefulness often starts with a large construction contract. For politicians, it starts with tax revenue, but there are other ways to value land too.

[00:06:45] Andrea Mackenzie: these kinds of large extensive open spaces

[00:06:48] act in our favor. They act to help us build resilience to these increased climate challenges by buffering lands from massive wildfires, soaking up storm waters as they come through, storing water underground, which we can tap during times of drought. These are the gifts that nature keeps giving us for free. And increasingly we’re putting a price on those and we’re understanding the value of them. But it’s really important to educate the broader public and decision makers so that piecemeal decisions aren’t made that undercut these services that nature is providing us

[00:07:28] Griff Griffith: That’s Andrea Mackenzie again. She’s talking about ecosystem services.

[00:07:33] There are so many things that nature does for us that we often take for granted and overlook. These services don’t show up on corporate balance sheets, but if they go away, they show up as natural disasters. They also show up in the form of increased insurance rates, increased food prices, pollution, floods, and wildfires. But it’s easy for a developer to discount or ignore these free services when advocating for their projects.

[00:07:55] After all, most of those costs I just mentioned, aren’t felt by the developer because they are paid by others often months or years later. In economics, these are called externalities. And unfortunately, are often overlooked.

[00:08:08] But in order to solve this, we must first understand how the land benefits us

[00:08:13] Megan Fluke: the Coyote Valley campaign, which you know, is a multi-generational campaign that started decades ago. The effort really seemed like a campaign to protect this landscape for the sake of the landscape, and that it was beautiful and it was open space and open space ought to be protected.

[00:08:31] The way that it evolved is we started to learn so much more about Coyote Valley, that it was an essential wildlife corridor for large mammals between the Santa Cruz Mountains and the Mount Diablo Range, that it protected San Jose’s water quality and protected San Jose from flooding. Just a whole host of other benefits that I could riddle off.

[00:08:53] The way that the goal evolved is that as we learned more about all of the value that Coyote Valley provides, that development in Coyote Valley just didn’t make sense both from a climate change perspective and also from an economic perspective.

[00:09:08] Griff Griffith: Megan Fluke, who we heard from in the intro, is the former Executive Director of Green Foothills, a non profit that advocates to protect open space and natural resources in the South San Francisco Bay Area.

[00:09:20] Green Foothills was among many other local advocacy organizations that have played a critical role in working to protect Coyote Valley, but ecosystem services aren’t just about the economic benefits of nature.

[00:09:31] It also includes the cultural and spiritual benefits.

[00:09:35] Chairman Lopez: My name is Valentin Lopez, and I’m the chairman of the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band. I’m also president of the board of directors of the Amah Mutsun Land Trust. Amah Mutsun Tribal Band is comprised of the descendants of the indigenous peoples that we’re taking the missions San Juan Bautista and Santa Cruz. Our territories began at the very southern end of Coyote Valley. History identifies our tribe as hunters and gatherers. And, uh, that’s quite insulting, and nothing can be further from the truth. Our people were very active stewards of the land. You know, our creation story takes place just directly west Coyote Valley, and if you look west, you would see the peaks of the Santa Cruz Mountains, and one of the tallest peaks. That’s Mount Umunum, and that’s the location of our creation story. And in our creation story, Creator gives us the responsibility to take care of Mother Earth and all living things. And so for us, all living things are the plants, the trees, The wildlife, the birds, the fish, the four legged, the finned, but then also the rivers, the mountains, and, the view sheds.

[00:10:54] Those were all our responsibilities and our people took it very seriously. We had the responsibility to ensure there was adequate foods for the fish, for the migrating birds, for the deer, the elk, the bear, etc. That was our responsibility to take care of those cultural resources, those food resources for all species.

[00:11:13] Griff Griffith: The depth of connection that indigenous people have with this land is hard for most non indigenous people to fathom. And modern society is often dismissive of traditional ecological knowledge because it doesn’t use the same terminology as Western science.

[00:11:26] And isn’t written up in pricey academic journals.

[00:11:29] Chairman Lopez: when I was in college, I went and looked at the words science and, because I knew that archaeology and chemistry, or biology, you know, I understood what those words meant, but science, what the heck did science mean?

[00:11:42] So I went to the library and looked it up, and science is the study of knowledge. And so when I look at it that way, all of our ancestors were scientists. You know, they’d studied how the plants interconnected, how they studied about the winds.

[00:11:56] They studied about the rains. They studied about the fog, the shadows. we knew that when the insects, nested in the ground, you know, what their nesting periods were so we wouldn’t burn during that time.

[00:12:07] Griff Griffith: You know, science is one of those terms we hear and use all the time, but I decided to look up the definition, just like Chairman Lopez did. Here’s what I found. The systemic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation, experimentation, and the testing of theories against evidence obtained. Over thousands of years, indigenous people had to study, observe, experiment, and test in order to thrive.

[00:12:49] As you might guess, open space adjacent to a prosperous area like Silicon Valley is in high demand.

[00:12:56] And And demand to develop in Coyote Valley has been consistent. Dr. Stuart Weiss is Chief Scientist at Creekside Science. He’s been working on various biology and ecology projects in and near the Valley for many years.

[00:13:10] Stu Weiss: Over the years, there’s just been all these development proposals in Coyote Valley. So back in the eighties, it was Apple and Tandem Computer wanted to put in a huge development in the late nineties cisco wanted to put their world headquarters right down there as part of Coyote Valley Research Park. And then in the mid two thousands people were pushing to have a city, developed on the valley floor. And one of the things I noticed is that every time a Coyote Valley development started getting some momentum, the economy would crash or there’d be a tech crash, and the plans would go away for a few years.

[00:13:51] I just thought that was an interesting leading economic indicator kind of wish I had based my stock investments on that

[00:14:00] Griff Griffith: the demand to develop Coyote Valley was so high that huge projects were pursued. Each one was complex and costly.

[00:14:07] And thankfully, there was a little luck that prevented these projects from proceeding. In fact, the Apple project fell through during the mid eighties, not just because of an uncertain economy, but Apple’s internal politics led to Steve Jobs being forced out.

[00:14:20] Apple ended up selling the land to another developer. And this is one of the first lessons that Coyote Valley can teach us. Perseverance is critical because you never know what is around the corner.

[00:14:31] Griff Griffith: But even as the development projects fell through, other threats remained.

[00:14:35] Dr. Weiss, while in graduate school, had been studying the Bay Checkerspot butterfly. The small butterfly used to be abundant across much of The San Francisco Bay Area. But at this time, only a few small populations remained, and one of those populations was in some hills adjacent to Coyote Valley.

[00:14:52] These grassland hills were grazed by cattle, so some of the researchers decided to fence off a section and see what happened. To their surprise, the fenced off area was taken over by non native Italian ryegrass. The soils in those hills were made of an ancient serpentine rock, which is known to be nutrient poor. And only specifically adapted plants can grow in serpentine soil. Why was the Italian ryegrass here when it struggled to grow so well in other serpentine areas?

[00:15:20] Stu Weiss: I went back to graduate school at Stanford to get my PhD. And I was sitting in a ecosystem ecology class, and the professor Peter Vitousek gave a lecture about something called dry nitrogen deposition. And it was like the light bulb went off in my head and I think it was the magnitude of the Las Vegas strip by the time it was over.

[00:15:46] Stu: And I made all the connections because I’ve been staring up at the smog cloud for about a decade at that point

[00:15:54] And then few back of the envelope calculations and it’s like, yeah, that’s a lot of nitrogen coming down. And that was the moment when I knew that this was an amazing connection here.

[00:16:06] Griff Griffith: It took Dr. Weiss a few years putting the research and science together. He needed to find out why the grazed areas showed more native plants and stronger butterfly populations, and why Italian ryegrass was growing so much better in those areas that were not grazed.

[00:16:20] Stu: And then I published a paper in 1999 that described the phenomenon.

[00:16:25] It’s called Cars, Cows, and Checkerspot Butterflies. And it’s become a bit of a citation classic at this point because I had made a really direct connection between the nitrogen deposition and the loss of biodiversity.

[00:16:38] Griff Griffith: Dr. Weiss was able to show that emissions from cars were fertilizing nearby lands. It was turning those nutrient poor soils into soils that could support invaders like ryegrass. His math showed that as much as 6 kilograms, or 13 pounds, of nitrogen was being applied to an acre of land every year.

[00:16:56] It turned out that the cattle were preferentially eating the invasive grass, due in part to how the grazing was managed. That’s right. Cows were actually helping biodiversity in this unique environment. This is a fascinating story that we looked at in more detail

[00:17:10] in Nature’s Archive Podcast Episode 37. But this discovery and the research that Dr. Weiss did was a key to unlock some of the biggest steps to protect Coyote Valley.

[00:17:21] In 1999, when Dr. Weiss’s paper was published, there was also a proposal to build a power plant in the north end of Coyote Valley.

[00:17:28] Stu: There was a proposal for the Metcalf energy center, 600 megawatt gas fire power plant,

[00:17:34] And it’s a large source of nitrogen oxides.

[00:17:39] The U S Fish and Wildlife service and the California Energy Commission told the proposers of the power plant that they had to do something, we have to mitigate for this.

[00:17:50] Griff Griffith: Many federal, state, and sometimes even local governments require projects that cause environmental harm to offset that harm in some way. In this case

[00:17:59] Stu: they really wanted the power plant and, we’re willing to put out a lot of extra what seemed to me have a lot of extra money, but it’s a half billion dollar project.

[00:18:08] 10, $20 million extra for mitigating was part of the capital costs and they were willing to do it. And we really wanted a precedent for mitigating for nitrogen emissions, because we figured we could start leveraging that. So that went through. In 2003, we have this ceremony dedicated in the Metcalf’s Energy Center Ecological Reserve.

[00:18:33] Stu Weiss: the mitigation for the Metcalf Energy Center turned out to be 131 acres of habitat conserved,

[00:18:41] Stu: So we had the precedent.

[00:18:42] Griff Griffith: This precedent led to 600 additional acres preserved when the US 1 0 1 highway was widened. Eventually, an 1800 acre hillside preserve was also developed This allowed local groups to show the public and the politicians this gem that people were driving by every day, but not noticing -until now. The views from the ridge were both breathtaking and informative.

[00:19:05] Advocates and biologists could tell the story of the land.

[00:19:08] They could show people super blooms of native flowers, the wetland below and how the highways bisected this narrow valley.

[00:19:14] People could easily see just how close the other range was across the valley.

[00:19:20] Andrea Mackenzie: One of the earliest Discoveries about Coyote Valley and why it was and is irreplaceable landscape is we realized that it was the last viable land connection or bridge connecting the Santa Cruz Mountains and the Diablo Range. A million acres of habitat in those two ranges. The success of those habitats depends on the gene flow and wildlife able to move between those two mountain ranges. So by protecting it, it’s the missing puzzle piece that allows us to avoid extinctions and to, improve the biological conditions for many, many species, some of which are found nowhere else in the world.

[00:20:06] And it’s easy for people to understand. It’s compelling. You have charismatic megafauna, as we like to call them, the mountain lions and the bobcats and the foxes and the golden eagles and the bald eagles that are all active in this landscape. And so they become really the salespersons, the ambassadors for protecting this landscape.

[00:20:28]

[00:20:28] Griff Griffith: I like to call those charismatic animal species

[00:20:31] ambassador animals. And if this story of landscape linkages and connectivity sounds familiar, it’s because we did a deep dive in the episode we called The Age of Connectivity.

[00:20:42] Biologists and the general public, like you , are recognizing that the impact of fragmented habitats goes way beyond tragic roadkill.

[00:20:50] Ambassador animals are a critical part of many successful conservation efforts. The charismatic mountain lion of Hollywood, P 22, did so much to sway public opinion, resulting in the construction of the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing in Los Angeles.

[00:21:04] And these types of stories are showing up more and more all around the world.

[00:21:15] Nick Perry: right now we have about 1, 500 acres of the valley floor permanently protected.

[00:21:19] Griff Griffith: That’s 1500 acres protected in addition to a few thousand acres in the bordering hills. The Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority sees a bright future ahead, but protection of this landscape is just one important step in Coyote Valley’s journey. They are developing a comprehensive master plan that incorporates land use agriculture, habitat restoration, and access. And to do this well, they are engaging with the public, landowners, the Amah Mutsun, and other local tribes, as well as other users and stakeholders. Many more steps lie ahead. Some of the improvements will happen quickly, but some habitats may take years or even decades to fully recover.

[00:21:58] Andrea Mackenzie: Native American ethos and philosophy is that we should be thinking seven generations ahead. And conservationists know this. They feel it in their, bones that we must be thinking long term

[00:22:12] Griff Griffith: remember earlier when I asked you about the local landscape that you love? Chances are it needs some help just like Coyote Valley.

[00:22:20] And there are so many lessons to be learned from this story. So what lessons can our guests share from this experience in Coyote Valley?

[00:22:27] We already mentioned the importance of perseverance, even when times look tough. Unexpected turns led to development projects falling by the wayside. Megan Fluke elaborates on this.

[00:22:37] Megan Fluke: What was surprising was that at some point we realized that the energy to pave over Coyote Valley and industrialize Coyote Valley really was just coming from a handful of people who had hopes for an industrial and urban city on this landscape.

[00:22:55] It almost felt like the Wizard of the Wizard of Oz for those that know that story. Once we looked behind the curtain, this seemingly, you know, sort of formidable opposition that just we couldn’t really grasp, but we didn’t really know where all this, you know, energy was coming from. This opposition really wasn’t as powerful as we thought.

[00:23:15] the campaign to protect Coyote Valley not once felt hopeless. It felt hard. It felt overwhelming, maybe confusing at times, but not hopeless. we pushed through and we persevered because that’s what advocates do, and we had the community on our side. I

[00:23:33] Griff Griffith: Getting the community on your side is another critical lesson. Ambassador animals can help with that, but you need to be sure people are connected to the land and the vision.

[00:23:41] Megan Fluke: One way that we’ve found to keep people energized is connecting them to the land. One of my favorite quotes is from the naturalist and writer Obi Kaufmann, people protect what they love and love what they know. The way that I found that’s helpful to keep people energized is through education and community connection And. Frankly, having a good fight every so often also energizes people too.

[00:24:08] Stu: We started taking people up to Coyote Ridge to see it, in 2003, I invited all of the elected officials in Santa Clara county to come take a tour and we had it set up so they would show up we’d shuttle them to the top in our four wheel drive vehicles, . And we’d have them for a few hours.

[00:24:28] We’d feed them like this gourmet lunch, then we’d send them on their way back down the hill. And it was transformative. We ended up with some real champions in the elected bodies who realized that, hey, we’re Santa Clara county. We do things right.

[00:24:45] Griff Griffith: Finding champions is also critical, whether it be elected officials, energetic advocates, or existing landowners.

[00:24:52] Nick Perry: Coyote Valley is an amazing place for agriculture. It has great soil, good weather. Agriculture definitely faces economic challenges, but there’s really great potential to help reestablish local agriculture in places like Coyote Valley.

[00:25:08] Griff Griffith: And feel free to toot your own horn once in a while, too.

[00:25:12] Andrea Mackenzie: We acquired a piece of property and opened it to the public in 2015, 350 acres called the Coyote Valley Open Space Preserve. Right before we opened it to the public, we had convenings there and community celebrations to bring many, many people out. People actually drove 45 minutes from San Francisco to come check out this new landscape. And it became a wonderful gathering spot for people to learn about Coyote Valley.

