
Left alone by humans, wildlife returns to Los Angeles' Eaton Fire burn area
Behind the remains of a town scorched by fire, the foothills are lush with new green and filled with birdsong.
Wildlife is returning to the Eaton Fire burn area and scientists are closely tracking it four months after the Los Angeles area wildfires tore through the Angeles National Forest and destroyed hundreds of homes and businesses in Altadena.
Trail cameras installed by a group of volunteers documented the first mountain lion back in the area March 26. It was seen again as recently as two nights ago.
'My first inclination was to share that with people who have lost so much during this fire and our community in Altadena, because it's a sign of hope that nature's returning, that nature's resilient,' said Kristen Ochoa, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, medical school leading the effort.
Ochoa, a long-time resident of Southern California, first began documenting the plants and animals that live in the area known as the Chaney Trail Corridor in July 2024. She founded the Chaney Trail Corridor Project and began uploading observations on iNaturalist, a volunteer-driven network of naturalists and citizen scientists that maps and shares documentation of biodiversity across the globe.
Located right behind Altadena, with a trailhead only a mile (1.6 kilometers) up the road from neighborhoods that were decimated during the fires, the privately-owned area adjacent to Angeles National Forest land was slated for sale and development into a sports complex. Ochoa and other volunteers set up a network of trail cameras to showcase the biodiversity of the area and take 'inventory of everything that was valuable.'
Much of the land was charred and barren after the fires, and the group also lost all of its cameras, watching as photos of the flames were transmitted before they went dark. But less than two months after the start of the fires, Ochoa was able to go back out and install new ones to start documenting the landscape's recovery.
Left alone by humans, wildlife returns to the Eaton Fire burn area.
'The thing I really remember is coming here right after the fire — there was so much birdsong,' Ochoa said.
Many volunteers with the group are local residents who lost their homes and have told Ochoa that witnessing nature's recovery in the area has brought hope to them as well.
While the fires burned aggressively, they also burned unevenly, leaving patches of trees and a small oasis of greenery surrounding a stream untouched. Animals were able to seek refuge there while the rest of their homes burned.
They did not come across any deceased animals, she said, but there were reports of an injured bear and deer.
The heavy rain that came in the weeks after the fires has helped with a quick recovery.
On a recent Wednesday morning, Ochoa pointed out several charred San Gabriel oak trees — only found in Southern California — that had rampant green growth around their base.
The 'crown sprouting' comes from having deep and developed root systems that have helped the trees survive for hundreds of years, Ochoa said.
An aggressive bloom of yellow mustard flowers, an invasive species, has also taken root on the hillsides, potentially crowding out native plants like the California sage brush and wild cucumber — a source of food for ground squirrels.
The group is partnering with local scientists at UCLA to do research on how bats and birds have fared after the fires as well.
As she installed a newly donated trail camera, she pointed out bobcat scat and fresh deer tracks on a ridge that had burned just months before.
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Vancouver Sun
29-05-2025
- Vancouver Sun
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The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. The study is the first to use a 'within-person' approach, meaning researchers tracked changes over time in each child, and not between kids. 'There has been ongoing debate about whether social media contributes to depression or simply reflects underlying depressive symptoms,' lead author Dr. Jason Nagata, an associate professor in the department of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, said in a background news release. 'These findings provide evidence that social media may be contributing to the development of depressive symptoms.' It's not clear why. However, adolescence can make for a 'critical period of vulnerability during which social media exposure may have lasting implications for mental health,' the researchers wrote. 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Winnipeg Free Press
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- Winnipeg Free Press
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Winnipeg Free Press
01-05-2025
- Winnipeg Free Press
Scientists once thought only humans could bob to music. Ronan the sea lion helped prove them wrong
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