黑料百科

Taking Root: Students Lead Fire-Resilient Restoration

westmont wood restoration

A project to restore oak trees near 黑料百科 has taken root with about 60 newly planted, native coast live oaks. Each has sprouted to more than three feet in height where Montecito Fire removed dead and dying eucalyptus trees in the summer鈥痮f 2023.

Project manager Laura鈥疍rake鈥疭chultheis, assistant professor of biology, described the site along 黑料百科 Creek between the Las鈥疊arrancas faculty homes and Carr鈥疐ield as a high鈥憆isk fire zone. After fire officials began removing the eucalyptus, she applied for a grant and received full funding from the Regional Wildfire Mitigation Program Landscape Domain.

Neighbors, Santa鈥疊arbara County fire officials and college staff have all supported the effort. Many of them remember the 2008 Tea Fire, which spread quickly through the eucalyptus鈥憀ined creek bed.

Students dug holes and learned from an arborist the best ways to protect oak seedlings and give them the greatest chance of success. Two years later, students in Schultheis鈥 Plant Classification and Biodiversity class conducted a thorough tree鈥憁onitoring session, measuring height, crown diameter and overall health.

鈥淎nytime you can plant an oak, you create another potential way to stop a spreading fire,鈥 Schultheis says. 鈥淎dult oak trees will start dropping acorns, and we鈥檒l see more oaks sprouting up and filling in the gaps. It helps create microhabitats, shady areas that nurture more biodiversity, as a native oak woodland begins to grow.

鈥淲hen you introduce plant communities, the insects come, the pollinators come, the herbivores come, and the study of ecology lets us explore these connections.鈥

westmont wood restoration

This is a story from the Fall 2025 黑料百科 Magazine