[00:25:46] That would be just a fraction of the conservation achievements we’ve achieved since then. I kind of liken it to this analogy of a, a small bird sticking out its chest and trying to appear bigger than it really is. That’s the kind of behavior that, that we engaged in to show people this was a small but really, really important

[00:26:06] Open Space Preserve, and when we opened it to the public and invited them to come in, they started to get a taste of what this amazing landscape, which had been forgotten for so long, and was surely going to be developed over time, and now belonged to them. What it could be if we thought bigger.

[00:26:25] Griff Griffith: And too often, Indigenous knowledge and partnership is missed.

[00:26:29] Chairman Lopez: I think that what’s really important is for the land managers to recognize the importance and the contributions of traditional indigenous knowledge, you know, our knowledge of the use of fire for cultural burning, not just prescribed fires to reduce fuel, but the importance of fire for, you know, enhancing and developing cultural landscapes. Restoring native plants.

[00:26:55] we’ve talked about these authorities and we’re actually working with them on a number of these initiatives as such. we feel that we have a good relationship with them today. And, and that we are working with them and they do have an appreciation for indigenous knowledge.

[00:27:10] I’d like people to recognize that we suffered through three the brutal periods of colonization. They were very difficult to us. And we people to know that we do not look at them as being the perpetrators to what happened to us. We don’t blame them. But what we ask for them to recognize, how much they benefited from that horrific history. And to recognize that the tribes today, especially the unrecognized tribes, but all tribes today, to work with tribes to help them restore their culture, restore their spirituality, restore their identity, and restore their, their landscapes, and to work with us to heal and recover from the past, And there’s a number of ways they can do that, you know, by supporting tribes in a lot of ways. But like, say for example, our land trust. Our land trust is a non profit. We can only do so much work, according to the amount of, money that we can raise. And so if they can help our land trust through donations that would go a long way to helping Mother Earth and helping our tribe.

[00:28:26] Griff Griffith: And we need to remember an important saying in conservation.

[00:28:30] Megan Fluke: advocates at Green Foothills like Brian Schmidt and Lenny Roberts would tell me ” the wins are temporary, but the losses are permanent”

[00:28:36] Griff Griffith: The wins are temporary because there’s always a new push to develop or purchase land or rezone it.

[00:28:42] Nick Perry: If you look back at the history, Coyote Valley was, I think, first zoned by the city of San Jose for development in 1960 in the And then in 1975, they rezoned it back to agriculture because, you know, people started to advocate that maybe it wasn’t best to continue to sprawl out.

[00:29:00] but then in 1984, they rezoned it back to development when companies like Apple wanted to build here. And that was the case until 2021. So, tides can change.

[00:29:09] Griff Griffith: That’s perhaps the last lesson of Coyote Valley. It’s important to constantly remind people of the value of their land because it’s all too easy for it to be taken for granted. As Megan Fluke said, the wins are temporary, , but the losses are permanent. So think about the special land near you and what you can do to support it. Which groups can you join? Which city council meetings can you attend?

[00:29:31] Perhaps you can organize a hike, birdwalk, or bioblitz to and show others the value of the land. Just get started. And big thanks to our guest today, Andrea Mackenzie, Megan Fluke, Nick Perry, Stuart Weiss, and Chairman Valentin Lopez.

[00:29:45] Chairman Lopez mentioned the Amah Mutsun Land Trust. I love Land Trust because they give us another opportunity to connect, to save, to be a hero, to have a relationship with the land. You can learn more about the Amah Mutsun land trust at www. amahmutsunlandtrust. org. We have links to them and all of our other guests in the show notes at jumpstartnature.com/podcast. And we also post a transcript of this episode and many other resources to help you jumpstart your own personal journey to help the environment. See you next time..

[00:30:17] Michael Hawk: The Jumpstart Nature podcast was created, written, and produced by me, Michael Hawk, and our host and co writer is Griff Griffith. Thanks for listening.

Jumpstart Bonus: Top 10 Favorite Species with Griff Griffith, Michelle Fullner, and Michael Hawk

What do parasitic plants, 600 year old oak trees, salmon, and hoverflies have in common? Well, they are some of Griff’s, Michelle Fullner’s and my favorite wild organisms!

One of the species mentioned today – a hoverfly. And if you look closely, you can see producer Michael’s outline in it!

Today’s episode is a fun conversation with Michelle Fullner, Griff Griffith, and myself, Michael Hawk, where we advocate for our 10 favorite animals and plants. We each bring three species to the conversation…well, not physically. And we had a bit of a game to decide who got to pick the 10th one. All I’m saying is that I still think that aphids would be good at soccer, but you’ll have to listen to hear what that’s about.

This idea was all Michelle’s – and if you don’t know Michelle, she’s the host and producer of the Golden State Naturalist podcast, which is a fun and entertaining California-centric nature podcast. Her fourth season is about to launch, and she plans to cover topics that I know you’ll love – wildlife crossings, coastal wetlands, red-legged frogs, and much more. Be sure to check out her podcast and follow her social media, too.

And looking ahead, Jumpstart Nature is in the late stages of three new episodes for this fall, covering invasive species, outdoor cats, and an inspiring land conservation story that succeeded against all odds. And if you’re listening to this on the Nature’s Archive feed, well, we have plenty of fun episodes coming too – covering topics ranging from wildlife forensics to ants!

Beyond a podcast, Jumpstart Nature is a movement fueled by volunteers, igniting a fresh approach to reconnecting people with the natural world. In the face of our pressing climate and biodiversity challenges, we’re on a mission to help you discover newfound purpose and motivation.

Join us in this vital journey towards nature’s revival. Explore more and show your support at jumpstartnature.com, and follow us on FacebookInstagramLinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube.

For even deeper nature insights, delve into our companion podcast, Nature’s Archive.

Sign up for our short, bi-weekly (and solutionary!) newsletter called It’s All Connected! Get recommendations for books, podcasts, articles, and more, as well as analysis and recommendations of things YOU can do to help nature.

Links to Topics Discussed

Snakes with Emily Taylor – Nature’s Archive

Newt Patrol

Photos

That circle is Michael’s head, and you can see a darker circle in the middle – my camera lens. And my hands on the edge. Those leaves are from a nearby rose bush.
A Pipevine Swallowtail Michael saw near Sacramento, CA
A Snow Plant seen by Michael In August 2023. A bit past it’s peak, and no snow at that time.

Transcript (Click to View)

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You are welcome to share the below transcript (up to 500 words but not more) in media articles (e.g., The New York Times, LA Times, The Guardian), on your personal website, in a non-commercial article or blog post (e.g., Medium), and/or on a personal social media account for non-commercial purposes, provided that you include attribution to “Jumpstart Nature Podcast” and link back to the jumpstartnature.com URL.

No warranty of accuracy of the transcript is provided or implied. There may be typos.

[00:00:00] Griff Griffith: It’s hard to even imagine how many salmon there used to be to anybody who’s been born after, you know, 1950. We can’t even, we can’t even fathom how many there were. And. Back in the day, people say there’s so many, you can walk across their backs. There was so many, you could dance across, you could break dance across her back. 

[00:00:14] Michael Hawk: So what do parasitic plants, 600 year old oak trees, salmon, and hoverflies have in common? Well, there’s some of Griff’s, Michelle Fulner’s, and my favorite wild organisms. So today’s episode is a fun conversation with Michelle, Griff, and myself, Michael, where we advocate for our 10 favorite animals and plants.

[00:00:34] We each bring three species to the conversation. Well, not physically, but virtually. And if you do the math, there’s three of us times three species. And you might be wondering, well, how do we get to number 10? So we had a bit of a game to decide who got to pick the 10th species. And all I’m saying is I still think that aphids would be good at soccer, but you’ll have to listen to hear what that’s all about.

[00:00:56] This whole idea was Michelle Fulner’s. And if you don’t know Michelle, she’s the host and producer of Golden State Naturalist podcast, , it’s a fun and entertaining California centric nature podcast, but the lessons in it span way beyond California. Her fourth season is about to launch and she plans to cover topics that I know you’ll love wildlife crossings, coastal wetlands, red legged frogs, and so much more.

[00:01:20] So be sure to check out her podcast and follow her social media as well. And looking ahead, Jumpstart Nature is in the late stages of three new episodes for this fall. We’re going to be talking about invasive species, outdoor cats, and there’s an inspiring land conservation story that succeeded against all odds that you just have to hear about.

[00:01:39] If you’re listening to this on the Nature’s Archive feed, well, we have plenty of fun episodes coming too. We’re covering topics from wildlife forensics to ants and much more. So, all right, here we go.

[00:01:49]

[00:01:49] Michael Hawk: So from this moment forward, no mistakes.

[00:01:53] Griff Griffith: Yeah,

[00:01:53] Michelle Fullner: Perfection is what we demand here. Alright, how’s everybody this morning?

[00:01:58] Grand 

[00:01:59] Michael Hawk: Getting there.

[00:02:00] Michelle Fullner: You getting 

[00:02:00] there? 

[00:02:00] Michael Hawk: at the grand level, but but not bad either. Somewhere in between.

[00:02:03] Michelle Fullner: We’ll get you a crazy straw for your coffee. Put it in, in, you know, a helmet. To get gravity working in your favor.

[00:02:09] Michael Hawk: Like those beer helmets. You see people it’s sporting events

[00:02:12] Michelle Fullner: With a straw,

[00:02:13] Michael Hawk: Yeah.

[00:02:13] Michelle Fullner: you’re gonna be good to go, definitely. 

[00:02:15] Well, all of us, I think have some roots in California, we’ve spent a lot of time kind of learning about the space, learning about , the world around us here. And so I wanted to bring us together and talk about some of our favorite species.

[00:02:28] . So I was going to go ahead and just kick us off and then we’ll just take turns. And then because there’s three of us, we’re making a top 10 list. So let’s get our top 10 favorite species, native species. And then because there’s three of us, that only brings us to nine. So we have a problem.

[00:02:42] Michelle Fullner: So each of us have four favorites and to choose which one is our number one, they’re going to have to compete. And we’re going to have to figure out which one is going to win in a game. And that game is yet to be determined by being drawn out of a hat. So a sport, and we’ll see which of our species would win.

[00:02:59] Griff Griffith: not a video game.

[00:03:00] Michelle Fullner: Not a video, you know, I should have put professional gaming in there, but I didn’t. Video gaming.

[00:03:06] Griff Griffith: I’ve never even 

[00:03:06] really seen a video game.

[00:03:07] Michelle Fullner: Okay.

[00:03:08] Griff Griffith: have. That’s it.

[00:03:09] Michael Hawk: I was really hoping for some truly exotic sports like underwater polo or, you know,

[00:03:14] Michelle Fullner: Oh yeah. They didn’t get that exotic.

[00:03:16] Michael Hawk: Ah,

[00:03:17] Michelle Fullner: mean, not just the top most televised sports for sure, but not super exotic ones either. We’ll see. We’ll see what 

[00:03:23] Michael Hawk: my aquatic beetle, my aquatic beetle may have a difficult time. I was planning on that underwater polo.

[00:03:29] Michelle Fullner: It was going to take us, it was going to take the competition away. You’re going to win us. Okay. So I’ll kick us off and then we can just kind of go through. We’ll go me, Griff, Michael, until we get to our number one spot and figure out which one’s going to win.

[00:03:41] Michael Hawk: sounds good.

[00:03:42] Michelle Fullner: All right. So, so number 10. This is number 10.

[00:03:45] , my first one that I have here is , it’s a butterfly and it is native to an area where I live and maybe, actually, I don’t think Michael’s in the range of it. Michael might be just south of the range of this butterfly, but it’s a Northern California butterfly that I love very much. And it’s beautiful blue and it has on the underside of its wings it has these beautiful like orange and white sort of spots and the back is almost like this black and then iridescent blue and the males are like more blue than the females.

[00:04:15] And it’s the California Pipevine Swallowtail Butterfly and it is gorgeous. Like they’re big, they’re beautiful, they’re very like to me charismatic. So I just really love seeing them in the forest. And I see them a lot of times in like riparian areas. I see them in Auburn all the time. And when I’m in Auburn, when I’m hiking there, the other thing I see is their host plant, which is the California pipe vine, sometimes known as the Dutchman’s pipe, which is the only place where the little caterpillars.

[00:04:44] Can grow up. So it’s their, it’s their food of choice and they love living on the Dutchman’s pipe. They eat it and they do something else that’s really cool. So I talked a little bit about their bright colors and maybe you guys can help me pronounce this word because I’m not actually sure how to pronounce it.

[00:04:58] Is it aposemitism? You guys know this word?

[00:05:01] Griff Griffith: I always say aposemitism,

[00:05:03] Michelle Fullner: Aposemitism?

[00:05:03] Griff Griffith: but that’s just me.

[00:05:04] Michelle Fullner: I, I heard somebody pronounce it the other way, but I don’t actually know.

[00:05:08] Griff Griffith: Yeah. I don’t think I’ve ever heard anybody pronounce it besides me and a couple other podcasters. So,

[00:05:15] Michelle Fullner: Thank you. Okay, so my default was aposemitism, and then I heard an entomologist say aposemitism, and so

[00:05:21] Griff Griffith: oh, let’s go with that then. Let’s

[00:05:22] Michelle Fullner: I don’t know. Okay, 

[00:05:23] Michael Hawk: All right. We’ll, we’ll get our team of fact checkers to

[00:05:25] Michelle Fullner: yeah, the

[00:05:26] Griff Griffith: where’s the all bugs by the Kevin? We just need to ask him.

[00:05:29] Michelle Fullner: There we go. There we go. That’s a great idea. So if anybody doesn’t know what aposemitism, we’re going to go with that, is, is basically you ever see those like really bright like frogs in the rainforest with these vibrant colors?

[00:05:41] They’re like poison dart frogs. Well, the bright colors Here’s the thing. This, the animal has, has an issue, right? So this animal is super poisonous and it’s like, I’m protecting myself by being poisonous, but that’s not going to help if the bird or the snake or whatever animal comes and eats it and has no idea that it’s a poisonous animal.

[00:05:59] So , the creature has these bright colors to let everybody know, Hey, I’m poisonous, don’t eat me. And that’s called aposematism. 

[00:06:07] Michael Hawk: they’re teachers. 

[00:06:08] Michelle Fullner: So these 

[00:06:09] butterflies, 

[00:06:09] Griff Griffith: dogs? I thought they were colorblind. They don’t get the scoop on this or what?

[00:06:13] Michelle Fullner: that’s a great question. 

[00:06:15] Griff Griffith: how many other animals are colorblind

[00:06:16] Michelle Fullner: we have like amazing color vision, humans have like some of the best color vision, birds are better than us, but like humans have really great color vision, but also a lot of animals that we think of as colorblind, it’s not like grayscale black and white type colorblind, they have some colors. So I

[00:06:32] Griff Griffith: Maybe all the important colors, like the poison colors.

[00:06:35] Michelle Fullner: I wonder if it’s like, you know, dogs can see orange or whatever it is. I’m not sure. Had to look that up.

[00:06:41] Griff Griffith: Oh, what an interesting question.

[00:06:43] Michelle Fullner: Yeah. Yeah. So I love that these, these butterflies do this because they’re just letting everybody know, Hey, don’t mess with me. I have these bright colors. Don’t eat me. And it’s because they get the toxicity from their host plant. They get it from the California pipeline. It’s a super toxic plant. And , the caterpillars chow down on that.

