Dozens of domestic rabbits roam through one San Jose neighborhood each night. They emerge at dusk, appearing on lawns and gardens and munching on rose and hibiscus flowers. Without intervention, just a couple of abandoned pet rabbits can quickly form colonies numbering in the hundreds.
Read MoreLatifat Apatira is a botanical nature printmaker based in the Bay Area. As a physician who nearly became a botanist, the power of her creativity lies at the intersection of her passions and identities. Describing herself first as a Muslim-woman, this identity punctuates all the others: artist, daughter, sister, Nigerian-American, educator, plant person, and botanical activist. The many themes that make up her life’s work—faith and spirituality, the rich history of nature printing, botany, ethnobotany, and art—come together to form the whole of her creative work.
Read MoreAround 9:00 p.m. during falcon fledging season, Craig Nikitas got a call from the San Francisco Fire Department asking him to come to Fire Station 35 on the pier. When he arrived, firefighters handed him a soaking-wet peregrine falcon fledgling in a box. She had been found grounded along the Embarcadero.
Read MoreIt’s ten minutes before sundown at the Yolo Bypass in Sacramento Valley. Corky Quirk, founder of NorCal Bats, is standing at the base of the west levee with her tour group as I-80 traffic rumbles across the causeway bridge overhead. Corky flips on her bat detector. The handheld device picks up the high-frequency soundwaves of bats’ echolocation calls and lowers the pitch to be within the range of human hearing.
Read MoreWaking up every two hours to feed an orphaned newborn bat pup, providing emergency maternal care for a hoary bat giving birth to breech twins, or grooming sleek bat fur with a mascara brush are all routine parts of life for JoEllen Arnold, a retired teacher, who is a bat "rehabber," and conservation advocate.
Read More