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| Dawson Los Monos Canyon Reserve |
Flowing through the bottom of the Dawson Los Monos Canyon Reserve is Agua Hedionda Creek, one of the few perennial streams in Southern California, as it winds its way through the San Diego county foothills to the Pacific Ocean. Along the stream banks of the canyon floor grows a lush riparian woodland, which gives way to dense chaparral spreading up the steep north- and south-facing slopes. The wide upper canyon opens out onto old pastures of introduced annual grasses, the result of a century of grazing. Other reserve habitats, some of which were once common throughout Southern California, include coast live oak woodland, inland sage scrub, and a mixed grassland of native bunchgrasses and introduced annuals. Downstream from the reserve's western boundary lie the coastal wetlands of the Agua Hedionda Lagoon, which are preserved through state and federal legislation. These neighboring protected lands enable the movement of species between open spaces, which in turn encourages diversity and helps keep the reserve from becoming an isolated natural island in this growing region. The varied landscape of Los Monos Canyon supports a rich fauna, with more than 75 species of birds, including several pairs of nesting black-shouldered kites.
Restoration Ecology
Stream bank restoration.
Fire Ecology
Old-growth and postburn chaparral monitored since a 1982 fire.
Field Courses
Site visits by university courses in ecology, human biology, and natural history; facilities are expanding to enhance teaching use.
Public outreach
The San Diego Natural History Museum collects plant specimens.
Selected Research
- The effects of floral predation on the pollination biology and reproductive success of Yucca whipplei.
- Parasite diversity of small mammals in fragmented areas.
- Suitability of soils and habitat types for the federally endangered Pacific pocket mouse.
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