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Tidepooling with visitors

Posted on 2020-01-132023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

It has been a while since I’ve spent any time in the intertidal. There isn’t really any reason for this, other than a reluctance to venture out in the afternoon wind and have to fight encroaching darkness. There’s also the fact that I much prefer the morning low tides, which we’ll have in the spring….

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Coming in for a landing

Posted on 2019-12-072023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

It’s no secret that I love pelicans. I love watching them soar low over the waves, where they are truly in their element. I love watching them plunge from the air into the water and then bob right back to the surface, because unlike their cormorant relatives, pelicans can’t fly underwater. And I love watching…

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Now you see me, now you don’t

Posted on 2019-11-302023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

The intertidal sculpins are delightful little fish with lots of personality. They’re really fun to watch, if you have the patience to sit still for a while and let them do their thing. A sculpin’s best defense is to not be seen, so their first instinct is to freeze where they are. Then, if a…

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Taking wing at a monarch sanctuary

Posted on 2019-11-112023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Autumn is migration season in California. We all know that, in the northern hemisphere, birds fly south for the winter and return north for the summer. And indeed, this is a very good time to go bird watching along the Pacific Flyway, as migrating birds stop to rest and feed at places such as Elkhorn…

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Things living and dead

Posted on 2019-11-082023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Sometimes dead things can be very informative. Not in the same way as their living counterparts, of course, but there are times when observing a dead specimen reveals details that cannot easily be discerned when the creature is alive. For example, most living birds don’t let you get a close look at their feet. Dead…

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If at first you don’t succeed

Posted on 2019-10-312023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

People call them air rats or trash birds, but I really like gulls. Especially the western gull (Larus occidentalis), known colloquially among birders as the WEGU. Yes, gulls eat garbage, but that’s only because humans are so good at making garbage and leaving it all over the place. Other gulls may travel quite far inland–in…

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Field trip to MBARI

Posted on 2019-10-282023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Last Wednesday, 23 October 2019, my marine biology students and I visited the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) in Moss Landing. We were led through the facilities by Kim Fulton-Bennett, the PR officer. MBARI isn’t generally open to the public, so this was a rare opportunity to peek behind the scenes at what goes…

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A world beneath your feet

Posted on 2019-10-102023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

When we stop to marvel at the wonders of the natural world, we usually forget about all the life that is going on that we don’t get to see. But there is a lot happening in places we forget to look. For example, any soil is an entire ecosystem, containing a variety of small and…

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Autumn at the slough

Posted on 2019-09-282023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

This time of year is when California earns its nickname as the Golden State. It isn’t only the dried vegetation blanketing the hillsides. The light itself takes on a golden hue, especially in the morning and evening when the sun is low on the horizon. Photographers call the time periods just after sunrise and just…

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Speaking engagement

Posted on 2019-09-252019-09-25 by Allison J. Gong

My next public speaking appearance is coming up!

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