Research Highlights at the GIIF
Cal Student Research Highlights

Undergrad research goes tropical
Every fall, the undergraduate students in the course, Biology and Geology
of Tropical Islands (ESPM C107), travel to the island of Moorea in
French Polynesia for nine weeks to learn first-hand about tropical
island ecology and to carry out semester-long research projects. The
GIIF held a day-long workshop, training the students on GPS and GIS
so that they could use the technologies for their studies abroad (Fig.
1). Lori LaRue (Fig. 2), 4th year Conservation
Resources Studies major,
looked at sediment changes in Moorea’s Temae Estuary, to understand
ecological changes from development around the estuary. She collected
GPS locations at 1000+ soil plots and interpolated surfaces and created
distribution maps of the estuary’s bathymetry (depth) and sediment
distribution. Zachary Hanna, 4th year Molecular
Environmental Biology major, studied the distribution and dispersal of the native tree Fagraea
berteroana. As part of his study, he collected GPS points of the
tree locations across Moorea and calculated tree density which he then
correlated to environmental factors (slope and aspect). The GIIF is
building a webmap of data collected by this year’s students for
future classes to use to analyze change.
Mapping threatened species habitat
Orien Richmond, a 3rd year PhD student in the Environmental
Science, Policy, and Management Department, is analyzing IKONOS satellite
imagery to find and map wetland habitat for metapopulation studies
of
the California Black Rail, a threatened subspecies in California. While
the Black Rail occurs throughout the San Francisco Bay-Delta Region,
populations were recently discovered (in 1994) in Yuba and Nevada Counties
in the Sierra Nevada foothills. He is targeting Black Rail habitat, patches
of freshwater emergent wetland consisting of cattail (Typha spp.), rush (Juncus spp.),
and bulrush (Scirpus spp.), to understand how patch size and
patch isolation affect local colonization and extinction dynamics (Fig.
3). In addition, he is trying to map habitat characteristics of the wetland
patches that might affect metapopulation dynamics and viability, including
density of certain emergent plant species and the proportion of different
wetland cover classes.
California’s historical vegetation
John Dingman, Undergrad Forestry Honors Student and SPUR grant recipient,
is working on relocating historic plots from the California vegetation
Type Mapping (VTM) project around the Bay Area, including Mount Diablo
State Park, CA. John is examining how land use has impacted vegetation
change over time, and the VTM historic database is critical in this
work (http://vtm.berkeley.edu). After obtaining research permits to
conduct research on State Parks, John collected high spatial resolution
satellite imagery and digital elevation models from various GIS databases
for his study areas. At each VTM plots(Fig. 4), he collects tree species,
DBH, height, species density, age and fire history data.