Wildlife Corridors
To wildlife, corridors are important because they enable these creatures to move about for shelter, safety, and food.
To wildlife, corridors are important because they enable these creatures to move about for shelter, safety, and food.
This is a refrain being sung by many researchers as they contemplate a possible sediment deficit and how we can get it back.
My guest is Brenda Goeden, Sediment Program Manager with the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Please join us as we talk about what an incredible resource sediment is and why it is so valuable to the health of the bay.
Marc Holmes is Director of The Bay Institute’s Bay Restoration Program.
Bay Area environmental agencies and organizations are working together to design what they’re calling What is Flood Control 2.0.
This conversation took place with three colleagues at the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture.
Part of the objective of our program over the last 23 years is to get all of us involved. One way to do that is to volunteer with a local wetland or creek restoration organization.
This is Part 2 of our report on the relationship between San Francisco Bay and Canada’s Boreal Forest.