California Native Plant Society – Mount Lassen Chapter

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Climate Change Adaptation: What We Can Learn from Traditional Ecological Knowledge

Virtual

This presentation, hosted by the Mount Lassen Chapter of the California Native Plant Society, will address how Traditional Ecological Knowledge informs future climate adaptation, based on California’s long cycles of drought, fires and floods, and how native plants and ecosystems figure into climate mitigation before and after disasters. Ali Meders-Knight will be using a case

Climate Change Adaptation: What We Can Learn from Traditional Ecological Knowledge

Virtual

This presentation, hosted by the Mount Lassen Chapter of the California Native Plant Society, will address how Traditional Ecological Knowledge informs future climate adaptation, based on California’s long cycles of drought, fires and floods, and how native plants and ecosystems figure into climate mitigation before and after disasters. Ali Meders-Knight will be using a case

Climate Change Adaptation: What We Can Learn from Traditional Ecological Knowledge

Virtual

This presentation, hosted by the Mount Lassen Chapter of the California Native Plant Society, will address how Traditional Ecological Knowledge informs future climate adaptation, based on California’s long cycles of drought, fires and floods, and how native plants and ecosystems figure into climate mitigation before and after disasters. Ali Meders-Knight will be using a case

Habitat Gardening In Fire Prone Landscapes

Zoom webinar

Destructive wildfires are becoming larger, hotter, and more frequent. Since 2000, an average of 7.1 million acres have burned across the US, more than double the average acreage that burned in the 1990s. In 2020, wildfires burned 10.3 million acres in the US, and roughly 60% was in California (> 4 million acres), Oregon (>

Habitat Gardening In Fire Prone Landscapes

Zoom webinar

Destructive wildfires are becoming larger, hotter, and more frequent. Since 2000, an average of 7.1 million acres have burned across the US, more than double the average acreage that burned in the 1990s. In 2020, wildfires burned 10.3 million acres in the US, and roughly 60% was in California (> 4 million acres), Oregon (>

Habitat Gardening In Fire Prone Landscapes

Zoom webinar

Destructive wildfires are becoming larger, hotter, and more frequent. Since 2000, an average of 7.1 million acres have burned across the US, more than double the average acreage that burned in the 1990s. In 2020, wildfires burned 10.3 million acres in the US, and roughly 60% was in California (> 4 million acres), Oregon (>