Researchers studying the biodiversity
of California's Central Coast gathered at UCSC on February
6, 2004, for an all-day workshop hosted by the STEPS Institute
for Innovation in Environmental Research. Participants included
researchers in a range of disciplines at UCSC, as well as representatives
of federal and state agencies and nongovernmental organizations.

The Santa Lucia Range, rising steeply from the Big Sur coast, is
one of the most environmentally complex and biologically rich areas
of the state. As
part of a project called the Santa Lucia Gradient Study (SLGS), the STEPS Institute
is helping to coordinate a network of researchers, managers, and policy makers
concerned with issues of biodiversity along the Central Coast.
The SLGS project focuses especially on patterns of biological diversity in
the environmentally complex area extending from the coastal waters of Big
Sur, across the Santa Lucia Range, to the Carmel Valley. Speakers at the
workshop
discussed a wide range of research efforts on the rapidly changing diversity
of fish, birds, mammals, insects, and plants along the Central Coast.
John
Thompson, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and director of the
STEPS Insitute, described the institute's progress on compiling a "meta-database" of
Central Coast biodiversity research. The meta-database is essentially a database
of databases--it doesn't hold any data, but aims to provide a comprehensive
source of information about the data that are available and where they can
be found. "There is a lot of valuable data out there, and it is not necessarily
on someone's computer. It could be on loose-leaf notebooks from the 1920s," Thompson
said.
Phillip Hoos, a staff researcher at
STEPS who is managing the meta-database project, has been traveling
up and down the coast visiting researchers and going through
file drawers and storerooms, sometimes turning up forgotten
troves of information, Thompson said. "It's remarkable
how little access there is to all the data out there. What
we are doing is pretty simple, but this kind of information
has been almost impossible to find in one place. We're just
getting started on the meta-database, and it is already being
used by people in the SLGS group," he said.The SLGS project
is part of the STEPS Institute Genes to Ecoregions Initiative,
which is facilitating interdisciplinary collaborations among
researchers, policy makers, and managers working on biodiversity
issues.
The goal of the initiative is to link
innovative ecological and molecular research questions and
methods with the needs of policy makers and managers. The project
was launched at a previous STEPS workshop held last year. Thompson
said that both workshops have led to new collaborations among
the participants. The February 6 workshop included representatives
from the U.S. Forest Service, National Marine Fisheries Service,
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, The Nature Conservancy,
Wildlife Conservation Society, UC Berkeley, Elkhorn Slough
Foundation, Big Sur Land Trust, Santa Lucia Conservancy, and
Big Sur Ornithology, among others.
The STEPS Institute was established
at UCSC in 2002, funded by a gift from UCSC alumnus Gordon
Ringold and his wife, Tanya Zarucki. The institute is leading
a campuswide effort to facilitate and strengthen interdisciplinary
collaboration among UCSC environmental researchers and other
researchers, policy makers, and managers throughout the region
and state. Researchers studying the biodiversity of California's
Central Coast gathered at UCSC on February 6 for an all-day
workshop hosted by the STEPS Institute for Innovation in Environmental
Research. Participants included researchers in a range of disciplines
at UCSC, as well as representatives of federal and state agencies
and nongovernmental organizations.
|