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For
a visual tour of the Preserve please visit one of the links
below:
360
degree Quicktime interactive tour
A flash
slide show of random images by an LMC photography student
Download
free players and enjoy using the internet!
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the flash
plugin?
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the quicktime plugin?
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The
LMC Nature Preserve is a Habitat for Wildlife and Learning Students
in Christine Hagelin's Environmental
Biology and General Biology classes. They have been working
for several years planting California native plants on a one acre site
at Los Medanos
College. The plants along with a pond provide a home for wildlife like
the monarch butterfly and the Anna's hummingbird.
The
LMC Nature Preserve recently was certified as a Schoolyard Habitat
for wildlife by the National Wildlife Federation. "This
habitat is certified in the National Wildlife Federation's worldwide
network of habitat-based learning sites. As a result of this school
community's environmentally responsible planning, landscaping, and gardening,
a habitat
has been created that invites and supports wildlife and learning."
This
national certification program certifies schools which provide
the four components for wildlife: food, water, cover, and places to
raise young.
There are currently over 65 species of native plants growing on
the site. Most of them tolerate clay soils, intense summer heat, and
drought. They
are therefore quite suitable for both residential and large-scale
landscapes.
Fertilizer,
when needed, is provided by the compost made on site with
leaves and grass from the campus. One former student, Jennifer
Garcia, "especially
liked going to the Nature Preserve and learning new things like
making compost and what makes the compost heat up." Wood chips
as a mulch have helped to control non-native weeds without the
use of toxic herbicides.
Native plants provide a habitat for insects, both prey and
predator that create balanced insect populations so that harsh
pesticides are not needed. Plants are put in the ground during
the fall so the winter
rains can allow the plants' roots to reach deep into the soil.
For the first summer, drip irrigation is installed to help the
plants survive
California's dry conditions. Once established, most of these
California native plants don't need supplemental water, thus
showing their drought-tolerant
feature. The pond provides a water source for birds as well as
a place for dragonflies to lay their eggs. Native stickleback
fish control any
mosquito larvae!
The
toolshed was completed in 1999 with both students and professional
builders in a course titled: Straw-Bale
Construction
and the Environmental Implications of Building. It is unique
in that it is made of rice straw bales that were stacked on
end, wired together,
and cement plastered. "Rainwater from the roof is collected
in salvaged plastic barrels for irrigation in the Nature Preserve," wrote
Martin Hammer, the architect of the building. Photovoltaic
shingles on the roof
power lights and the automatic drip irrigation system. Chris
Coelho, a former student and now UC Davis graduate said, " It
was learning how to build it (straw bale shed) as well as learning
about other alternative
ways to construct buildings." The building was recently
on the cover of The Last Straw, an international journal of
straw bale and natural
building. Future goals of the Preserve, according to Christine
Hagelin include... "placing supplemental bird feeders,
providing additional water sources, and serving as a demonstration
site
for the community
to landscape with California native plants that enhances wildlife." |
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