[00:06:57] And then it’s like their body is imbued with this toxin.

[00:07:00] Griff Griffith: Puts a whole new spin on art you are what you eat, huh?

[00:07:05] Michelle Fullner: Absolutely. 

[00:07:06] Michael Hawk: Well, I think you hit, you hit an interesting point there too, because you said birds have really good vision and a lot of them can even see like into the UV spectrum and that would be the primary predator of a butterfly would be birds, so it works for them.

[00:07:18] Michelle Fullner: that’s a great point. And it makes me wonder if there’s even colors designed for birds to see on the butterfly that we don’t even see.

[00:07:24] Griff Griffith: Oh, and you know what? Dogs and wolves, if they can’t see those colors, the dose is probably, you know, dose makes a poison. Like they’d have to eat hundreds of butterflies before it made a difference. Maybe they don’t need that color vision.

[00:07:36] Michelle Fullner: That’s a great point. Maybe it’s just not even important to them. It, maybe it would like knock out a bird, but it would barely touch a dog.

[00:07:41] Griff Griffith: Size matters.

[00:07:42] Michelle Fullner: Yeah, for sure. Okay, that’s interesting. So how to help these animals? Okay, so if you live in the native range, you gotta look up a range map. It’s, it’s northern California, and I know it’s a lot of northern California.

[00:07:53] I don’t know the exact parameters of where these butterflies live.

[00:07:56] Michael Hawk: They’re in Arizona as well. I, there’s a different there’s a different pipe vine down there.

[00:08:00] Michelle Fullner: here’s the thing though, This, our subspecies is only here. 

[00:08:04] So I was like, I was, had to be extremely on brand for this and I chose only endemic species. So

[00:08:10] all of, all of mine are only endemic to California. But Michael, you’re right.

[00:08:14] Cause there is

[00:08:15] Griff Griffith: What does endemic mean for our listeners?

[00:08:17] Michelle Fullner: So endemic is it’s only within a certain range. And so in my case, I’m choosing only Organisms that are endemic to California. And this is even a little bit narrower than that because it’s just Northern California. So,

[00:08:29] Michael Hawk: stay, staying on brand for, for me anyway, I love to get into the nuance. So you’re talking about a subspecies.

[00:08:35] So there’s pipevine swallowtail as a species. And then there are certain subpopulations that are a little bit genetically different and have slightly different behaviors or preferences.

[00:08:44] And the one you’re focusing on is the Northern California specific subspecies.

[00:08:49] Michelle Fullner: exactly. So yeah, there’s a whole bunch. I know in like the, the Eastern United States, and I want to say that they’re more in the Southeast, but they also, I think they get up pretty far North too. I’m not sure their exact range over there, but they’re not obviously the California subspecies. So yeah, those are, those are the ones that we have here.

[00:09:05] And if you live In Northern California, where these butterflies also live, a way to help them is to plant their host plant, which is the Dutchman’s Pipe or the California Pipeline, however you want to call it. Both are common names for it. But one of the things that’s good to know about this plant is that everybody talks about how slow it grows.

[00:09:22] So it’s a very slow growing plant, but you can accelerate it a little bit by giving it a lot of water when it’s establishing. So it’ll grow a little faster if you give it a good amount of water. I’ve had mine for, this is the third year it’s been back there, I don’t give it a lot of water because it’s this weird spot in my side yard that I just never go over there. So it’s grown really slow, but this year it like exploded. It’s on this trellis, it’s a vine, so it, it, it’s really great for the side yard, things like that, where it’s like, they say, plant it where the, the bottom of it. Will not get direct sunlight, but the leaves, it will grow into sunlight. So that’s like the ideal conditions for this.

[00:09:57] It’s great for taking up, you know, a wall type of space, putting it on a trellis, if you’ve got like a small space for it. And then after a couple of years is when it really starts to flourish usually, but you can accelerate that by, you know, giving it a little extra water.

[00:10:11] Michael Hawk: It’s a cool looking plant too.

[00:10:12] Michelle Fullner: It is, and it’s got the craziest flowers.

[00:10:14] They, it’s called the pipevine because the flowers look like these pipes. And they’re pollinated by what are they? What are they pollinated by?

[00:10:21] Michael Hawk: No, sorry.

[00:10:22] Michelle Fullner: They’re like little gnats, right? They’re pollinated by gnats, I’m pretty sure. Super 

[00:10:25] Griff Griffith: That’s what I, that’s what I remember. Anyways, I’m not looking it up.

[00:10:28] Michelle Fullner: I think so. And then, if you open one of the flowers up, you see a bunch of dead gnats in there. So people actually thought these flowers were carnivorous for a while, but they’re not. The gnats just can’t always find their way out. It’s just unfortunate for them.

[00:10:39] Griff Griffith: Oh, it seems like someone’s got some more evolving to do.

[00:10:42] Michelle Fullner: I know, like, let’s take advantage of that situation. Alright, let’s kick it over to Griff. That was my first one. That was number 10.

[00:10:48]

[00:10:48] Griff Griffith: so I picked my animals based on my relationships with them, not those kinds of relationships, but like, how I’ve experienced them throughout my life. And so most of them stem from my childhood. So not necessarily my favorite species, but they are the species that led me into conservation.

[00:11:04] And the first one I want to talk about. Is turkey vultures. So I always grew up on the edge of suburbia in the Bay area. So I was one of those kids. You’ll hear a lot of older conservationists my age say this from California. I was one of those kids that pulled out the stakes when I knew they were going to build, because I knew what that meant.

[00:11:18] That meant that my Creek was going to get put underground. That meant my pond was going to get drained. That meant terrible things were going to happen to the animals I liked. And I had everybody in my neighborhood convinced that I could tell the turkey vultures apart, and then I had them all named. That was a lot, but everybody fell for it. And so the one I remember the most was Big Red and I’d watch Big Red. He was the biggest one to me. And or she, probably she, but big red would circle around and I just loved turkey vultures. And I always thought they were circling around because there was something dead in the field across the street.

[00:11:48] So I always went over there and looked. And then later I found out that’s not true. Turkey vultures have a great sense of smell, but they won’t give up a meal. So when they’re circling, they’re actually rising on a warm air current that is spiral like so many other things in nature. It’s a spiral, just so interesting.

[00:12:05] And then, so I’d watch these and they had that wobbly flight, like they’re hitting turbulence all the time, but they barely ever flapped. Super cool to watch. And so I’d make up stories about them, blah, blah, blah. And so I finally became, I finally got my wildlife career started when I was 12, like on my birthday.

[00:12:19] And I volunteered at the Suisun Wildlife Care Center. And one of the first animals that I had to go get to be weighed was a turkey vulture. So the uh, the older volunteer was like, send the, this is the 80s. This would never happen today. So 12, if there’s a 12 year old listening and getting excited, you won’t be able to do this nowadays.

[00:12:36] This is the 80s. So they’re like 12 year old, go get the turkey vulture out of the pen and bring it in here.

[00:12:41] Michelle Fullner: These are large

[00:12:42] Griff Griffith: I. They’re large birds. I’m 12. I knew to put a towel over its head. Cause when birds can’t see, they get less stressed. So if you ever have to rescue a bird, cover it with a cloth or something.

[00:12:52] So I went in there and I went to go throw the towel over it and I missed, and the turkey vulture vomited and moved its, moved its head and spread vomit everywhere. And at that moment, I knew that this was my very favorite bird because I was 12 and I loved gross, and that was the grossest thing I’d ever seen.

[00:13:12] So I ran back inside and I was like, Oh my God, it threw up all over me. And the volunteer was like, Oh, that’s right. They do that. So I went back out there. I got it. And been in love with with vultures and wildlife care volunteers ever since. So, that was one of the things that was really cool and gross.

[00:13:26] The other thing is they. Pee oop, depending on how you want to say it, on their legs when, when it gets really hot. So birds don’t really have poo and pee so much. Like, you know, when you see bird poop, you see the brown part, the white part and the white part is kind of like the pee. So they pee oop on their legs to keep cool, which I thought was amazing.

[00:13:43] But also because they have such strong stomach acids and might also kill the bacteria on their legs, which I also thought was super fascinating. So 

[00:13:50] I was super. 

[00:13:51] Michael Hawk: with like reflectivity on their legs too. So it cools it off in the moment and then it keeps it a little more reflect,

[00:13:57] Michelle Fullner: Nice little whitewash.

[00:13:58] Michael Hawk: Like the

[00:13:59] albedo is higher than,

[00:14:00] um, 

[00:14:01] Griff Griffith: interesting. I can see how that would be, especially with the white and the puke or whatever. And then also they’re bald. Who can’t love that? And they’re not bald just because that looks cool. That actually has like, scientists believe an evolutionary function. So they’re not getting all the dead stuff on their their head.

[00:14:18] And like there’s some really cool Native American stories about how Turkey vultures lost their feathers. So if you want to look that up at your local tribe’s website, they might have a story, especially if you live in Turkey, well, there’s Turkey vultures and black vultures, but I’m sure the stories are pretty similar. So. I love them. And they have a sense of smell, which is really unusual for birds to have a strong sense of smell. So their sense of smell is even better than ours. So when you see turkey vultures dive and kind of cruise close to the ground, they’re going and they’re smelling for dead things when they do that.

[00:14:49] And that is also super fascinating. So I just think that they’re the coolest, most disgusting birds. And so if you have like a 12 year old who likes gross things and you’re trying to hook them in conservation, turkey vultures, and turkey vultures also are really closely tied to the land. Like all animals are, but like tied to what we’re doing on the land, our management, like lots of animals, but we can fix the turkey, like how turkey vultures are affected way easier than we can fix some of the other unhealthy relationships.

[00:15:17] And one of the best things you can do for turkey vultures is if you’re a hunter, switch to copper bullets, stop using lead bullets altogether so getting the lead out of hunting should be priority for all hunters.

[00:15:27] And I really like what like the Yurok tribe has done here locally is they have a hunters of stewards program because gut piles can help California condors, which are turkey vultures. And so getting the lead out could actually assist condor reestablishment in California. It can actually help scavenging birds like turkey vultures.

[00:15:49] And I think these are super easy for hunters to do. And so if you have, if you know, a hunter is really poor and can’t afford anything, but lead bullets, maybe. And you can get some copper bullets and trade them and take their lead bullets away. And say here you can have these instead. So those are just some of the reasons why I love turkey vultures.

[00:16:05] Also, the other really cool thing about new world vultures is they’re not related to old world vultures, even though they look so similar. It’s another fascinating example of convergent evolution, where two things in different parts of the world So, vultures in the new world are more closely related to seabirds, and that’s why they have such a great sense of smell.

[00:16:26] And then the ones in the old world, quote unquote old world, are more closely related to raptors, which is how the Oftentimes when you, when you see like raptors in North America and you’ll see turkey vultures on there, and I’m always like, what are they doing on there? But that’s wise because it’s a carry over from that old world tradition and accuracy because they are raptors over there.

[00:16:46] Michelle Fullner: Okay. That’s super interesting. And when you were talking about the turkey vultures, super great sense of smell, it reminded me about something super crazy about turkey vultures, which is that they don’t have a septum. So like that, that little bit of, of nostril, you know, like between your nostrils, a little bit of flesh right there.

[00:17:03] Turkey vultures don’t have that. And the reason why is because of that great sense of smell. So when they fly around, they’re getting air. passively passing through their nose so that they don’t actually have to sniff all the time. They can actually just have the air pass through and they can pick up this insanely small, like, parts per million amount of an odor of something, which is how they find, yeah.

[00:17:24] And so when they’re, I would imagine, They’re passively smelling just all the time, right? Cause they don’t have the septum. So when they’re circling, they’re, they’re riding that air current and they’re not even thinking about it. Like the air is just passing through. So if something was around, they would pick it up.

[00:17:37] Oh,

[00:17:40] Griff Griffith: about them is they don’t have a song. They don’t have a call. They have a hiss. That’s all they do is hiss. So if you wanted to like occupy some children for a long time, tell them to give them a hundred dollars. They go and hear a turkey vulture call and they’ll be outside for hours.

[00:17:55] Oh, wait, this is the eighties. I guess we don’t do that anymore. Right?

[00:17:58] Michelle Fullner: we need to 

[00:17:58] bring 

[00:17:58] Griff Griffith: the 80s, like, Oh, kids stay outside for all day long. That’s what my parents do. Yeah. Turkey vultures are awesome.

[00:18:04] Michelle Fullner: they’re rad. They’re super rad. Okay. Michael, let’s hear yours. What’s your number eight, Michael? What?

[00:18:13] Michael Hawk: species like turkey vultures. You can see the pipeline is a swallowtail. It’s a big butterfly and it’s always flitting around and it’s colorful. I’m going to go in the other direction and pick something that’s kind of ubiquitous, but easily overlooked.

[00:18:25] And I think that when we think of pollinators, we often think of bees and they get all of the press when it comes to pollination or most of the press, but my species, it’s actually a group of species, and I’ll, I’ll talk about one in particular. It’s the hover fly. So, some people know them as syrphid flies or flower flies, and I think they’re overlooked because they’re small, but they’re really colorful and they look like bees or wasps, and a lot of people will even call them sweat bees.

[00:18:51] So they’ll be patterned yellow and black, and you’ll see them kind of hovering around your flowers. And everywhere I’ve gone in the United States, I’ve found hoverflies, and usually multiple species, even in your backyard garden. So they’re really efficient pollinators. They’re very important. And in fact they are not just pollinators, but the larval form when they’re little babies, they actually, a lot of them will eat aphids and they’ll eat other pests too, that at least what gardeners think of as pests.

[00:19:21] So they play a super important role in the ecosystem. And it’s not just that they eat the the aphids or thrips or other things. But some hoverflies actually aid in composting and decomposition and other things. In fact, a lot of sewage treatment plants use hoverfly larvae to help with the breakdown of sewage.

[00:19:43] Yeah, there are certain species that that’s that’s what they do. So yeah, I find them fascinating because I missed them my whole life, you know, until I don’t know, four or five years ago. And I finally started paying attention and looking closely. Most of these flies, they’re pretty small. You know, if you take your average European honeybee, they’re going to be maybe one third to one fifth the size of that or smaller in some cases.

[00:20:08] But the really cool thing is you can identify to species most of the hoverflies because they all have a unique pattern, even though they kind of mimic wasps and bees, they’ll be like this intricate little calligraphy on their abdomen. And that pattern can help you identify them. And I said I would tell you about a specific hoverfly that I, you know, like more than others.

[00:20:30] And there’s a genus that are actually called calligraphers.

[00:20:33] And it’s like some little artist was drawing this special calligraphy

[00:20:38] on the back. So, yeah.

[00:20:40] Michelle Fullner: And they’re yellow and black?

[00:20:41] Michael Hawk: Yellow and black,

[00:20:42] yeah. 

[00:20:43] Griff Griffith: I have some that are, if they’re yellow and black, I haven’t seen it yet. Like they’re really, really small and it’s often gray here. Cause I’m right on the coast, but that’s the main insect I see flying around are fringe cups, one of our native plants here, and I always tell people like, bees are cool because they pollinate bees.

[00:21:00] But hoverflies can pollinate and they’re predators. You know, they’re like twice as cool.

