UCCE & Calaveras Big Trees State Park California Naturalist Course Fall 2015 Course Syllabus and Information

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UCCE & Calaveras Big Trees State Park California Naturalist Course Fall 2015 Course Syllabus and Information Lead Instructors/ Course Facilitators: Kim Ingram - email: kcingram@ucanr.edu Kim is a Natural Resources Community Outreach Education Specialist with UC Cooperative Extension and a certified California Naturalist. She has been working in the Sierras since 2007 on the Sierra Nevada Adaptive Management Project, the Sierra Nevada Watershed Ecosystem Enhancement Project, and the California Naturalist Program. Susie Kocher - email: sdkocher@ucanr.edu Susie is a Natural Resources Advisor with UC Cooperative Extension in the Central Sierra (El Dorado, Amador, Tuolumne and Calaveras Counties) and a registered professional forester. Course Instructors: Wayne Harrison email: wandw2@comcast.net Wayne is a retired California State Parks Senior Environmental Scientist. Wendy Harrison email: Wendy.Harrison@parks.ca.gov Wendy is an Interpreter I at Calaveras Big Trees State Park. Tapan Pathak email: tpathak@ucanr.edu Tapan is a Climate Change Adaptation Specialist at UC Merced, Sierra Nevada Research Institute. Phil Saksa email: psaksa@ucmerced.edu Phil is a research hydrologist and PhD candidate at UC Merced. Paul Ustach email: pustach@deltacollege.edu Paul is a professor of Biology at San Joaquin Delta College. Jeannette Warnert email: jewarnert@ucanr.edu Jeannette is a Public Information Representative for UC Division of Agriculture & Natural Resources and the Kearney Agriculture Research and Extension Center. Jeannette is also a certified California Naturalist. Glenn White - email: GWhite@tcsos.us Glenn is the project director for STEM-Tracks, Tuolumne County Superintendent of Schools Office. Course Description: The California Naturalist Program is a program developed by the University of California Cooperative Extension to improve environmental literacy and to foster a committed corps of volunteer naturalists and citizen scientists trained and ready to take an active role in natural resource conservation, education, and restoration. 1

Our goals are to provide training for adult environmental stewards through an adaptable outdoor and classroom curriculum that can be easily applied in a variety of settings, and engage adults in interactive learning that provides them with scientific literacy and critical thinking skills, a science curriculum, hands-on learning, communication training, and community service. The California Naturalist course will introduce you to the wonders of our local ecology and engage you in the stewardship of California s natural communities. The course will combine a science curriculum with guest presenters, field trips and project-based learning to immerse you in the natural world of the Calaveras forest. By the end of this course, participants will be able to: Understand what it means to be a naturalist Understand the abiotic, biotic and cultural factors that make California, mixed conifer and sequoia natural history and ecology unique Demonstrate skills in making and recording natural history observations in a field notebook and on inaturalist.org Demonstrate skills in communicating and interpreting natural resource information Apply knowledge of Central Sierra ecosystems to local and global environmental issues. Course Components: Guiding Philosophy The UCCE/ Calaveras Big Trees State Park California Naturalist Course is an integrated program with classroom lecture and discussion intertwined with field experiences. Course & Readings The course will be held on Friday evenings and Saturdays, with one Thursday evening, over a period of 5 weeks. The course will be hosted at Calaveras Big Trees State Park, unless otherwise noted. In preparation for lectures, all assigned readings from the California Naturalist Handbook should be completed before each course session where they appear on the syllabus. Each session will be a mix of lecture, discussion, eating and outdoor exploration. Dress appropriately for the weather you never know when the instructor may send everyone outside! Field Trips Field trips (see 4 below for dates) will be integrated into the Saturday sessions. We will meet at Calaveras Big Trees State Park, unless otherwise noted. Participants may not bring guests or children to any course meeting or field trip. Field trip instructions will be provided the week prior to the scheduled trip. Field Notebooks All participants are required to keep a field notebook during the course. Field notebooks may be checked by the instructor periodically during the course or at the end. We will be using these notebooks during course, on field trips and hopefully on your own time. Keeping a field notebook is one of the best ways of fostering continued learning and getting to know a place intimately. inaturalist Over the course of the California Naturalist course, each participant will be responsible for registering for an inaturalist account (http://www.inaturalist.org/) and adding at least 3 observations. We will introduce the inaturalist web tool later in the course. 2

