Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve

The Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve is a 483 hectares (1,190 acres)[1] nature preserve and biological field station formally established as a reserve in 1973.[2][3] The biological preserve is owned by Stanford University, and is located at 37.408°N 122.2275°W / 37.408; -122.2275[4] south of Sand Hill Road and west of Interstate 280 in Portola Valley, San Mateo County, California. It is used by students, researchers, and docents to conduct biology research, and teach the community about the importance of that research. The preserve encompasses Jasper Ridge and Searsville Lake (actually a reservoir) and the upper reaches of San Francisquito Creek, along with the latter's Corte Madera Creek and Bear Creek tributaries.

Douglas Fir rises above Coast Live Oak/Pacific Madrone forest on northeast peak of Jasper Ridge - viewed from Sandhill Road
Looking south across Searsville Reservoir from the dam on Corte Madera Creek and on to Russian Ridge
Ohlone mortars and pestles found at Jasper Ridge

Geology

Coast Redwoods in San Francisquito Creek valley below Searsville Dam
Columbia Tiger Lilies (Lilium columbianum) in San Francisquito Creek valley below Searsville Dam

Jasper Ridge is part of the foothills northeast of the Santa Cruz Mountains and is bounded by San Francisquito Creek, Corte Madera Creek and Los Trancos Creek, although the preserve occupies only the northwestern half of the ridge. The hilly mass runs about ten kilometers from northwest to southeast and about half that in width.[5]

Serpentine (Serpentinite) is the California State Rock. It was formed from deep sea or mantle rocks. This rock was squeezed toward the surface by tectonic plate movement, and thus feels greasy, as it has been polished over millions of years. Graywacke Sandstone after crossing Leonard's Bridge. This sandstone was part of the Franciscan formation 138 million years ago. Some rocks found at the preserve include: Greenstone, Chert, Serpentinite, Sandstone.

Ecology

In 1922, Cooper asserted that Jasper Ridge was historically chaparral, and cleared in the nineteenth century to open grasslands, primarily Eurasian wild oats (Avena fatua and Avena barbata).[5] However much of the grassland has been replaced by various oaks, especially Coast Live Oak (Quercus agrifolia), and Pacific Madrone (Arbutus menziesii). More recently, the oak/madrone forest is being succeeded by specimens of large Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) as in the image above. In addition there are several groves of second growth Coast Redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) in the preserve, some in large "fairy rings" indicating that trees of immense girth were cut down in the nineteenth century.

Academic studies

Numerous academic studies and ecological experiments are conducted at Jasper Ridge.

Global change experiment

The Global Change Experiment studies the response of California annual grassland to global change, including elevated atmospheric CO2, temperature, altered precipitation, and increased nitrogen deposition.

Argentine ant invasion

This project studies and tracks the Argentine ants, an invasive species.

Bat monitoring

A station near the lake monitors bats at night, by converting and recording bat sounds (ultrasonic echolocation).

gollark: Also CGNAT now.
gollark: Like I said, it's not really very hard to do that (at least at a small scale, making stuff run with the volume of data Facebook deals with is a different issue), the hurdles are more, er, social and possibly legal.
gollark: The average person really does not want to do anything remotely complicated with a computer, which is problematic, and it doesn't really *help* that a bunch of stuff (down to the balance of upload/download speeds available on home network connections) on the internet is set up now to encourage using big walled gardens and discourage running your own stuff.
gollark: Well, you can't easily, which is the problem.
gollark: Because it's run by a bunch of individuals or smaller groups and can be networked together.

See also

References

  1. "About the Preserve". Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve. Stanford University. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  2. "History". Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve. Stanford University. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  3. Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve Annual Report 2009-10 (Report). Stanford University School of Humanities and Sciences. 2010. Retrieved 2011-07-24.
  4. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve
  5. William Skinner Cooper (1922). The broad-sclerophyll vegetation of California: an ecological study of the chaparral and its related communities. The Carnegie Institution of Washington. p. 31. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
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