[00:21:06] Michelle Fullner: Pull in double duty.

[00:21:07] Michael Hawk: I mean, there are some that are not yellow and black. I’m thinking of one called a grass skimmer that’s black and red. You know, and, and sometimes they have this really shiny gold on this special part on their, on their back. , I have a photo I’ll have to include it in the show notes, maybe that I call it a self portrait.

[00:21:22] So even though it’s this tiny little hover fly, I had my macro lens and I got really close to it and you can actually see the reflection of me in this shiny gold part of the

[00:21:32] Griff Griffith: Ooh, cool. 

[00:21:33] Michelle Fullner: Oh, that’s a really great shot. That’s cool.

[00:21:35] Michael Hawk: So how can you help? How can you help these wonderful

[00:21:38] Michelle Fullner: Just leave untreated sewage 

[00:21:41] Michael Hawk: Yes, 

[00:21:41] that’s, that’s what I was going to say.

[00:21:43] It’ll save you on your water bill. But maybe something more practical than that is just, I, I like to say leave those aphids alone. So, aphids are, are also super cool, but a lot of gardeners when they see aphids at the first sight of an aphid, they will get out the pesticide or spray them off with water or whatever.

[00:22:00] But what I’ve found personally is It’s so much fun to leave them because usually, not all the time, but usually the aphids will get taken care of by other predators like hoverfly larva or lady beetles or some of the other ones that take care of it. So, 

[00:22:13] Griff Griffith: Inspires a song like, Hey, gardeners leave those if it’s a long Um, uh, 

[00:22:20] Michelle Fullner: Also way better than the raw sewage idea. So I’ll grant you 

[00:22:23] Michael Hawk: Yeah. And, and just to give a little more context, I mentioned some other garden pests, but the, you know, they’ll eat mealy bugs and scale insects and things like that that a lot of gardeners just like. Cringe when they hear so yeah, those natural services from the hoverflies,

[00:22:37] Michelle Fullner: All right. I love it. I love it. Okay. So next one. Is back to me. And this is number seven. And this is one of the most deadly animals in the world. This is my number seven. And I actually had one of these when I was a kid. My brother and I caught it and we kept it outside of our, our home until physics did it in.

[00:22:58] And so this animal’s name was Newton and it’s another California endemic. And this is an animal with an incredible sense of direction. And it can, if you, if you drop it just about anywhere, it’ll know exactly which direction it needs to go to reproduce, right? To find its natal waters, because they always go back to the same places to reproduce.

[00:23:19] And also, it’s a creature that lives a double life. So if you think about the word amphibian, ampha means double and bios means life. So amphibians lead a double life. And this animal is the California newt. And it is found in California only exclusively. There are a couple of other species that are really closely related.

[00:23:38] There’s like a rough skinned newt that looks super similar to California newts. There’s like

[00:23:43] Michael Hawk: that’s what we have in our area.

[00:23:44] Michelle Fullner: Yeah. You have those guys. So we had California newts growing up and I love and adore them. I had no idea how toxic they were when I was a kid, but their skin is, yeah, is like imbued with, it’s tetrodotoxin and it can kill you super quickly.

[00:24:00] So there’s this, This story, I don’t know if this is a true story, if this is an urban legend about these two guys that had gone out camping and one of them went out to the stream, scooped up some water, made some coffee, drank the coffee and, and died. they were trying to figure out what happened to this guy.

[00:24:17] Well, at the end, at the bottom of that pot of water, they found a dead California newt. And so they had cooked this newt and ingested the tetrodotoxin from the newt skin and it killed the guy, which. To me is the perfect alibi, right? You’re like, Oh, my friend scooped up the water. Like, I think it

[00:24:32] Griff Griffith: Oh yeah. Good idea. 

[00:24:35] Michelle Fullner: For sure. It seems extremely shady to me, but that is the legend and it would kill you. Like there’s definitely enough toxin in one of these newts to kill a full grown human being. So. I’ve touched them many, many times. Turns out that’s not actually great like for the newt because we can spread all kinds of little terrible things with our skin and they have super thin breathable, breathable skin as amphibians and so it’s not great for us to touch them.

[00:24:59] I actually now carry nitrile gloves everywhere I go just in case I find a newt and I want to pick it up. So that’s my kind of nerdy thing that I have with me at all times.

[00:25:07] Griff Griffith: And that’s another example of

[00:25:09] Michelle Fullner: Oh yeah, they’re another, yeah, aposemitism.

[00:25:12] Griff Griffith: Mm-Hmm

[00:25:13] Michelle Fullner: California News, thank you, I didn’t get in the description. So they’re like sort of brown on top, sort of a warm brown, and they have these bright orange bellies. Super bright. And they

[00:25:22] Griff Griffith: And I accidentally picked one, one time walking down a trail and I saw it tumble. And when it landed, it landed on all fours, but it arched its backup to make sure I saw all of its orange.

[00:25:32] Michelle Fullner: I did that behavior for you. I forget what that’s called. There’s a name for that behavior.

[00:25:36] Griff Griffith: It’s called You Better Nut.

[00:25:37] Michelle Fullner: Yeah, you

[00:25:39] know, 

[00:25:39] Griff Griffith: It’s

[00:25:39] called. 

[00:25:40] Michelle Fullner: It’s like all the stay, stay back ism. So another little fun fact about these guys, is that you know they, they have some interesting behaviors when it comes to reproduction. They do something called a mating ball.

[00:25:50] And so there’ll be like a female and like four males or more, just all trying to get in there and make the magic happen. So that is called a mating ball and I’ve seen it happen in ponds and things where there’s like just this, it’s a newt ball and you see a ball of newts and it’s like writhing around in the water and that’s what’s going on there.

[00:26:07] So if you ever see that, it’s called a newt ball.

[00:26:09] Griff Griffith: don’t break it up. Don’t be like relax,

[00:26:11] Michelle Fullner: Don’t break up the party. No, they’re, they’re doing fine in there, hopefully, but it’s not our business if they’re not. And then the way to help these creatures, because like I said earlier, they have an incredible sense of direction. And these are animals that can live like 20 years.

[00:26:25] Nobody thinks that newts live that long because they’re just small and you don’t think about that, but they live forever. And they have this amazing sense of direction and they just take their same routes that they’ve always taken. back to where they want to reproduce. But a lot of times humans have put roads in the way of where they want to go.

[00:26:41] And so newts will just plod across roads. They don’t stop and check for traffic. They just walk right across. And so there’s actually groups of people that are like newt brigades that will go out and they’ll actually pick up the newts from one side of the road and ferry them across in the same direction they’re going.

[00:26:56] Love them, right? So if you want to help newts, check in your area to see if there’s a newt brigade. Because there are, so there’s some in like Sonoma County. I know there’s different ones around the state. So check around and see if there’s a new brigade, because there’s probably a lot of different new species that need that kind of help too.

[00:27:11] Michael Hawk: Yeah, my friend Merav leads up this group called Newt Patrol over by Lexington Reservoir here in the Bay Area and it was an overlooked roadkill hotspot until they started documenting this on iNaturalist, by the way,

[00:27:25] and, As a result now several of the agencies that are responsible for the neighboring lands are actually working to create safe crossings for newts, which is a huge win.

[00:27:33] It’s not done yet, but it’s on the right path.

[00:27:36] Michelle Fullner: I love that.

[00:27:37] Michael Hawk: I have a question for you, though. You said that your newt was named Newton and it was done in by physics. So was it like an apple fell on its head or what

[00:27:46] Michelle Fullner: So kinda, I mean, so what happened 

[00:27:48] Michael Hawk: didn’t know if that was a pun or, you know, I’m thinking of

[00:27:50] Michelle Fullner: it was it, so we named it Newton. Unironically, like we just named it Newton because it was a newt and we didn’t know how to take care of a newt. So we just kept it in a five gallon bucket with water. And we had like a stack of rocks in there so that if Newton wanted to climb out and get on the rock, he or she could.

[00:28:08] And one day the, one of the rocks fell and pinned Newton down. Yeah. And so Newton died. Yeah, underwater. It was, it was bad. I was like seven or eight, you know. I was not taking good care of it. It was sad. It was really sad. Poor Newton. Yeah.

[00:28:23] Griff Griffith: It’s funny how all the naturalists brought home little animals to die when they were in their childhood. You know what I mean? I did, too. Things came to my house and died. It was awful. I feel so

[00:28:32] Michelle Fullner: There’s some fatalities.

[00:28:33] Griff Griffith: I’ve made my Are you going to talk about the way that they got so poisonous?

[00:28:38] Michelle Fullner: Oh, is this the, is this the garter snake arms race?

[00:28:41] Is that what you’re talking about? Okay. So I hadn’t, I

[00:28:44] Griff Griffith: I mean, it might be too long, but I mean, it’s so interesting.

[00:28:47] Michelle Fullner: talk about it. You talk about it. ’cause I only know, I have a guess about what’s going on there, but I think that It’s, it’s an example of one of the arms races that I’ve, I’ve learned. And I love researchers who dig up these stories because they are the most fascinating. So whoever dug up this one, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I don’t know who they are, but apparently the last time I read about it, it started in the Bay area and the, I think it’s the terrestrial or now the aquatic, one of the, one of the garter snakes eats the rough skin new or, you know, that group of newts.

[00:29:14] Griff Griffith: And so. As the newt, you know, became more and more poisonous with this tetrodotoxin, which is the same toxin as in pufferfish. And then the garter snake would get more and more resistant. And so the, and so over evolutionary time, then the new got more and more and more toxic, but the garter snake got more and more and more resistant.

[00:29:33] And so what’s happened is. In some places, the farther away from you get, you get away from the Bay Area. Sometimes the less toxic the rough skin newts get. And I found out this whole thing because I thought they were poisonous. I heard the coffee story years and years ago. And then I saw with my own eyes, a black crown knot heron eat a rough skin newt.

[00:29:53] And I was like, it’s going to die. Let’s watch. And I sat there for hours and it never died. And so I found out that there is a geography to this toxin 

[00:30:01] and this , yeah, it’s super interesting. And then the snakes that are the most resistant allegedly, and I read this once or twice, we might need to double check with another who’s that snake person you just interviewed, Michael?

[00:30:13] Michael Hawk: Oh Emily Taylor, Snakey

[00:30:14] Griff Griffith: Taylor. I mean, we didn’t ask Emily Taylor, but it’s like the garter snake keeps getting more and more bright. The more resistant it is against the talk, it’s bright. So I’ve seen some that look like slithering jewels. And I’ve been like, you are the selected, the special, the

[00:30:29] Michelle Fullner: well, do they become toxic too? Oh,

[00:30:33] Griff Griffith: hypothesis.

[00:30:34] So I don’t know if that’s been studied. I read about this years ago. Maybe there’s more on it now.

[00:30:38] Michelle Fullner: that’s amazing. I didn’t know that. Okay, cool. All right. Let’s jump to Griff. Let’s go back to you because now it’s number six. It’s your turn.

[00:30:45] Griff Griffith: Okay. So. I was a Ranger Rick kid, and whenever I saw something really cool in Ranger Rick, I had to have it or I had to go find it. So there was a article on box turtles. So my mom said, if I save 10 that I could go to and buy a box turtle to pet store. So I like did little work around the, you know, neighborhood, rake leaves or whatever, got my 10 bucks, went and bought my Myrtle the turtle and Myrtle the turtle became My best friend for a very long time.

[00:31:10] It was a Eastern box turtle. So there’s four species in North America, but the common box turtle has like four subspecies and I think Eastern box rules, one of them, if I’m remembering correctly. So I brought her home. She was the coolest box turtle. And I just let her hang out in the backyard and I would catch her eating all sorts of things.

[00:31:28] One time I caught her with a mouse leg in her mouth.

[00:31:32] Seriously. That was the cool. I was like. Nine or 10 at the time, I thought that was the coolest thing ever. So I so we moved a lot, but whenever we moved into a yard, there would be turtle habitat immediately built, which usually consisted of like a water source and some rocks, places for the hide and stuff.

[00:31:47] Everything I read about in Ranger Rick. But then as I got older I wanted a real pond and more turtles and more stuff. So I told all the kids in my neighborhood, if they helped me dig it in the small backyard, that they got to name something that went back there. And so next thing, you know, I had a waterfall and piles of rocks, great turtle habitat.

[00:32:01] And so people would donate. Turtles to me, box turtles. And and then I even stole one, one time from these people in my church. Sorry, Walls. Yeah. I’m the one that stole Quirky. I’m admitting it now, 40 years later, or 40 some years later, Quirky was kept in a box in a room. And. Her scales were coming off and her, her shell was malformed. And so I stole her and and I took her home and her shell hardened up after a year or two. And then she had babies with tank and another turtle that got donated to me. Cause I was like the box turtle rehab place now. So it was, I loved those turtles. They were so cool. They’re not native to California. They’re native to mostly the East coast, you know, depending on what species. And. When I went back East and saw them, the wild, I couldn’t believe that these were wild animals because to me, they were always 

[00:32:51] Michelle Fullner: mm-Hmm. 

[00:32:51] Griff Griffith: then they faced a lot of the same problems that the newts do. They’re being taken in the pet trade.

[00:32:56] And I know that’s a problem cause I used to take rough skin newts home all the time when I was a kid. And so they’re being taken. And the thing about it is, is they want to go home so bad. They have another homing. So they’re looking for their home. So if you take them far States away, when they get out, they’re going to be looking to go home.

[00:33:11] It’s just awful thing to do to anything, to take it away from its home. So the other thing that’s really happening to box turtles is the roadways. So same thing with the new, it’s, it’s the roadways that are killing them. And in some places where their numbers are starting to come back after the pet trade, they’re now being smashed on the roads.

[00:33:28] And so roadways are really something that we have to address. And Ben Goldfarb’s book Crossing has a whole section on roads, which is super amazing, hardcore and really open. Look, there it is. Oh,

[00:33:39] Michelle Fullner: I have it. . I just produced 

[00:33:41] Griff Griffith: cop. So that’s box turtles. I love them. Please don’t get them as pets.

[00:33:46] If you want a pet turtle in California or anywhere, go find an invasive species in your local lake or stream or, and take it home and make sure it can’t escape.

[00:33:55] Michelle Fullner: I just found one the other day. It was massive. It was a red ear. Red. Red. What’s it called? Readier slider

[00:34:00] Griff Griffith: Yeah. I think I’m, I’m getting, I have to go capture, capture some out of my local Creek and bring them home and make them pets. Because that’s what they were to begin with. They’re pets that people let go. Like around here, a lot of the bullfrogs and the turtles that are invasive are released pets.

[00:34:13] But anyways, box turtles. I love them. Leave them where they’re at. And please drive slow during the spring and fall. Cause during the winter, they’re hibernating. And during the hottest part of the summer, they’re like, kind of like estivating or summer hibernating. So it’s the spring and fall. You got to be careful on the road.

[00:34:27] Michelle Fullner: Okay. Great. All right. Let’s jump to Michael.

[00:34:30] Michael Hawk: Well, I’m going to have to change things up again a little bit because we’ve only been talking about animals so

[00:34:34] Michelle Fullner: Oh, okay.

[00:34:36] Michael Hawk: So I’m going to go in a different direction. And this this organism I saw for the first time in real life just a couple years ago. And this was after seeing these beautiful pictures of this weird looking bright red plant that peaks its way out of snow drifts.

