Nathan Danielโexecutive director of Truckee Meadows Parks Foundationโand the rest of the TMPF team are preparing for the first of five data collection projects called mini bioblitzes, which are designed to document biodiversity in Truckee Meadows parks. The first bioblitz takes place from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Jan. 16, at Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Park, 305 Coretta Way.
Tell me about how the bioblitz will work.
Folks will show up whenever they want. Itโs open to the families, the public, anyone. And we will help โฆ those folks go out and help us identify every single species of living thing in the park. โฆ Itโs a mini bioblitz because we are not necessarily going to identify to species, everything. Thatโs tough. That takes some experts, especially when youโre talking about insects. But we will identify as best we can. And the idea is we do this every year, and โฆ itโs a way to judge the health of the park. Weโre actually starting a whole series of bioblitzes with Washoe County this year. This will be the first of five. So weโll do four more bioblitzes in Washoe County Parks. โฆ People will come out, and we will give them the tools they need to go out and explore. So it might be binoculars or these things called aspirators, which we use to suck up insects. โฆ Weโll be with them to help them identify what theyโre seeing. And then weโll conglomerate a list and publish it โฆ and just kind of compare what weโve seen over the last two years. This will be, I think, the third year weโve done it. โฆ Weโll be able to see [how things are changing] in the park.
So this will be the third year at MLK Park on MLK Day, too?
Yep. โฆ and the reason why we do it on MLK Day is because โฆ it serves as a national day of service. โฆ We have a lot of AmeriCorps members that serve with us โฆ and in a consortium that we have, where we have members serving at Nevada Land Trust, the Oxbow Nature Study Area, the May Arboretum, Keep Truckee Meadows Beautifulโthose all have AmeriCorps members that are on our grant. So theyโre serving at different places, doing education in different ways, but theyโre all serving to educate our community on the value of our public lands and doing that through science education.
These expertsโwhat are some of their specializations?
So we have some folks that are entomologists. โฆ So theyโll be looking at insects. And then we have some of the park rangers who will be out there. โฆ And then thereโs us from the [TMPF]. We are experts in the natural world. So we know a lot of the species that weโll see out there. โฆ We can identify all of the plants and animals weโll see out there.
Will people be surprised by the amount of life they see in the middle of winter?
They willโassuming thereโs no snow. If thereโs a lot of snow, weโll see less. If thereโs no snow, weโll see a whole bunch of insects [and] spiders โฆ and all sorts of critters crawling around, especially by the time noon comes around. Weโll probably see a lot of different bird species. โฆ We could see coyotes, which weโve seen running around. โฆ Youโd be impressed by how many different species you see out there, and thereโs a whole bunch of different plants that are there that are in different stages of their cycle.
