A Summary of My Presentations

Below is a list of my presentations, which I can deliver either as illustrated lectures (powerpoints) or talks (without electronic images).  “Secrets of the Oak Woodlands” –– California’s Sierra Nevada mountains, towering redwoods, and rocky shorelines have historically attracted far more attention than its oak woodlands. But a close look at our state’s most widespread and wildlife-rich forests reveals an astonishing array of fascinating organisms and co-evolutionary relationships. As I share stories about some of my favorite species, we will crawl through woodrat houses, undulate in mating balls with newts, gaze at the sky through the third eye of a western fence lizard, and pollinate manzanita in middle C. We might also fight with acorn woodpeckers for breeding vacancies and join … Read more…

Fremontia Review

Secrets of the Oak Woodlands: Plants and Animals Among California’s Oaks by Kate Marianchild. 2014. Heyday Books, Berkeley, CA. 192 pages. $18.00. ISBN# 978-1-59714-262-5. Published in Fremontia, Vol. 43, No. 1, January, 2015. Fremontia is the journal of the California Native Plant Society. A wide range of nature enthusiasts will enjoy Kate Marianchild’s informative and well-balanced natural history book. Secrets of the Oak Woodlands provides insightful ecological life histories of prominent plants and animals living and interacting in one of our state’s essential natural communities. The organization and layout is well designed for naturalists who want to quickly prep for their next outing. As one reads through the text it’s easy to connect the ecological dots because all of the species names described in the … Read more…

California buckeye chapter

  Secrets of the Oak Woodlands: Plants and Animals among California’s Oaks   Excerpts from the California buckeye chapter   “California buckeyes unfurl their soft, many-fingered leaves in late winter and early spring, bringing luminous green cheer to landscapes still clad in somber grays. In May and June they again brighten our hillsides and canyons by transforming into giant flower candelabras, and in fall their seeds—the largest produced by any California native plant—droop like exotic testicular ornaments from bare silvery branches. The seed husks later crack open, allowing glossy brown “bucks’ eyes” to peek out between thick greenish lids. In winter, sculptural trunks adorned with moss and colorful lichens curve skyward while festoons of light green lace lichen dangle from … Read more…

Newt chapter

Excerpts from the California newt chapter   Three dead hunters  “In the predawn coolness of a fall day around 1950, a hunter in a campsite somewhere in Oregon’s Coast Range walked to a stream with an empty coffeepot. After scooping up water in the darkness and walking back to camp, he set the pot on the grill, added coffee grounds, and boiled the coffee. As the sky slowly lightened, he poured three cups, handed one to each of his two companions, and saved the third for himself. While sipping their coffee, the men began to notice tingling in their lips and hands. Soon they were vomiting, and within thirty minutes all three hunters were dead. When hikers found them two … Read more…

California quail chapter

Secrets of the Oak Woodlands: Plants and Animals among California’s Oaks by Kate Marianchild     Excerpts from the California quail chapter   Whrrrr! In the dimming shadows of dusk a covey of California quail explodes into flight, foiling the dinner plan of a stalking bobcat. The thirty-odd birds fly a dozen feet and land on the low branches of a live oak, murmuring to each other until the cat has wandered off. With heavy bodies and strong legs, quail are designed more for life on the ground than for flight. They rarely fly farther than the nearest tree or shrub when escaping from danger. Hunted for millions of years by hawks, snakes, and mammals—including humans for the last twelve … Read more…

California sister chapter

  Secrets of the Oak Woodlands: Plants and Animals among California’s Oaks by Kate Marianchild   Excerpts from the California sister chapter   “The first time I see a California sister butterfly flutter by each spring, my heart flutters a bit too. These are the most colorful of our early spring “flying flowers” and their appearance reassures me that life in the oak woodlands is gliding along much as it has for millennia. It means female butterflies laid their eggs late the previous summer or fall, caterpillars hatched and ate oak leaves, and just before winter the caterpillars built nests to protect themselves from the cold. ” Camouflage, anti-freeze “Sisters lay green eggs singly on the upper edges of the … Read more…

Coyote chapter

Secrets of the Oak Woodlands: Plants and Animals among California’s Oaks by Kate Marianchild   Excerpts from the coyote chapter   “The first time I slept in my yurt, a cacophony of yips and howls sliced the night, sailing through my open window from a point about twenty stone’s throws away. Twelve years later I still get goose bumps when I hear coyotes. Their crooning carries me back along moonlit trails toward a primal wildness I long to rejoin. I want to sit skin-to-fur with the “song dogs,” muzzle raised, howling to their eerie harmonies. Coyotes are keystone carnivores who keep their local ecosystems healthy by controlling populations of small plant-eating and nest-raiding mammals. They also strengthen populations of deer … Read more…

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