[00:34:52] And yeah, you know what it is because it’s a snow plant. And if you’ve ever seen a picture of this, you can’t forget it really because it’s blood red. And it does grow where there’s still snow on the ground. And, you know, so how is this possible? What is this thing that can grow when there’s snow on the ground?

[00:35:10] Well, what it is, is it’s actually a parasitic plant. And the reason that it’s able to grow so early in the season is because it’s tapping in to a nutrient system underground that other plants have developed. In fact, it’s not just other plants, but the mycorrhizal fungi that connect those plants together.

[00:35:28] So this, this plant, it’s bright red because A, it doesn’t photosynthesize. It doesn’t need to because B, it’s a parasite. Um,

[00:35:39] Michelle Fullner: It was like, it’s not easy being green. I’m gonna be red.

[00:35:42] Michael Hawk: yeah,

[00:35:42] Griff Griffith: Right. And it actually flowers too! There are so many parasitic plants that I think get overlooked, but 

[00:35:55] Michael Hawk: pollen. , so they’re very cool from that standpoint. So the way it works, I just want to elaborate a little bit because As a parasite, I think a lot of us, when they hear that word, you kind of get this negative connotation.

[00:36:12] You think of things like ticks or fleas or roundworm or, you know, things like that, that we don’t like. But I would challenge people to maybe try to grow a different perspective on what it means to be a parasite. And it’s just a different lifestyle that has evolved or has occurred depending on how you look at the world it’s you know, or created, you know for that matter and if you were to adopt the perspective of the parasite And think about what would they think of us, you know, we we look at them and they’re like, oh, they’re freeloaders They’re you know, they’re you know doing these things without the work You know, they may look at us and be like you all are so frantic and wasteful You Yet, you know, we’ve learned to live a life that values patience and efficiency and you know The art of doing more with less so these plants do more with less by tapping into the mycorrhizal fungi that are there trading nutrients providing nutrients for the plants in the community that they’re that they’re in and they’ve developed this kind of Relationship with this other relationship.

[00:37:15] So it just shows me like all of this You Interconnectedness. I’m struggling to find the right word here because it just blows my mind every time because you have, you have the, the fungi that are connecting the plants together and helping get nutrients to the plants. And then you have this parasitic plant that’s coming in and tapping into that and providing its own services and its own beauty you know, out to the world.

[00:37:35] Griff Griffith: Have you guys ever seen a parasitic plant in anybody’s native plant garden?

[00:37:38] Michelle Fullner: Oh, no.

[00:37:39] Michael Hawk: That would be really hard. 

[00:37:41] Michelle Fullner: That would be hard. That would be like a multi year project, probably,

[00:37:45] Griff Griffith: Higher level

[00:37:46] Michelle Fullner: a really cool, 

[00:37:48] you’d have to get these really great mycorrhizal networks going on first for, for the micro heterotrophs, especially.

[00:37:53] Griff Griffith: not if you use dodder. Maybe if you use the that orange string looking plant that is that, that bites into things like a vampire, that’d be kind of cool plant to add to your native plant garden.

[00:38:02] Michelle Fullner: Yeah. Fathers be good to your daughters, as John Mayer would say.

[00:38:07] Michael Hawk: I, I’m so tempted to go off on data right now to be his dodder. So amazing. It’s recently been shown that it can kind of like see in a way when it first sprouts, it just has a day or two to find a host

[00:38:19] and 

[00:38:20] somehow I can 

[00:38:20] Griff Griffith: lapse videos of it. 

[00:38:22] Michael Hawk: Yes, it can evaluate what’s nearby and what the best choice is for it to go grow towards.

[00:38:27] And there’s so many amazing, you know, parasitic plants. Like mistletoe is, is a hemiparasitic plant. It’s

[00:38:32] partly it does photosynthesize, but it’s important for wax wings and bluebirds and so many other species

[00:38:39] Griff Griffith: And the kites nest in it.

[00:38:40] Michael Hawk: yeah, yeah. So anyway, that’s how to help, you know, don’t just assume that if something is parasitic, that it’s harmful or negative for the environment.

[00:38:49]  They’re part of the food web. They’re part of the ecosystem and. provide many other services to many other plants, animals, and insects.

[00:38:57] Griff Griffith: If you have an awesome parasitic plant growing in your native plant garden, it’s obvious that it’s in our garden, send it to us and we will post it on our Facebook pages

[00:39:05] Michelle Fullner: Yeah, that’s

[00:39:06] Griff Griffith: and give you a shout out.

[00:39:07] Michelle Fullner: That’s so cool. Well, and actually, also, it’s really funny that you chose that plant because just literally two or three days ago, I posted in my Instagram story, because I want to make a video about these, this family of plants. It’s called mycoheterotrophs, or maybe not family. I don’t know how related they are to each other, but mycoheterotrophs.

[00:39:23] So, so myco being mushrooms or the mycorrhizal networks, right? That are, we think of as mushrooms, although those are just the fruiting bodies. And then heterotroph, meaning that they have to eat other things, right? Like, autotrophs feed themselves, heterotrophs eat other things. We’re heterotrophs, sometimes I resent that because I want to just lay in the sun and like, then just have energy.

[00:39:43] And that’s not the way it works, but But anyways, , these cool plants that are plants and not fungi, even though they look like fungi a lot of times, because they have these weird colors and they pop out of the ground in these weird ways. I don’t have any pictures of them. So I’m actually crowdsourcing a reel right now because I want to make a video about them because I think they’re super interesting.

[00:40:00] And so I Instagram story, I’m like, Hey, plant nerds, like if anyone has any mycoheterotrophic photos, 

[00:40:05] send them 

[00:40:05] Griff Griffith: took a picture of one last week. I’ll send it to you.

[00:40:09] It was, it was interesting. Cause the Forester from Redwood Rising, Lathrop Leonard was like, Oh, and sometimes there’s ghost pipes and coral root up here, keep your eyes open. And I was like, there it is. And it was one just coming out of the ground.

[00:40:20] It’s all like pink, red, and it’s like just barely coming out of the ground, so I’ll send that one to you.

[00:40:25] Michelle Fullner: Sweet, cause most people sent snow plants, cause that’s what I talked about. But some people sent like some ghost pipes that were very cool 

[00:40:32] Michael Hawk: I have a few I could send you.

[00:40:33] Michelle Fullner: Ah, that’d be rad, thank you. Okay, who are we on? Is it my turn again? It’s my turn again,

[00:40:37] so number four. Also, not an animal. Not as mysterious or unknown as Michael’s not animal. But this one is a keystone species. So, it is not a parasite. Although I am acknowledging that parasites can be extremely ecologically beneficial.

[00:40:55] Lots of, lots of good that they’re doing in the world. But this one is actually a host species for just a myriad, a myriad of other species. And it plays a really crucial role. role where it is native. And so in particular, there’s a whole family of these beings, but the one that I particularly love is the Valley Oak. So I adore these plants. They are like, they can grow to be like a hundred feet tall. I think there are most majestic Oaks. They’re the biggest Oaks in California, maybe the biggest Oaks period. I’m not sure about that. They’re definitely the biggest Oaks in California, the tallest. And in some cases they can live like 600 years.

[00:41:32] So, these are ancient, majestic, like, wonderful trees. And they’re not as old as, you know, the redwoods or the sequoias, but they’re, they’re very old. And then there is that one community. It’s not valley oaks. But there’s some kind of like oak situation, Michael, or maybe Griff, maybe you guys know about this.

[00:41:48] What’s that ancient oak that is like re sprouting from the roots, I want to say? It’s not like a single stem that’s super old, but it’s thought to be like the oldest organism. It’s not a bristlecone pine. Like, it’s an oak. You guys know what I’m talking about? I’m 

[00:42:00] Michael Hawk: No. 

[00:42:01] Griff Griffith: California? Is it in Southern

[00:42:02] Michelle Fullner: I want to say it’s Central Coast somewhere, but

[00:42:04] Griff Griffith: I do remember reading about

[00:42:05] something that’s copper themed. Yeah, 

[00:42:07] it’s, it’s, it’s. It’s coppicing over and over

[00:42:09] Michelle Fullner: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Anyways. Okay. That’s an oak. This is a different oak, but valley oaks are the ones with the alligator skin bark. They’ve got very like furrowed bark, really rough looking. They’ve got the gnarly long limbs. And sometimes when they start to get older, they’ll send them down to like the ground and like have, you can just walk up a limb.

[00:42:27] They’re really beautiful. They have the really lobed leaves. And I think that they’re really mysterious and gorgeous and majestic trees. But in addition to that, they’re hosting hundreds of species of insects, which is super important because we’re having large insect die offs globally. We’re having a lot of problems with insect populations, not universally.

[00:42:47] Some insects are faring okay, but they’re not always the ones that we want to be faring okay. So oaks are really great because they bring in that Biodiversity, because they support so many different species of insects, and then there’s a lot of birds and things that use those to raise their young. So birds need tons of caterpillars to raise their baby birdies, and so they get those from the oak trees a lot of times, so.

[00:43:08] You get actually more bird diversity if you have the same kind of density of canopy. in an area. This was a study done in Sacramento, actually. You can have the same density of canopy in urban trees, and if there are oaks present, there are like seven more species of birds present. So regardless of like, how much tree cover there is, it’s the presence of oaks that’s making the difference.

[00:43:29] Griff Griffith: And if you live in an area that’s, that has set an oak death and it’s killing oaks, you can plant valley oaks because they don’t get set an oak death.

[00:43:37] Michelle Fullner: That is a great point. Yes, but one thing that they do have a problem with is the Mediterranean oak borer beetles. And so those were found in St. Helena in like 2017, something like that, and they’ve been spreading. So it’s a beetle species, yeah, where they’re, they’re boring and they kill the oaks. And that’s a really huge problem because the oaks are, you know, these food sources 

[00:43:59] Griff Griffith: keystone species.

[00:44:00] Michelle Fullner: Yeah, Keystone species. So, so anyways, it’s a huge problem. There’s also other species of beetles that affect other oaks, like the gold spotted oak borer. That’s more in SoCal, I think. That’s in the Black Oaks, the Coast Live Oaks, and the Canyon Live Oaks. But in the Valley Oaks, they’ve started to see these Mediterranean oak borer beetles.

[00:44:20] And one of the ways to help trees is to In general, specifically the valley oaks, because I love them with all my heart. They’re probably my favorite species, period, is to not move firewood around. Like if you were going camping, buy your firewood right there where you’re going camping. Don’t bring your firewood with you because these little beetles hitchhike on the logs and then they get into a new area.

[00:44:39] They escape from the logs. They don’t get burned up in the fire. Maybe some of them do, but some of them escape into the neighboring trees and they can cause massive infestations. So especially if a forest is stressed at all. It’s going to be extra susceptible, but also if it’s just this non native species that maybe the tree doesn’t have a natural defense to, I’m making that part up, but I’m guessing that that would also make it more susceptible.

[00:44:59] So those are, that’s one key thing that you can do that helps a lot of different tree species, not just oaks, not just valley oaks, is just don’t move firewood.

[00:45:06] Michael Hawk: What about the woodpecker brigade? An army of woodpeckers just everywhere, you know?

[00:45:11] Michelle Fullner: Bring them in.

[00:45:12] Griff Griffith: Bring them in.

[00:45:13] Michelle Fullner: I like it. So that was number four. We got Griff with number three.

[00:45:16] Griff Griffith: Number three. So of all animals, of all animals in California or animals period that I’ve had a relationship with it’s, it’s a genus, it’s the salmon Actually, it’s the coho salmon the most. So I grew up fishing for salmon with my grandfather, and then I started doing salmon habitat restoration when I was 18 in the California conservation core.

[00:45:37] And then went on to the forest service where I did fishery surveys, mostly for salmon, but all fish, but mostly it got to be mostly salmon. Cause those are the ones that were like the most in politics and. Important to indigenous folks, because a lot of the indigenous folks in my area, Wiyot and the Talawa and more Hoopa consider themselves like acorn salmon people.

[00:45:57] So salmon was like central to their culture. It’s a cultural keystone species for a lot of people. And which is cool is I’m Irish. And we also called ourselves in Southern Ireland acorn salmon people, because we were also eating acorn and salmon. 

[00:46:11] So my relationship hasn’t just been, you know, doing biological surveys on them and doing restoration. Also, I wanted to be a commercial fisherman for salmon because so many men in my family had done that. And it was important to me in my twenties to continue that. For some reason. So I went up to Alaska and I worked on a fishing boat and caught tons and tons of salmon and.

[00:46:32] I really understand the relationship between them as not just an important ecological species, an important cultural keystone species economic species. It’s, they’re really part of our identity in California, the Salmon are, and, and have been for thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of years since time immemorial.

[00:46:52] And we’ve had. Commercial fishery shutdowns here in California. And I think that that really speaks to how we’re doing stewarding. Like salmon are a good indicator of how we are doing as stewards. And the fact that we’re losing them is not a good sign. And so many people are trying to bring them back.

[00:47:10] So many folks are working on bringing the salmon back and there’s lots of ways you can do that. So we won’t get into all of them, but salmon have a lot of interesting. Like so many interesting stories. And I would highly recommend looking up the indigenous people’s stories about salmon and the communication networks they had about salmon.

[00:47:27] Like there would be several tribes along a river and they would wait till a shaman or elder at the most up river. The most uprooted destination of the salmon would, it would give a blessing. And then that’s how the tribes down river, they would all agree to then start fishing. And these were people of different languages and religions and different cultures.

[00:47:47] This wasn’t like, this wasn’t like a monolith or monoculture. All these people were different and they cooperated. Around the salmon. So there’s a lot of stories like that with salmon. And I think that the day that we bring back salmon and salmon are off the list and we have a salmon fisheries reestablished, and we have trees that are getting marine nutrients from the wildlife dragging these salmon carcasses.

[00:48:09] Cause salmon die after they spawn, you know what I mean? Life is a virgin and then you die. That’s, that’s what I think about with salmon. Like they, it’s, you know, they meet the love of their life, if you will. And then they die shortly after. But their bodies would get drug into the forest. And so we still see these marine markers from salmon up in these trees that are far away from the water.

[00:48:28] And that’s because there used to be so many salmon. It’s hard to even imagine how many salmon there used to be to anybody who’s been born after, you know, 1950. We can’t even, we can’t even fathom how many there were. And. Back in the day, people say there’s so many, you can walk across their backs. There was so many, you could dance across, you could break dance across her back.

[00:48:45] There was tons and tons. I’ve seen it in Alaska, the way it used to look down here. And I hope one day that we can bring that back. So one thing people can do right now is it’s going to sound counterintuitive, but it’s not buying farm raised salmon, making sure your salmon are wild caught. Not eating salmon right now.

[00:49:01] I mean, even at the Yurok Salmon Festival, this is going to be the second year in a row where they haven’t had salmon at the Yurok Salmon Festival. So maybe switching to another fish for a while. Also knowing that everything ends up in the water. So whatever toxins you’re using around your waterway are ending up in there and they’re affecting the fish. So there’s a bunch of little things you can do. There’s a lot of different websites and stuff like that, where you can learn how to help salmon. But coho salmon are different from a lot of the other salmon in California because their babies stay in the creeks all summer long, which is

[00:49:29] unusual. So when you see baby salmon with the black par marks, those like vertical marks down their bodies.

