McLaughlin Natural Reserve

At 2,800 hectares (7,050 acres), the McLaughlin Natural Reserve is one of the NRS's largest sites, and it is one of only a few sites in California that protects unusual serpentine habitats for research and teaching. The McLaughlin Reserve encompasses several geologic formations, two watersheds (Putah and Cache Creeks), and a variety of vegetation that includes oak woodlands, nonserpentine chaparral, serpentine chaparral, and grasslands. Overlain on this natural diversity is a mosaic of human land-use, yielding grazed and ungrazed grasslands, relatively pristine habitats, and reclaimed mining areas. Surrounding the reserve are 30,000 hectares (75,000 acres) of accessible public land managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

Baseline data

The Homestake Mining Company has collected baseline data on the site's geology, soils, hydrology, air and water quality, archaeology, and terrestrial and aquatic ecology; ongoing environmental monitoring adds to the computer database.

Field courses

The site is visited by university courses in plant ecology, California floristics, geology, and creative writing.

Expanded facilities

Establishment of the reserve as an environmental-research field station is part of the long-term reclamation plan for the gold mine.

Selected Research

  • Serpentine habitats: Dynamics and succession of serpentine chaparral; the spread of exotic grasses on serpentine.
  • Ant studies: Ant specificity to unique isolated habitats; determinants of polymorphism and foraging strategies in ants.
  • Host-association effect on herbivory of the Indian paintbrush species.
  • Ecological and evolutionary responses to habitat mosaics: integrating across spatial and temporal hierarchies of plant biodiversity.




Contact Information
Paul Aigner and Cathy Koehler
Resident Directors
McLaughlin Reserve
26775 Morgan Valley Road
Lower Lake, CA 95457
Phone: 707-995-9005
mclaughlin@ucdavis.edu


McLaughlin Website

Location
Napa, Lake, and Yolo Counties, northwest of Davis; two-hours from Davis campus.
Google Map


Facilities
Facilities: 6000-ft2 field station with 23 beds, classroom, lab, greenhouse, Wi- Fi, computer, kitchen, showers, laundry, gym, storage space, and shop space .


Databases
Plant List
Natural History Handbook with species lists; meteorological, air quality, water quality, and aquatic ecology databases available in various formats.


Personnel
One Resident Director position (shared by Paul and Cathy) and one Reserve Steward (Rhett Woerly).


Size
2,853 ha (7,050 acres)


Elevation
379 - 888 m (1,245 - 2,914 ft.)


Average Precipitation
75.7 cm (29.8 in.) per year.


Average Temperatures
July: 24.6ºC (76.2ºF)
January: 7.3ºC (45.2ºF)


© University of California Regents 1994 - 2013.