Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
California’s legendary Highway 1 is losing its climate fight. Can it be saved?
California’s coastal Highway 1 has always looked precarious, clinging to cliffs that crumble into the Pacific and skirting ...
Elkhorn Slough, a coastal wetland visible from the Highway 1 bridge in Moss Landing, CA is a breeding ground for many ocean species and a safe haven and food source for sea otters and other marine ...
Elkhorn Slough, a coastal wetland visible from the Highway 1 bridge in Moss Landing is a breeding ground for many ocean species and a safe haven and food source for sea otters and other marine ...
Elkhorn Slough Foundation Executive Director Mark Silberstein is retiring after 42 years leading a team that restores and nurtures a coastal wetland that’s productive despite the forces arrayed ...
Thanks to funding support from UC Santa Cruz’s Center for Coastal Climate Resilience (CCCR) and collaborative expertise from ITS Research Computing, the campus is about to launch “Elkhorn,” an ...
Toxic metals in Elkhorn Slough after battery fire, 'Protect Salinas Renters' investigation concludes
The Moss Landing power plant is right next to Elkhorn Slough, a protected marine estuary. In today's newscast, newly published research confirms the January battery fire in Moss Landing released toxic ...
Though the weather may be unpredictable, there are still many opportunities to get out and be active during December, with activities on the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, CDFW, calendar.
What’s up, Lookout friends? Wednesday, Dec. 3, is here, and the Santa Cruz County forecast is again mostly sunny skies and temperatures peaking in the low 60s, with a beach hazards statement in effect ...
Elkhorn and staghorn coral are now functionally extinct around the state, researchers say, meaning they no longer play any significant role in their ecosystem. By Catrin Einhorn After a searing ocean ...
Gena Bentall paddled her kayak deep into Elkhorn Slough on the lookout for the flip of a tail or the bob of a head. About a mile in, sea otters bobbed in the water everywhere. Some dove under the ...
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