[00:49:34] When you see those in the summer, those are probably coho. And that’s why they’re the most endangered is because they’re Left with us during the summer and the droughts and the water diversions, especially all the water diversions has really led to a shortage near extinction, extinction in some watersheds of the coho salmon.

[00:49:50] Michael Hawk: Can you elaborate on that kind of counterintuitive thing that you said about, you know, it’s better to buy wild caught salmon rather than farm raised salmon?

[00:49:59] Griff Griffith: So a lot of the farm raised salmon, and I haven’t followed up on this in the last couple of years. So if someone wants to correct me, I’m way into it, but farm raised salmon. Their meat is dyed, first of all, so it can be pink, but there’s so many of them concentrated in small areas and usually at the mouth of rivers where adults are gathering and waiting for the rains to come so they can make their way up into their natal streams because salmon are anadromous, so they start in the fresh water, they go out to the salt water, live three or four years, and they come back and spawn and then die in the fresh water, which is really.

[00:50:30] Really interesting cycle and the indigenous people have great stories around how to explain that to their kids or to themselves. It’s super interesting, but when you have a gathering. You know, a not unnatural gathering of salmon doing their, almost their whole life cycle in the river. And then you have the native ones, the wild ones going past this.

[00:50:48] They’re catching those diseases, sea lice and those other diseases, and it’s killing them. And so we don’t want to support farm raised salmon. We don’t want farm raised salmon to happen. We want to fix our streams, when to restore our streams, because we don’t need to have pens of salmon. We need to have streams.

[00:51:05] Full of salmon

[00:51:06] Michelle Fullner: hmm. Better Pink from the food that they eat.

[00:51:08] Griff Griffith: that are pink from the food they eat, not from dye.

[00:51:11] Good hmm. So, we had salmon. That was number three. Michael, what you got for us for number two?

[00:51:16] Michael Hawk: For number two, I’m going to tie back into your valley oak story a little bit here. And I I also maybe gave a little bit of a preview as to what this species is. So these are large and gregarious species. Many different kinds across the world I think with the exception of Australia and Antarctica and it’s woodpeckers. woodpeckers are very often as, as kids, one of the first birds that we notice because they are maybe colorful and gregarious and maybe they were even pounding away on the side of your house at some point and you’re like, what’s going on out there? In particular, I want to talk about the acorn woodpecker, which is found in many parts of the Western U.

[00:51:57] S. And I think that the name actually gives a little bit of tip off as to how they relate to Valley Oaks, because as an acorn woodpecker, well, obviously they must like acorns, right? And they do, but like so many common names, there’s another layer to the story. So acorn woodpeckers, they live in these communal groups you know, family groups very often, and they will go out and they collect acorns, and they store them in specially drilled holes that they make, where they just will, will make the hole just big enough and then wedge that acorn in there.

[00:52:31] And you can have thousands of acorns stored together. in a, in holes on a tree or on a power pole. A wooden power pole is one of our favorite places, actually. And and each of these little holes will have acorns, like every few inches, scattered across. And that’s called a granary. And I’m going to go off on the granaries here for a little, little bit and then come back to why acorns are not where the story ends for these birds.

[00:52:55] But the granaries are really interesting because if you put a fresh acorn in a hole and you put it in there really tight, because you don’t want somebody else to come along and steal your acorn, right? So, so you’re a special bird. You’re this really metal bird that you can bang your head against solid wood at forces that, you know, we can barely even fathom.

[00:53:14] you can really wedge that thing in there, but that fresh acorn is going to dry out at some point, or maybe there’s an insect inside that acorn and it eats it and it shrivels up a little bit and it gets loose. So there are, you know, specific birds in these communal groups that manage the granary and they go around patrolling, looking for loose acorns.

[00:53:33] And they’ll take it out and find a better fitting hole and continually move these acorns around and sometimes discarding the old, you know, the really old ones. Now you might be wondering, well, why are they storing all these acorns and not eating them? You know, why are they, why are they letting them dry out in the first place?

[00:53:50] And that’s because like almost every woodpecker, they prefer insects. So despite their name, Any chance they get, they would rather eat an insect. It doesn’t matter on what time of year it is. If there’s an insect available, they’re going to go for the insect. And in fact, acorn woodpeckers can fly catch. So like there’s this whole category of birds called fly catchers that, you know, maybe if you’re lucky, you get to observe one sometime and it will sit on a perch and it will look for a bug flying by of some sort, and it will sally out and grab that bug in midair and come back and, and eat it.

[00:54:20] Well, acorn woodpeckers will do the same thing if the opportunity arises. So as the day warms up, if you have a chance to look at acorn woodpeckers, you’ll see them fly catching. Now, on top of that, they will also mimic, well, mimic is too strong of a word, but, but they’ll use similar strategies to what a sap sucker will use.

[00:54:38] Whereas, you know, sap sucker is another type of woodpecker will go and drill these little holes and let the sap leak out and then insects get caught in that sap and they’ll come back and, and they’ll eat those insects. Acorn woodpeckers will do the same thing. Sometimes their own. you know, sap.

[00:54:52] Sometimes they’re taking advantage of other sap as well. So it’s really cool. And the acorns are just kind of a backup plan for them. So these are the planners of the woodpecker world where they have this large store of backup food just in case they need it, which by the way, sometimes attract insects too.

[00:55:08] So they can look like they’re eating the acorn, but they’re really going for that insect.

[00:55:12] Griff Griffith: So some people are probably wondering why the acorn whippeckers want their acorns to be so tight in those trees. 

[00:55:19] Michael Hawk: Yeah, 

[00:55:20] Griff Griffith: are they, why don’t they like it? Loose ones.

[00:55:22] Michael Hawk: yeah, like, 

[00:55:23] so when I was talking about other animals stealing the acorns, and that’s why they want it to be so tight, like, I’ve seen this actually happen, in fact, where an acorn woodpecker had some fresh acorns, and it was going to put it in the granary, and it starts to tap it in, and then suddenly like a raven or a crow will come in and scare away the woodpecker, and it’s able to steal that acorn and have it for itself, and squirrels would want to do the same thing. So there are many other animals watching. These acorn woodpeckers, and if those acorn woodpeckers can’t get those acorns tightly fit, it’s an easy meal for some other animal.

[00:55:55] Griff Griffith: Yeah. Speaking of drama, that’s some of the, that’s some of my favorite bird watching is acorn woodpeckers at the granary. That’s some good drama. Cause they’ll chase off anything. They are brave up there. I love it.

[00:56:06] Michael Hawk: they are. So now, how can you help? Well, listen to Michelle and plant some valley oaks. Protect those valley oaks. If you don’t live in California and you don’t have valley oaks, really you know, oak trees are great for all woodpeckers. Thanks. Part of it is because most woodpeckers are cavity nesters.

[00:56:24] They need holes in big, old, mature trees. And oak trees, very often when they get mature, they lose a limb, a hole develops, maybe there’s some carpenter ants that help along or, you know, something like that. Woodpeckers don’t always excavate their own holes. Sometimes they use naturally occurring holes, but other times they will excavate their own.

[00:56:41] So big, old trees, keep those around. Support those insects. Like we’ve talked about in a couple of different ways, because most woodpeckers will eat insects, you know, as their primary source. And the other thing is if you have a big old tree that has cavities in it, don’t just cut it down as long as it’s not a safety concern, you know, if it’s a safety concern, you know, that’s, that’s

[00:57:01] Griff Griffith: Cut it to height, cut it to height. If it’s a 

[00:57:02] Michael Hawk: Cut it to height. Exactly. So if you can leave a good chunk of that trunk, like up to where there are some holes, you’re doing a couple of things. You’re leaving those cavities, but then you’re also supporting the habitat because dead trees, trunks, things like that are habitat for many other organisms, not just birds.

[00:57:22] So, it’s very overlooked. We want clean, pristine parks and lawns, and it’s so tempting just to go remove these things, but lots of cool stuff happens on you know, on these dead and dying trees, if you can keep them.

[00:57:34] Griff Griffith: I just moved into a new place and I’m talking my housemates or whatever they’re called neighbors um, into creating a Snag out of a Bradford pair. And so, cause I’m going to girdle it and then we’re going to cut it to height and then they’re artists types. So I said, it’d be great if you guys could do some art on it and drill some holes in it and some cool patterns for the native bees, and that was the deal.

[00:57:58] That was how I sold it was. Do art on it. So we’re going to have this snag that’s going to have tons of art on it. We won’t get acorn woodpeckers here because it’s too close to the coast, but we will get some coolness and I can’t wait to see it. So if people aren’t into having snags in their yards or standing dead trees, you can cut them to height so they don’t fall on your house or fall on anybody.

[00:58:17] And then you can make art on them. And that might be a way to get standing dead trees more welcomed into our spaces.

[00:58:24] Michelle Fullner: That’s a great idea. 

[00:58:25] I love it. I love it. And speaking people’s language too. I love that you didn’t just be like, you know, you, you specifically knew you were talking to artists. So you’re like, Hey, let’s do art here. So tailoring your message or finding out about people before tailoring your message to them so that, you know, you 

[00:58:40] Griff Griffith: That’s how I got them on board. I was like, what, what patterns we plant these yellow flowering tidy tips in? And they’re like, Oh, we know they didn’t give a crap about gardening before, but once they got to do their expression, all of a sudden they got interested. They painted pots, all kinds of stuff.

[00:58:56] Michelle Fullner: Brilliant. 

[00:58:56] Michael Hawk: That’s awesome. And, you know, connecting in that way is great. I wanted to go back real quick to cavity nesters because cavity nesting birds, like many, many, many birds, most birds are in decline with a few exceptions, but the cavity nesting birds are very often doing worse than than many other birds because We have so few old growth trees and when they do get old and they start to look like they might be a safety risk, they get cut down to the ground, even in parks, you know, because it’s a liability for them.

[00:59:27] So, I, I can’t really stress this enough. It’s one of those, you know, hiding in plain sight conservation issues that we have.

[00:59:33] Michelle Fullner: Also, to me, it’s like whoever goes and takes a picture of just like a very normy looking tree. You know what I mean? It’s like, it’s beautiful when a tree has character. I wanna go and take a picture of a, a crazy like gnarled old tree with holes in it and stuff like, that’s more interesting to look at and has more character.

[00:59:49] And I think that it, it lends some of that to the adjacent kind of surroundings.

[00:59:55] Michael Hawk: And what’s better than getting a picture of a baby bird sticking its little head out of a hole in the side

[01:00:00] Michelle Fullner: That’s the best. That’s the best. Okay. For our number one. We gotta be ready. Let me go grab my hat. Oh, okay. I have this hat, and I have some slips of paper in here. Get some of those noises on the mic. And on the strips of paper, I’ve written different sports. Okay? I don’t know a whole lot about sports.

[01:00:16] And, that’s okay. Good. We’re kind of in good company. But I know the general idea of how these sports are played. And so, there were three of us. We each had three different sports. favorite species. And that means that we had a list of nine, but we need a list of 10. So to figure out whose top pick gets to be number one on the list, we need a way to figure that out.

[01:00:36] So what we’re going to do is I’m going to draw out one of these sports and read what the sport is. And then we’re going to each make a case for which of our species would win against the others. Why would our species be good at that sport? Alright. Does everyone understand the rules? Is that good?

[01:00:51] Griff Griffith: we’re going to reveal the name and then tell why it would be the

[01:00:53] Michelle Fullner: Yes!

[01:00:54] Exactly. Okay. Okay, so, the sport is okay, somebody say when.

[01:00:58] Michael Hawk: Go. 

[01:00:59] Michelle Fullner: Okay, soccer. All right, so who wants to go first? Who’s going to win at soccer?

[01:01:04] Griff Griffith: my species will lose because it’s stuck in the ground,

[01:01:09] but if you, soccer in the ground. I a ball. It’s If you kick a ball at it, it might ricochet back into the goalpost. That’s the only way that we would score.

[01:01:18] Michelle Fullner: What’s your species?

[01:01:19] Griff Griffith: Coast Redwood.

[01:01:20] Michelle Fullner: Of course it is. You’re being on brand today, too. All right, Coast Redwood. I love it. Well, I mean, I think, though, that they’re pretty wide, so they could make a great goalie.

[01:01:30] Griff Griffith: And their roots are really shallow,

[01:01:32] Michelle Fullner: There you go.

[01:01:33] Griff Griffith: so if they got some X Men powers, it would be easy for them to unbury their roots and kick things in, you 

[01:01:37] Michael Hawk: Well, I have a question. How long is this game? If we’re talking about like a multi thousand year game,

[01:01:43] Michelle Fullner: They’re the Redwoods are Oh yeah, that’s true.

[01:01:46] Honestly, change the terms a little bit, right? We got to be on plant time.

[01:01:50] Griff Griffith: It takes 2000 years. Yeah.

[01:01:53] Michelle Fullner: Humans are too hasty.

[01:01:54] Griff Griffith: Okay. Well, in that case, we got it.

[01:01:55] Michelle Fullner: Yeah. Coast Redwood’s great. Awesome. Michael, Unless someone’s got a bristlecone pine.

[01:02:00] Yeah. Outlast everybody. 

[01:02:02] Michael Hawk: species is a bristlecone pine.

[01:02:05] no! no, no, no. So my species, I’ve already talked about a little bit today. It’s aphids. And I think aphids would win this without a doubt because they can reproduce so fast. They’re just going to win in numbers.

[01:02:20] And, you know, the reason they can reproduce so fast is because.

[01:02:24] They give live birth. I don’t want to get into my whole aphid story here, but but yeah, I think I think aphids, they’re super

[01:02:29] Griff Griffith: They’re born pregnant, even.

[01:02:31] Michael Hawk: Yeah. So 

[01:02:32] Michelle Fullner: I’m

[01:02:33] Michael Hawk: they

[01:02:34] Michelle Fullner: sorry. You just blew my mind. I’m sorry. I’ve been pregnant and I was not good at playing soccer when I was pregnant. So I will just go ahead and put that out there. All right. So mine. is the yellow billed magpie, another endemic species. It’s a California endemic bird and it’s got this striking yellow bird.

[01:02:53] It’s a corvid and it’s got this long beautiful tail. It’s got these white wing tips. They’re just very distinctive, very easy, even for somebody like me who doesn’t know anything about birds to identify. I can spot these birds. There’s a certain neighborhood in Sacramento. Every time I go there, I’m like, Oh, there’s a bird!

[01:03:07] I’m in Arden now. There’s yellow billed magpies. Like, they always greet me every single time that I go in there. And I think they would win at soccer because they’re incredibly smart and cooperative. And so they have these like groups, right? Like they are able to communicate with like different squawks and things.

[01:03:23] So they are able to communicate with their groups. They’re cooperative, like the parents raise the babies together. And sometimes even like the older sibling will come and help raise the baby. And they’re corvids. They’re super smart. They’re like one of the smartest birds that’s out there. So I think they would have the strategy down.

[01:03:38] So I think that’s why the yellow billed magpies would win.

[01:03:40] Michael Hawk: The aphids would just fly into their eyes. Reproduction

[01:03:43] rate. I 

[01:03:45] Griff Griffith: would fall and crush everybody.

[01:03:47] Michael Hawk: I but the mags are op, they’ll eat whatever’s available, so they’re just, they’re gonna take out the aphids. So we’re just gonna gobble them up.

[01:03:57] the aphids got it.

[01:03:58] Michelle Fullner: Alright, alright, what do we think? So, out of these three, this is the part that I didn’t actually think through. How do we decide, after we make our case, which one of these actually wins?

