- Home
- News Grid
- Local News
- Green Hawk
- Business
- Politics
- School Zone
- Nonprofits
- Missing Pets
- Multimedia
- Arts
- Movies
- Outdoors
- Sports
- News Releases
- Columnists
- Blogs
- Opinions
- Classifieds
- Advertise
- Donate
- Partners
Road to Recovery Continues for Channel Islands National Park

It’s a balancing act restoring natural resources. Saving flora and fauna and protecting sensitive cultural sites involve a double-edged sword. It’s important to preserve those resources for future generations, but what’s the limit of our impact on those resources? The Channel Islands National Park has been doing that since the late 1980s, and March marks the 30th anniversary of America’s 40th national park.
The controversial eradications of black rats on Anacapa Island in 2002 and feral pigs on Santa Cruz Island between 2006 and 2008 were tough decisions to make, but overall the islands are benefitting from the removal of non-natives. Island hoppers today will find a fragile ecosystem well on the way to recovery, but Channel Islands National Park superintendent Russell Galipeau says ecological restorations need to continue through this decade.
“It’s about allowing natural processes to prevail,” said Galipeau, who has been superintendent of the archipelago since the summer of 2003. “We had to remove the stressors.
“What are we doing today to leave those resources unimpaired?”
By 2012, the park’s General Management Plan will be finished but Galipeau gave a preview of things to come on the chain. Now that the feral pigs are gone, the National Park Service and The Nature Conservancy are in the middle of ridding Santa Cruz Island of non-native flora, such as the fennel the pigs helped spread throughout the mountainous island. Scorpion Rock just off Santa Cruz is being revegetated. Ice plant on Anacapa is also in the process of being eliminated.
“By 2016 all the ice plant will be gone,” Galipeau said. “Most of it is getting done with volunteers, but we have to put something back, so we’ll have a small nursery on Anacapa with natives.”
The park service will continue to monitor kelp forests off all the islands, and possibly develop new campgrounds at Prisoners Harbor on Santa Cruz and on Santa Rosa Island. The airstrip on San Miguel Island needs improvements. There’s also talk of an interpretive area near the historic Vail & Vickers Ranch on Santa Rosa, and all the elk and deer on the windswept island are to be removed by the end of 2011.
With the chain’s ranching era behind it, the park service will begin restricting the use of old cattle roads where even park personnel won’t be allowed to go.
“We want to keep our footprint fairly small,” Galipeau said.
— Noozhawk contributor and local freelance writer Chuck Graham is editor of Deep magazine.
Comments
Noozhawk's comments are moderated, but by posting here you accept your responsibility to follow our rules as part of Noozhawk's shared online community. Please keep your comments civil and helpful. Don't attack other readers personally, and do not use vulgar, abusive or discriminatory language. Use the "Report Abuse" link if a comment violates these standards or our Terms of Use.
» on 03.15.10 @ 09:45 AM
Way to go Park Service!! I’m sure I’ll be enjoying the Channel Island more and more over the coming years.
You don't have permission to flag this entry.
» on 03.15.10 @ 09:58 AM
It states in the article that volunteers are being used to get rid of the iceplant on the island. How would one become a volunteer on this project?
You don't have permission to flag this entry.
» on 03.17.10 @ 02:45 PM
Nice article. Anyone who’s never been out to the Park is missing something. A boat
ride out there when the whales are migrating is an amazing sight in itself.
The fellow who is appealing the Milpas crosswalk at De la Guerra also cost the
Park Service big bucks a few years ago, when he appealed efforts to remove rats that had invaded Anacapa Island.
That federal tax money (our money) wasted dealing with him could have been put to better use helping spruce up the National Park.
You don't have permission to flag this entry.
» on 03.27.10 @ 09:50 AM
To volunteer for Channel Islands restoration projects, you could call the National Park Visitors Center in Ventura Harbor (805) 658-5733 - Clare Fritzsche is very helpful. Or contact Cindy Kimmick at Channel Islands Restoration
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Yes, please get involved with helping to restore our Channel Islands!
You don't have permission to flag this entry.
More Local News »
Paradise Lost at Red Rock? Longtime Road Closure Limits Recreational Access
Reduced funding, limited staffing and several lawsuits have contributed to a backlog of work for the Los Padres National Forest
Bald Eagle Reality Show Plays Out on Channel Islands
Webcam monitors four pairs nesting on Santa Cruz Island, and Anacapa Island hosts its first nest in more than 60 years
Smooth Seas Make Channel Crossing a Breeze for Intrepid Kayaker
As luck would have it, it was a swell day for a solo paddle adventure from Santa Rosa Island to Santa Cruz Island to Carpinteria
Cachuma Lake Nature Activities for February
From Passport to Santa Barbara, walks and lake cruises, there are many ways to explore the area
California Condor Population Reaches Recovery Milestone
After near-extinction, 100 of the birds — of all ages — are now soaring in the wild, conservation officials say
Weather: Fair 57.0º
Search Noozhawk »



