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Location and Habitats
Bodega Marine Reserve is located on the Sonoma County coast 60 miles
north of San Francisco. Part of the University of California's Natural
Reserve System and site of the Bodega
Marine Lab (BML), this 362 acre research and teaching reserve includes
a rich mix of coastal habitats protected for long-term studies. Undisturbed rocky intertidal areas are within 100 meters of the
Laboratory buildings, and extend over 2 km along the Reserve boundaries.
Other intertidal habitats on the Reserve include protected and exposed sandy beaches, extensive lagoon mudflats
and sandflats, and tidal saltmarsh.
Reserve terrestrial habitats include sand dunes, coastal bluffs, coastal prairie/coastal
scrub and freshwater wetlands. Plant communities,
soils and microclimates vary sharply over relatively small distances on
the Reserve because of a variety of geological factors associated with
the Reserve's contact with the Pacific Ocean and the San Andreas Fault
Zone.
Adjoining the Reserve is the Bodega State Marine Reserve, a fully protected
no-take reserve extending 1000 feet offshore, established by the state
legislature and managed by the California Department of Fish and Game
and BML (see the 2007 "Science of Marine Reserves" Booklet ). Located in the southern portion of one of the most significant
upwelling systems in the world, the Refuge adds intertidal and subtidal
habitats remarkable for their diversity and abundance of flora and fauna,
creating excellent opportunities for underwater research. The Bodega State Marine Reserve is contiguous with NOAA's Gulf
of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, providing additional
research sites and opportunities.
To protect long-term field research sites from external disturbances,
the Reserve is fenced and posted to limit unauthorized access. However,
public hiking and recreation are available in adjacent State Park areas.
Researchers wishing to access the Reserve should contact the Research Coordinator and see Reserve
Use Application.
Habitats of the Bodega Marine Reserve
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Rocky Intertidal Coast. The laboratory facilities
are located adjacent to Horseshoe Cove and the outer coast. An almost
continuous shoreline bench of dioritic granite, most of it exposed to
the pounding waves characteristic of the Sonoma coast, supports a diverse
community of marine algae and invertebrates. Numerous tidepools and adjacent
waters harbor a rich array of fish species, and shorebirds forage on the
rocks and in extensive mussel beds during low tides.
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Sandy Beach. Two beaches border the Reserve.
Horseshoe Cove (left, below) is a small pocket beach nearby the Laboratory,
partly protected by the Cove shorelines. Salmon Creek Beach (right, below),
a 4 km stretch of exposed sandy beach in the State Park just north of
the Reserve, is available for some kinds of field research.
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Mudflats and Sandflats. Bodega Marine Reserve
leases approximately 90 acres of Bodega Harbor intertidal flats, with
a third of the area closed to the public to protect research sites. Thousands
of migrant shorebirds winter at Bodega Bay each year, attracted by the
wide range of benthic invertebrates living in these soft sediments.
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Saltmarsh. An unusually diverse saltmarsh
community occupies the high intertidal zone bordering the Reserve sandflats.
Several native saltmarsh plants of limited distribution occur here. Another marsh, more
brackish in nature, occurs at the lower edge of the freshwater wetlands
near the BML Housing.
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Coastal Bluffs. The blufftops of the Reserve
support a mainly native plant community with many colorful wildflowers.
To maintain the high native biodiversity, Reserve staff actively control
invasive species such as the South African iceplants (Carpobrotus spp.)
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Coastal Prairie/Coastal Scrub. Over much of
the Reserve uplands, coastal grasslands merge with areas dominated by
the yellow bush lupine, Lupinus arboreus. Grasslands vary from areas with
a diverse native flora to patches of weedy invasive species. These systems
have been the focus of numerous studies, many continuing, of plant-insect
interactions and plant community dynamics on the Reserve.
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Sand Dunes. The Reserve dunes are largely covered
with yellow bush lupine and the introduced dune grass, Ammophila arenaria
(below, left), planted in the 1920s-1950s to stabilize actively blowing
dunes. Some areas, however, still support a mostly native dune scrub community,
with Lupinus chamissonis and Ericameria ericoides as the dominant shrubs,
surrounded by a rich mixture of grasses and forbs. Bodega Marine Reserve
has an agreement with State Parks for researcher access to a 20 acre area
of native dune adjacent to the Reserve.
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Freshwater Wetlands. Small, seasonal or permanent,
freshwater wetlands occur at many sites within the dunes on the Reserve.
The photo below, right, shows a wetland that grades from fresh to brackish
near BML Housing.
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<BMR Bodega Marine Reserve P.O. Box 247 (2099 Westside Road) Bodega Bay, CA 94923 Phone 707/875-2021 |