[01:04:08] Michael Hawk: I should have picked the dung beetle is,

[01:04:10] Michelle Fullner: Oh, that would have been perfect yeah, 

[01:04:13] You know what though? Maybe the, the Coast Redwood wins for goalie, for sure. And the, you know, the yellow billed magpie is a great, like, coach be able, because it’s going to be able to tell those aphids where to go, and the aphids could be the actual players. Although I don’t know if they could move the ball, so that’s kind of a

[01:04:29] Griff Griffith: Maybe 

[01:04:30] if enough of them got on one side, they could use like gravity.

[01:04:33] Michelle Fullner: All right, so do we have to draw these out of a hat? Like, how do we decide which one is the winner? 

[01:04:38] Michael Hawk: I don’t think the aphids would win if I was being honest. I think, I think probably the magpies would win if you could teach them what to 

[01:04:46] Michelle Fullner: have yellow billed magpies be the winners?

[01:04:50] Griff Griffith: I think so. Yeah.

[01:04:51] Michelle Fullner: All right, yellow billed magpies are the winner, so we’ll put them in our number one spot. And these are really interesting birds. because they’re mostly in the Central Valley of California.

[01:05:01] They’re super bright, like I said before, and so they eat just about everything, which can be good and bad because they can eat rodents, which can have problems with rodenticide ending up in the yellow billed magpies. They eat insects, which can end up having problems with neonicotinoids ending up in the yellow billed magpies. So there’s some issues that they face because of their diverse diet. But one of the other really big issues that they face is West Nile virus. So in the early 2000s, I want to say like 2003, four or five, somewhere in there, West Nile virus hit the scene in California and it massively spread. just decimated the population of yellow billed magpies.

[01:05:38] And that population has never fully recovered. And there’s even kind of a question of, can this species build a resistance even once they survive it? Like, are they even building a resistance to West Nile? Or can they just get reinfected and die because they haven’t totally that? And these are super charismatic birds.

[01:05:56] I love watching them. They are absolutely my favorite bird species. I,

[01:06:00] Griff Griffith: can even learn to talk.

[01:06:01] Michelle Fullner: can they?

[01:06:01] Griff Griffith: Yeah. Now I had a friend who back in the eighties, whose mom brought home a baby that fell out of a nest and they kept it and it could learn how to talk and it could talk on cues. So when you walked in the door, it would say, hello. And when you were getting your key, when his mom was getting the keys ready, it would go goodbye, like I had, like it took cues, but it could speak a lot of

[01:06:21] Michelle Fullner: Oh my gosh. So it would sit there in the soccer game and be like,

[01:06:24] Griff Griffith: Yeah, right.

[01:06:27] Michelle Fullner: right. And , so West Nile is a huge issue. I don’t know how much we can do to help with the West Nile issue. So the thing that I said should help this species is not using neonicotinoids. Which is a whole class of pesticides, which are systemic in plants. So they can be applied to roots or they can be applied to the leaves of plants.

[01:06:45] They’re taken up into all the tissues of the plant. 

[01:06:48] Griff Griffith: Including The nectar.

[01:06:49] Michelle Fullner: Including the nectar. Exactly. And so whatever comes along and feeds on that plant, maybe it’s a bee going to pollinate it. Maybe it’s a caterpillar going to munch on some leaves that gets taken up into that animal and then that gets eaten by a bird.

[01:07:01] Or whatever the case may be, and it can, it can move through these different layers or different levels of the food web. So it can affect a lot of different species. So,

[01:07:12] Michael Hawk: Thanks.

[01:07:12] Michelle Fullner: and they can get washed into watersheds. So like when it rains, they get washed into the water and they can end up in a lot of our waterways too. So yeah, they’re real hard to get rid of. They stick around and they kind of just spread all over the place. So they can be real ugly, real nasty stuff. So any way that you can avoid using them, I know that some of them are going to be banned in California for consumers to purchase at some point, but I’m pretty sure that like farms and stuff can still use them.

[01:07:39] And so if there’s ever anything up for a vote and you want to reach out to your representatives to let them know, like, Hey, vote for this, this bill, try to get them banned. That would be a really great move too. Alright, we got our, we got our list, guys. I’m proud of us. Thank you guys for humoring me and talking about your favorite California species with me. This was a lot of fun.

#6: Cicadas: Unexpected Ambassadors of Biodiversity

Periodical cicadas are amazing animals – they spend nearly 13 or 17 years underground, and all decide, together, to come out and party in your trees at the same time.

They are loud, and perhaps you think they are annoying. But they are one of the most accessible demonstrations of nature’s abundance that still occurs.

But cicadas are super important to our ecosystems and the food webs that support life. Their story is full of history, drama, and even optimism. And right now, as this is being released in 2024, a rare “double emergence” is occurring.

So now is the time to give cicadas a second look, and see just how magical the “magicicada” genus is. 

Host Griff Griffith, with the help of renowned cicada researchers Dr. Chris Simon, Dr. Gene Kritsky, and Dr. Matt Kasson, as well as All Bugs Go to Kevin founder Kevin Wiener, takes a fun, and sometimes disturbing look at cicadas, why they matter, and how they reflect biodiversity in general.

Join us in this vital journey towards nature’s revival. Explore more and show your support at jumpstartnature.com, and follow us on FacebookInstagramLinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube.

For even deeper nature insights, delve into our companion podcast, Nature’s Archive.

Links to Topics Discussed

All Bugs Go to Kevin: Facebook Group | YouTube Channel
Cicada Safari App
cicadas.uconn.edu – perhaps the best, most authoritative resource on periodical cicadas
The full length interview with Dr. Chris Simon is available on Nature’s Archive podcast feed.

Related Podcast Episodes

Cicada Photos

Periodical Cicada – Image courtesy Kevin Wiener
A Wing-tapping Cicada, a type of annual cicada. Photograph by Michael Hawk
Scissor Grinder Cicada, a type of annual cicada. Photo by Michael Hawk
Green Grocer cicada, an annual cicada of Australia. Photograph by Michael Hawk
Annual Cicada Exoskeleton. Photograph by Michael Hawk

Credits

This podcast episode was written and produced by Michael Hawk. Our host and co-writer is Griff Griffith. Kat Hill provided editing assistance.

Thanks to the team at cicadas.uconn.edu for allowing us to use some of their recordings of periodical cicadas, as well as Kevin Weiner for use of his photos and audio.

Some of the music used in this production is through creative commons licensing:

The following music was used for this media project:
Music: Lofi Prairie  by Brian Holtz Music
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/9247-lofi-prairie
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Transcript (Click to View)

Jumpstart Nature owns copyright in and to all content in transcripts.

You are welcome to share the below transcript (up to 500 words but not more) in media articles (e.g., The New York Times, LA Times, The Guardian), on your personal website, in a non-commercial article or blog post (e.g., Medium), and/or on a personal social media account for non-commercial purposes, provided that you include attribution to “Jumpstart Nature Podcast” and link back to the jumpstartnature.com URL.

No warranty of accuracy of the transcript is provided or implied. There may be typos.

Cicada Episode

[00:00:00] Griff Griffith: Welcome to a world where the hum of nature symphony takes center stage. That mesmerizing chorus of thousands of cicadas blending together in harmony.

[00:00:13] And guess what this year, it’s a double feature in some parts of the United States, two distinct groups of cicadas are rising up simultaneously Turning 2024 into a cacophony of nature’s finest.

[00:00:29] There are special kinds of cicadas that spend over a decade underground and somehow, some way they all decide to emerge at the same time.

[00:00:37] How can millions of insects collectively make these decisions?

[00:00:42] but there’s a deeper story buzzing beneath the surface. It’s a tale of survival of predator and prey dancing in a delicate balance. It’s about adaptation, evolution, and yes, even danger lurking in the wings.

[00:00:56] Matt Kasson: When a cicada is infected with Mesopora, basically the Posterior or the back part of the abdomen comes off and from underneath emerges a chalky white gumdrop or maybe something analogous to powdered sugar or chalk dust

[00:01:16] And those plugs are basically millions of individual spores that then get transferred as they fly around, as they attempt to mate. We call them flying salt shakers of death It’s kind of a pretty metal term,

[00:01:33] Griff Griffith: Gross. Is he describing a sexually transmitted fungus? We’ll hear more from Dr. Kasson about this in a few minutes. Regardless, cicadas in their standard form or as flying salt shakers of death are more than just background noise.

[00:01:47] They’re a living testament to the intricate web of life where every species, no matter how small, plays a vital role, not just to ecosystems, but also food webs. In fact, cicadas have been eaten by people too for thousands of years.

[00:02:01] Cicadas reflect what it means to have biodiversity and abundance. So even if you don’t have these kinds of cicadas in your area, similar stories are playing out all around you.

[00:02:10] So buckle up because we are about to embark on an extraordinary journey into the wild world of cicadas and how they embody the importance of biodiversity.

[00:02:18] I’m Griff Griffith, and welcome to Jumpstart Nature.

[00:02:31] You’re listening to a special kind of cicada, a periodical cicada. , periodical because they only emerge after a set period of time. In United States, different groups emerge after either 13 or 17 years.

[00:02:55] If you’re like most people, the thought of cicadas probably conjures up memories of loud or maybe even annoying insects of mid and late summer screaming from the nearby trees.

[00:03:04] And based on those recordings, I can’t blame you, but these cicadas are a bit different. Dr. Chris Simon is considered the world’s foremost expert on these unique cicadas.

[00:03:14] Chris Simon: Ah! They’re spring cicadas and they’re small and black with red eyes. None of the annual cicadas in the United States have red eyes and there’s huge numbers of them all over. When they first come out. You can see ’em all over the trees and bushes, and then they climb up into the tops of the trees

[00:03:36] the smaller two are much louder and much more annoying, the largest one. The Decim group, they have a nice calm whistle sound and it sounds like flying saucers from a 1950 science fiction film. If you go into an area and you ask people if they’ve heard anything, it sounds like a flying saucer. And the cicadas are there. They’ll, the Decim ones, they’ll say yes. So it really does sound like flying saucers.

[00:04:04] Griff Griffith: Okay, to help set the stage, here’s a sample of what a 1950s flying saucer sounded like And now here are a couple recordings of Decim cicadas The first one is a group singing as a chorus.

[00:04:24] And here’s one isolated with a chorus in the background. Okay, yeah, I can hear it a little, but I think the cicadas sound a bit more like the alien probes from the original War of the Worlds movie.

[00:04:41] Gene Kritsky: There are seven species of periodical cicadas in the eastern U. S. There are three species of 17 year cicadas. And there are four species of 13 year cicadas. Now within those seven species, there are essentially three species groups.

[00:04:55] Griff Griffith: Dr. Gene Kritsky has been mapping where these cicadas occur for close to 50 years. From here, things get complicated pretty fast, so with the help of our experts, I’ll try to break things down in simple terms.

[00:05:07] The groups of cicadas Dr. Kritsky mentioned are lumped together because they look and behave similarly.

[00:05:12] Despite being similar, each group has both a 17 year species a 13 year So yes, the most closely related species seem to have different life cycles offset by four years.

[00:05:24] when we have a mass emergence, like we’re due to have any day now in 2024, We don’t just see one species or one group emerge. Rather, we see distant cicada cousins spanning different groups and species deciding to come out at the same time.

[00:05:38] Whew! So are all these cicadas sitting around coordinating their plans?

[00:05:43] I have so many questions! But wait, there’s more!

[00:05:47] Chris Simon: So each species has a whole bunch of reproductively isolated groups. And these are so recently isolated in different years that they haven’t formed new species yet, but they’re in the process of becoming species because they’re reproductively isolated.

[00:06:07] Griff Griffith: All right, so we have speciation in progress. That is, for whatever reason, one species of cicada, or more accurately, groups of different species, Have banded together to emerge from underground But the same set of species that emerges in Illinois in 2024 on a 17 year schedule might emerge in Pennsylvania in 2025, but on a different 17 year schedule.

[00:06:29] since these groups emerge in different years and locations, they are reproductively isolated. They never see each other as adults, and as a result, don’t exchange genes. Given enough time, they will become distinct species.

[00:06:42] These groups of cicadas that emerge in different places at different times are called broods. It’s important to note that cicadas have their own unique definition of brood. In other animals, a brood usually refers to a group of young cared for by specific parents, like with birds.

[00:06:59] Chris Simon: Yeah, the word year class would be much better than brood because as you said, it’s used in birds to mean that the individual’s in a nest

[00:07:07] Griff Griffith: So we have seven current species of periodical cicadas in the United States.

[00:07:12] Chris Simon: we used to think that they were the only periodical cicadas, but oh, maybe in 2014 we uncovered this little newspaper, article, a little blurb that said World Cup Cicada. And it turns out that the cicadas come out in the year, like in the spring, right before the World Cup. So I found the publications, it was published by a scientist in Northeast, India. I contacted him and it turns out that they also discovered another group that’s nearby that’s offset by two years, same species, but it’s got two broods offset by two years.

[00:07:52] And then in a book written by a cicada biologist about the South Pacific, he mentions a cicada that might be periodical in Fiji. We checked it out and sure enough, it does seem to come out once every eight years.

[00:08:09] Griff Griffith: These Fiji cicadas will emerge in 2025. That’s just enough time for someone to fund a jumpstart nature trip to Fiji

[00:08:16] so we can personally investigate. Nat Geo, Animal Planet, Bill Gates. Are you listening?

[00:08:23] Fiji dreams set aside for the moment. You Periodical cicadas are just a blip in the big picture of cicadas.

[00:08:32] Dr. Matt Kasson is also a biologist who has an entirely unexpected path to cicadas. And we’ll discuss that a bit later. But first,

[00:08:40] Matt Kasson: late August, we have something called the Dog Day Cicadas, because we hear them during the hottest dog days of summer.

[00:08:47] And they’re the really loud, obnoxious ones that scream, scream at you while you’re out at your picnic table or grilling. and those are commonly heard, but not really seen like the periodical cicadas. So that’s an example of an annual cicada

[00:09:01] Gene Kritsky: There are 3, 400 species of cicadas worldwide. But those come out every year,

[00:09:07] Chris Simon: the annual cicadas are bigger, wider and some of the annual cicadas are much bigger. There’s some very tiny little cicadas, say for example, we know of some in Australia that are maybe the size of your fingernail. And then there’s some very large cicadas also in Australia and New Guinea, tropical areas. I would guess maybe six inches long, something like that.

[00:09:32] Griff Griffith: I’ve been a nature nut for decades, so I’m not always surprised to learn that some animal or plant has more diversity than I expect, but 3,400 species of cicada, wow. One other thing I’ve come to expect is that every species has a wonderfully unique way of interconnecting with the rest of nature.

[00:09:50] Gene Kritsky: They do a lot of ecological good when they come out. So, for example, the holes in the ground that they produce as the nymphs emerge is like a natural aeration and in our hot summers when the clay soil starts getting baked really hard and we get that heavy rains instead of running off, a lot of that water goes down those holes and helps water the trees later in the summer.

[00:10:09] when the adults are flying around, they’re food for all sorts of opportunistic predators unlike the annual cicadas, periodical cicadas, their survival strategy is to have come, come out such massive numbers. That birds, dogs, cats, raccoons, deer, I’ve seen turtles eat these things. I’ve seen snakes eat these things, have all the cicadas they want to eat. And there’s still millions left.