Capstone Project Participants are required to complete a volunteer service project in one of four areas: Stewardship, Education/Interpretation, Citizen Science and Program Support. The Capstone project provides an opportunity for participants to integrate the in-course material with an applied work project that is done in conjunction with a natural resource agency or organization. Participants are encouraged to work in teams when appropriate. Participants will share their individual or group project the evening before or on graduation day. Presentations will be 5 minutes long per person (15 minutes for a 3 person group). A capstone project proposal form will be provided along with a list of approved project ideas from past California Naturalist course participants, and feedback as necessary. Participants who would like to propose a Capstone project that is not on the list may to do so. Attendance Participants must attend all course sessions. If a session is missed, the participant must complete make-up activities on their own time at the direction of the instructor. Please talk with the Lead Instructor if you will miss a course session. Only one course session can be missed. Homework Reading is assigned for each course meeting (check the course schedule below), based on the topic to be covered that day. Participants are expected to read the chapters assigned for that day before the course meeting times, so that the materials are more relevant as they are presented. There may be short quizzes or group exercises to reinforce the material in course. Volunteer management system (VMS): Participants will be provided an on-line account to track their volunteer hours, including hours spent on their Capstone project. Tracking volunteer hours is an essential way to prove the need for and impact of a program like the California Naturalist Program. Other Information Participants may opt to pay an additional $80 to receive four UC Davis Extension undergraduate academic credits upon course completion and certification. More information will be provided. Saturday sessions begin in the morning and end in the afternoon. Please bring a sack lunch and a water bottle. Participants and instructors may take turns providing snacks. There is a potluck celebration lunch scheduled for the last day. Required Items: The California Naturalist Handbook by Greg de Nevers, Deborah Stanger Edelman and Adina Merenlender (available at Epilog Books, or online) An e-mail account A field notebook for nature observations and drawings, pencil(s) Suggested, but not required: hand lens (10x), binoculars Recommended supplemental reading: Management of Giant Sequoias at Calaveras Big Trees State Park, Wayne Harrison: 1986 Field Guides An Island called California, Bakker, E., University of California Press: 1984 A Natural History of California, Schoenherr, A.A., University of California Press: 1992 Introduction to California Plant Life (California Natural History Guides, 69), Ornduff et al., UC Press: 2003 Trees and Shrubs of California (Calif. Natural History Guides 62), Stuart, Sawyer, UC Press: 2001 3

California Insects, Powell and Hogue, University of California Press: 1980 Mammals of California (California Natural History Guides, 66), Jameson and Peters, UC Press: 2004 The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Western North America, Sibley, D.A., Knopf Publishing: 2003 Ecological Perspectives: The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinction, Quammen, D., Scribner: 1997 The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt and the Fire that Saved America, Egan, T., Mariner Books: 2009 Fire in America: A Cultural History of Wildland and Rural Fire, Stephen Pyne 1997 Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California's Natural Resources, Anderson, M.K., University of California Press: 2005 In Full View: Three Ways of Seeing California Plants: Keator, G., Yamane, L., Lewis, A. Heyday Books & Headlands Cenger for the Arts: 2001 The Climate Fix, Pielke, R. Basic Books: 2011 4

California Naturalist Course Agenda Friday, September 11, 2015: (5:00pm 8:00pm = 3 classroom hours) Intro to each other and the program (60 min) Kim Ingram, Community Education Specialist, UC ANR and CA Naturalist Capstone intro (60 min) Kim Ingram Ch.1 review including worksheet (60 min) Kim Ingram Saturday, September 12, 2015: (8:30am 3:30pm = 3 classroom hours & 4 field hours) Review worksheet & general (60 min) Kim Ingram Geology, Climate & Soils presentation and Q&A (120 min) - Glen White, Project Director, STEM- TRACKS, Tuolumne County Superintendent of Schools Office Geology, climate & soils field trip (240 min) Glen White Friday, September 18, 2015: (5:00pm 8:00pm = 3 classroom hours) Intro to interpretation & communication (60 min) Wendy Harrison, Interpretation, Calaveras Big Trees State Park Giant Sequoia and Fire Ecology and Fire Management (60 min) Wayne Harrison Review worksheet and general (60 min) Susie Kocher, Forestry & Natural Resources Advisor, UC Central Sierra MCP, registered forester Saturday, September 19, 2015: (8:30am 3:30 pm= 3 classroom hours & 4 field hours) Forestry & working landscapes (60 min) Susie Kocher Interpretation in the field (60 min) Wendy Harrison Plants & Forestry presentation and Q&A (120 min) Tom Hofstra Plant & forest field trip (180 min) Susie Kocher, Wayne Harrison Thursday, September 24, 2015: (5:00pm 8:00pm = 3 classroom hours) Energy & Global Issues presentation and Q&A (120 min) Tapan Pathak, Specialist in Climate Adaptation in Agriculture, UC Merced Review worksheet & general (60 min) Kim Ingram Friday, October 2, 2015: (5:00pm 8:00pm = 3 classroom hours) Water presentation and Q&A (120 min) Phil Saksa, Research Hydrologist, UC Merced Review worksheet & general (60min) Kim Ingram Saturday, October 3, 2015: (8:30am 3:30pm = 2 classroom hours & 5 field hours) Water field trip (120 min) Phil Saksa Wildlife presentation and Q&A (120 min) - Paul Ustach, Professor of Biology, San Joaquin Delta College Wildlife in the field (60 min) Paul Ustach Working Landscapes: Range & water field trip (120 min) Friday, October 9, 2015: (5:00pm 8:00pm = 3 classroom hours) I naturalist (60 min) Jeannette Warnert, Public Information Rep. UC ANR/Kearney Ag. Field Station and CA Naturalist Capstones (90) - all General (30 min) Kim Ingram Saturday, October 10, 2015: (8:30am 12:30pm = 2 classroom hours & 2 field hours) INaturalist in the field and any capstones projects in the field (120 min) Jeannette Warnert Capstone projects (60 min) - all Evaluation and wrap up (60 min) Kim Ingram Final pot luck celebration - all 5