[00:10:31] And that means those predators will have more of their offsprings survive that year.

[00:10:37] Griff Griffith: Imagine if you woke up one day and your house was swarming with your favorite chocolates. You’d probably eat a few, maybe a lot. And this goes on for days. Eventually you’d get tired of eating them. This is what happens with cicadas. Dr. Kritsky continues:

[00:10:50] Gene Kritsky: , when the females lay their eggs in the terminal growth of trees and the branches sometimes break, and the leaves turn brown, we call that flagging, that’s like a natural pruning.

[00:11:00] And the next spring, the trees will produce a larger leaf set and flower set that helps them to recover. And then finally, the cicadas die after they’re done laying their eggs. And let’s face it, they can come out in numbers there. Now this is under trees, but they’ve been measured up to one and a half million per acre of tree coverage.

[00:11:20] That’s a lot of bugs. When they die, they collect at the base of trees, because they’re all up in the trees, and they start to rot. And that rotting, as they start to decay, all those nutrients from all those millions of cicadas goes into the soil around the base of the tree. Forming a, a nutrient cache for the tree.

[00:11:39] Chris Simon: there’s a huge pulse of nutrients into the soil. And that’s been studied by Louie Yang at Davis who’s shown the real importance of the cicada bodies as fertilizer for growing plants.

[00:11:52] Griff Griffith: Those are just a few of the benefits of cicadas. and many cultures worldwide have long seen cicadas as a culinary delight. Recognizing the nutritional value of freshly molted cicadas, indigenous Americans gathered them into baskets and prepared these abundant snacks in various delectable ways. Even today, cicadas are savored as a delicacy in many parts of the world. You can even buy cicada pizzas in parts of the United States.

[00:12:15] however, the early colonists mistook cicadas for,

[00:12:18] Chris Simon: Locust they used to be called 17 year Locusts and 13 year Locusts I think they got that name during Colonial times because the colonists in Massachusetts were not doing that well. There was just like one plague after another.

[00:12:33] And then all of a sudden all of these cicadas came out. They were all over everything. And so they thought it was a plague of Locusts like in the Bible.

[00:12:42] Griff Griffith: and Sadly, some of their misconceptions have persisted through the generations, leading some people to believe they are harmful pests. It’s important to dispel the myth that cicadas pose a threat to gardens or pets. cicadas are not interested in devouring your plants or harming your beloved pets

[00:13:00] In nature, every action sets off a chain reaction, sparking a dance of reaction and adaptation among plants and animals. Over millennia, these interactions weave themselves into the very fabric of The Ecosystem .

[00:13:13] As cicadas continue to speciate, evolving into new species right before our eyes, This dance becomes ever more intricate and grand, like a ballet expanding into a spectacular ensemble performance. Each new dancer adding their unique steps to enrich the ecosystem.

[00:13:29] Sometimes this dance takes a disturbing turn, or at least disturbing if we look at it through the lens of humanity. Matt Kasson again:

[00:13:37] Matt Kasson: Oftentimes when people think about fungi, they think about mushrooms. And it’s true that all mushrooms are fungi, but not all fungi are mushrooms. The mushroom forming fungi is just one branch on the fungal tree.

[00:13:53] Entomopathogen is the word we use for an insect infecting or an insect destroying fungus. And Massospora cicadina is an entomopathogenic

[00:14:03] fungus. That means it infects insects, primarily cicadas.

[00:14:08] Griff Griffith: There are many types of fungus that target insects.

[00:14:11] Matt Kasson: let me, , take you on a visual journey. , imagine a cicada, , their body is made up of these, plates of, chitin.

[00:14:20] usually black in color. When a cicada is infected with Massospora, basically the Posterior or the back part of the abdomen comes off and from underneath emerges something analogous to a, an eraser on a, on a pencil, , covered with, um, powdered sugar or chalk dust. And that is the fungal plug of Massospora .

[00:14:44] And those plugs are basically millions of individual spores that then get transferred as they fly around, as they attempt to mate. We call them flying salt shakers of death. It’s kind of a pretty metal term, , but it’s also visually informative. , if you were to imagine a cicada with a salt shaker, duct tape to its back, flying around, you would see, you know, salt, shaking out everywhere.

[00:15:13] And that’s similar to what’s happening with these spores on the back end of the abdomen.

[00:15:17] Griff Griffith: The ballet has suddenly turned into a heavy metal mosh pit Alright, alright, enough of that. and it turns out different fungal species infect other types of cicadas too, it’s all part of the dance and this fungus takes control of the cicada much like how music can take control of our dance.

[00:15:40] Matt Kasson: in order to talk about cicada behavioral modification in the presence of a Massospora, I want to quickly just talk about behavioral modification in other insects by fungal pathogens. , there’s a really common type of behavioral modification called summit disease. And even if you’ve never heard that term, you’ve certainly seen it because zombie ants , are the like iconic example of this.

[00:16:08] , what happens is a lot of insect pathogens coerce their hosts to climb to a high elevation, affix, , or lock into place, whether that’s biting down or, or, you know, digging in, , after which the insect dies and the fungus, you know, dies. erupts quite cinematically out of the cadaver. That’s the zombie ant fungus.

[00:16:35] That’s what The Last of Us is based on. , some of you may know the video game or the HBO series.

[00:16:41] So that’s one behavioral modification, but that’s not what Massospora does. Massospora is actually way cooler because it does something called active host transmission. That is, it keeps its host alive. as long as possible to maximize its dispersal.

[00:16:57] Griff Griffith: If you’re wondering how an animal can have its posterior fall off and seemingly go about its normal routine, so am I.

[00:17:03] Matt Kasson: Well, despite the fact that a third of the abdomen, including the genitalia of these cicadas, have They continue to fly around as if nothing happened. They continue to engage in normal behavior, just like their uninfected counterpart. There’s a prolonged wakefulness in them that is beautifully disturbing, if I might say.

[00:17:30] In addition to this prolonged wakefulness or this kind of hyperactivity, We also see what we characterize as hyper sexualization. For example, a male that’s infected with Massospora will not only continue to try to mate with females, will himself pretend to be a female to get healthy males to come in contact with him.

[00:17:56] , what underlies all that? , that was really a question we had from the beginning, is why is this hypersexual behavior happening? Why is this prolonged wakefulness happening? And it turns out, , well, it’s drugs. In fact, uh, we found in Massospora cicadina, , a production of a compound called cathinone.

[00:18:15] Now, cathinone is a naturally occurring amphetamine,

[00:18:18] Griff Griffith: Ah, they’re hopped up on amphetamines. Have you heard those crazy stories about what people do when they abuse drugs called bath salts? these were causing people to become excessively alert, aggressive, and even giving superhuman strength during rage filled outburst. That was the same amphetamine that controls these cicadas.

[00:18:36] With millions of cicadas left over even after predators partake in the cicada buffet, it’s no wonder that some pathogen found its niche among this abundance.

[00:18:45] Matt Kasson: you know, in, in any large population, , there’s a baseline amount of disease, , that will impact the population.

[00:18:55] These obligate parasites or pathogens have really kind of figured out the perfect balance to maintaining themselves, but leaving enough of the other hosts around so that they can infect the next generation. that’s something to think about.

[00:19:12] Griff Griffith: Wow. This story has certainly taken an unexpected turn.

[00:19:16] And of course the cicadas evolution responds to the pressure caused by these fungal infections too.

[00:19:21] Kevin Wiener: My first experience, , with periodical cicadas was in Cincinnati, Ohio, uh, where I grew up, and I just remember my dad telling me, like, these stories about, like, you couldn’t even see the bark on the trees, and everything was covered, and just, they were, they were everywhere, and then the time came, and it was just really underwhelming.

[00:19:54] Griff Griffith: that’s Kevin Wiener and insect advocate, educator and founder of the popular All Bugs Go To Kevin Facebook group, describing his first cicada encounter.

[00:20:03] but 2021 saw the largest brood of cicadas emerge, and it made huge headlines. This brood is known as brood 10, but Roman numerals are used to number the broods. So it appeared in headlines like brood X.

[00:20:15] Kevin Wiener: I was excited. Super excited. I could see it through my, like, adult eyes now, Like, just knowing that it’s such an important part of, of nature to boost, , you know, populations of animals, you know, cause these are basically defenseless insects that are free for the taking for anything that, that, that eats insects. , so it can really help Populations of anything that would eat them and then in turn boost other populations of things that would eat those and so on.

[00:20:43] I was driving through Lincoln City, Indiana, I had my radio going. blaring, windows up. And then I hear this sound and I was like, there’s no way. There’s no way. And so I turned the, the stereo off, rolled the window down, and I could not believe the sound.

[00:21:08] It was so loud. And it was, I mean, I’m getting goosebumps just thinking about it now. It was just the coolest thing. And so I immediately, like, pulled over, and I just started exploring. And they were just everywhere and, uh, and high up in the trees. I mean, you just were immersed in sound.

[00:21:31] I wanted to see, I wanted to pick one up, I wanted to look at them and it’s a learning experience too, you know, because I didn’t know going in which species I was looking at, so I had to learn how to identify them because I think we had three different, , species that were popping up.

[00:21:44] Griff Griffith: Knowing a bit about the story of cicadas, their lives underground, the spectacle, what they do for nature, helped turn Kevin into a cicada fan, and his curiosity is exactly what we need to help biodiversity.

[00:21:56] But despite there being billions of cicadas, some populations are in decline. And we’re likely suffering from shifting baseline syndrome too. That is, each generation loses perspective of what things used to be like.

[00:22:09] Chris Simon: In some places they’re okay, but New England was 90% cleared in the 1800’s by the colonists with axes. And you can see paintings of the countryside at that time. And it’s just cleared, rolling hills, stone walls, trees along the edges of the walls, but mostly just completely cleared. And that’s why the New England populations are so small. And now Brood Eleven’s gone,

[00:22:36] If you’re in an area like DC Baltimore where there’s tons of suburbs, they’re surviving because there’s lots of parks as well and forest patches, and they’re doing just fine there. But if you’re in other populated areas where the trees have all been cleared and there’s a lot of asphalt and highways, so you know, when you think of them maybe moving north with climate change, it’s a little bit difficult in some places because there’s just these massive highways clearing asphalt. It’d be quite difficult to move north along the, say, I-95 corridor.

[00:23:11] Griff Griffith: Just to clarify, we aren’t expecting an emergence in 2024 in some of those areas, but if you’re curious, if you might see periodical cicadas, where you are. We have you covered.

[00:23:20] Dr. Simon and her team have excellent resources at cicadas.uconn.edu, spelled U C O N N. But as you might expect these days, there’s also an app for that.

[00:23:32] Gene Kritsky: Cicada Safari is an app, it’s a free app, , which is designed to ask our colleagues, our friends, people with an interest in natural history, to help us map periodical cicadas.

[00:23:43] Griff Griffith: People with an interest in natural history? That sounds like you! Cicada Safari is available on Apple and Android phones. Check our show notes for links.

[00:23:51] Gene Kritsky: Cicada Safari is a very easy, you walk out there, make sure your, location services are on, or your GPS take a picture of Cicada.

[00:23:58] you submit it, we have people with their eyes looking at it. It goes on the live map

[00:24:01] Griff Griffith: Contributing to community science in this way is incredibly important as we just discussed in our last episode. And yes. You can use iNaturalist as well, but Dr.

[00:24:11] Kritsky stressed that Cicada Safari is even simpler since it’s just for cicadas.

[00:24:16] Why is documenting cicadas so important? As we mentioned, populations are changing and some are declining. and you know what else is wild? Sometimes the cicada alarm clocks are wrong and no, it’s not like they’re just off by a little.

[00:24:28] Chris Simon: Sometimes, a large number of individuals will come out four years early or sometimes four years late, and that even happens in seventeen-year cicadas, and in 13 year cicadas. In thirteen-year cicadas, if you go to a place that you know is gonna be really dense and you go there four years ahead of time, there’ll be quite a few cicadas coming out.

[00:24:51] And the same for seventeen-year cicadas; if you know of a place that in the historical records, it’s very dense, and you go there four years early, you’ll see a large number of individuals coming out.

[00:25:04] Griff Griffith: these could be the start of entirely new broods and researchers need help understanding this. wow. Isn’t nature just incredible? When we started developing this episode, we had no idea that cicadas were such a perfect reflection of biodiversity and change in our environment. and as nature lovers, if periodical cicadas are emerging in your area, take this opportunity to soak it up.

[00:25:23] You may not see it again for another 13 or 17 years.

[00:25:26] Gene Kritsky: One of the important things about periodical cicadas, and this is especially true for parents of small kids, if you’re fortunate to have cicadas emerging in your backyard, the cicadas that are emerging, they emerge at night, if you’ve got cicadas in your backyard, get those kids outside.

[00:25:42] Get a flashlight. Your peripheral vision is limited because it’s dark. And you’re watching these things. Not one or two, but Tens, hundreds of them climbing up tree trunks, walls, what have you, and slowly transforming from the nymph to the adult. And that process takes about 90 minutes for the cicada to pull out, the adult cicada pull out of the nymphal skin, free itself, expand the wings.

[00:26:03] And then takes another 90 minutes to turn dark. That’s like having a David Attenborough special in your backyard.

[00:26:10] Kevin Wiener: I just want to see people get out there like, , yeah, they’re loud and they scream, but that’s how they find the ladies so that they can make more and, feed these animals that we love so much. I can talk about how exciting things are, but, like, to experience it for yourself. There’s nothing like it. And to think that I thought a lot of this stuff was just unimportant, silly, or just, just didn’t want to connect at one point in my life, I feel like I have missed out on so, so much.

[00:26:39] And I don’t want that for other people and that’s why I do the things I do and try to get people excited about the world around them and these little animals that are out there doing these amazing things, because Once you start to understand them and that they’re not out to get you, it’s pretty freaking cool.

[00:26:55] Griff Griffith: Well said. And even if you don’t get periodical cicadas in your area, look around at what does occur in abundance, or has similar boom and bust cycles that contribute to biodiversity. Perhaps it’s snow geese, sand hill cranes, or oak tree acorns. Everything is connected, and the more of these connections we have,

[00:27:11] the stronger our ecosystems are. So get outside, get curious, and look at those cicadas with a new sense of awe and a deeper meaning.

[00:27:19] If you enjoyed today’s episode, would you do me a favor and just share it with three friends or different groups that you think would like it? Also be sure to check out Jumpstart Nature on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter @jumpstartnature.

[00:27:32] And the full interview with Dr. Chris Simon has been released on our companion podcast, Nature’s Archive.

[00:27:37] Nature’s Archive. Check it out and see you next time.

[00:27:40] Michael Hawk: Special thanks to Dr. Chris Simon, Dr. Gene Kritsky, Dr. Matt Kasson and Kevin Wiener for lending their time and expertise to this episode. Please check out cicadas.uconn.edu, Cicada Safari, and Kevin’s All Bugs Go To Kevin Facebook group and his YouTube channel. He promises to have fresh Cicada videos as they emerge in his neck of the woods. And make sure to report any encounters with that Cicada fungi too. Dr. Kasson, will be monitoring iNaturalist for those observations. Jumpstart nature was created, written and produced by me, Michael Hawk, our host and co-writers Griff Griffith. And thanks to Kat Hill for some additional editing help. Additional information is in the show notes at jumpstartnature.com/podcast. Thanks for listening.

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