Serving as a global platform for applied conservation research and education to inspire the next generation of conservation leadership, the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve is an enduring nature preserve protecting intact and resilient natural resources—last-of-their-kind coastal ecosystems, natural communities and species, and significant cultural resources—at a dynamic, ecological crossroads between land and sea and northern and southern coastal California at Point Conception.

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Vision for a Wild Coast

Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve Strategic Plan.

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Preserve Overview

There aren’t many places on the Southern California coast that remain largely untouched by development. The Nature Conservancy’s (TNC’s) Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve is one of them—exceptional in size, location, and biodiversity. The Preserve is a vast property that sits at Point Conception—the sharp corner of coastline that gives California its distinctive crook. The land has been kept intact, free from significant development for nearly 100 years.

Located near Santa Barbara, Point Conception and its surrounding lands comprise one of the last and best “wild coast” areas in Southern California and have some of the highest biodiversity and cultural values in the world. The Preserve’s unusual geography makes it a globally important site for conservation. The coastline runs north-south above Point Conception and east-west below it; cold currents from the north collide with warm water from the Santa Barbara Channel, creating diverse marine and terrestrial habitats unlike any others in the state. The Preserve stretches from the coast to the Santa Ynez Mountains and includes chaparral, grassland, oak woodlands, coastal scrub and closed-cone pine along eight miles of wild coastline.

Wildflowers at Dangermond Preserve
The Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve (4:15) Experience the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve through the eyes of our scientists at The Nature Conservancy. From large carnivore research to archeology, the advances being made here are leading the scientific community across the globe.

Dangermond Natural Resources by the Numbers

  • Icon showing land with trees.

    24,000+

    24,000+ acre coastal property

  • Icon showing tree branches.

    8+

    8+ miles of undisturbed coastline with sandy beaches

  • Icon showing fish under water.

    50

    50 miles of streams

  • Icon showing water drops.

    300

    300 acres of wetlands

  • Icon showing stalks of grass.

    9,000

    9,000 acres of native and annual grassland

  • Icon showing trees in forest.

    6,000

    6,000 acres of oak woodland and forest

  • Icon showing paw prints.

    200+

    More than 200 wildlife species

  • Icon showing sprouting plant leaves.

    600

    Nearly 600 plant species

Regional Context

The Preserve is a 24,000 + acre property located in Santa Barbara County, California. The Preserve encompasses more than eight miles of the coast surrounding Point Conception, adjacent to Jalama Beach County Park in the north. Most of Jalama Watershed and contributing tributaries fall within the Preserve. The 100,000-acre Vandenberg Space Force Base (VSFB) abuts the western boundary of the Preserve and the offshore Point Conception State Marine Reserve protects over 22 square miles of coastal and marine habitat creating contiguous terrestrial-marine protection.

The Preserve helps to maintain significant regional connectivity for many species. Maintaining open and undeveloped land is important for wildlife populations and, over longer time periods, for plants, to ensure that genetically diverse populations can persist. Ensuring that lands are effectively managed to maintain habitat connectivity, either through some permanent conservation action (such as acquiring land for a nature preserve) or through the compatible management of private lands, is a critical conservation goal. Given its important regional context, especially for habitat connectivity for wide-ranging species, the Preserve is developing important regional partnerships with neighbors and agencies to protect the unique biodiversity of the region.

Ecological Context

Most of the Preserve is located on the Lompoc Hills and Point Conception U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 7.5-minute topographic quadrangle maps. The easternmost portion of the Preserve is located on the Santa Rosa Hills and Sacate quadrangle maps. Elevation varies from sea level to approximately 1,680 feet at the crest of the Santa Ynez Mountains.

The Preserve sits at the boundary of three USGS terrestrial ecoregions, the Central California Foothills and Coastal Mountains (CCF), the Southern California Mountains (SCM), and the Southern California/Northern Baja Coast (SCB). This unique positioning is mirrored in the ocean with Point Conception sitting at the breakpoint of the Northern and Southern California Current ecoregions, which creates high marine biodiversity due to the meeting of the northern and southern ranges of many species.

The southward flowing and colder California Current moves offshore at Point Conception, while the nearshore shelf is bathed by the warmer California countercurrent (CA-MLPA 2009, Claisse et al. 2018). This location is a biogeographic crossroads that serves as a “mixing” zone, or ecotone, between cooler, more maritime climate adapted terrestrial and freshwater species of the Central Coast and species adapted to the warmer and drier South Coast and Northern Baja California region.

Vegetation types common in the general region surrounding the Preserve are a mosaic of oak woodlands, annual grasslands, chaparral and coastal shrublands, and scattered patches of conifer forests at more mesic sites and at higher elevations. The primary USGS terrestrial ecoregion for the Preserve is the CCF, which spans all the way around the foothills of the Central Valley, on both the Sierra Nevada (eastern) side of the Valley and on the western side (Inner Coast Range) to the Pacific Coast south of the Santa Cruz Mountains (WRA 2017). This ecoregion reaches its southernmost point on the Preserve at Government Point.

The CCF ecoregion is one of four Mediterranean ecoregions occurring within California. This portion of California is one of five Mediterranean climate regions globally, which encompass only 2% of the world’s land area but 20% of the world’s plant species (e.g., Rundel 2018). The Mediterranean biome is among the most imperiled globally (Hoekstra et al. 2005), and is recognized as a biodiversity hotspot, with high endemic species diversity and endangerment.

Overview Maps of the Dangermond Preserve

Some of the many views of the unique geography of the Dangermond Preserve.

Vegetation map of Dangermond Preserve.
General visitor map of Dangermond Preserve.
Geology map of the Dangermond Preserve.
Map of management zones at Dangermond Preserve.

Context continued…

The varied climatic, geologic, soil, and topographic conditions at the Preserve and surrounding lands drive tremendous species diversity. Over 1,300 plant species, more than 500 bird species, 138 terrestrial and marine mammals, 43 reptiles, 17 amphibians, and over 20 freshwater fish species have been documented in Santa Barbara County, including roughly 30 endemic animal species and 35 endemic plant species. As climate conditions change, some of these species may shift their ranges accordingly, possibly to relatively cooler, more mesic areas, provided that underlying abiotic conditions and interspecific competition do not deter their movement and establishment (Loarie et al. 2008). The region the Preserve covers is one of the most natural, least protected parts of the California coast south of Humboldt County.

The Preserve serves as core and migratory habitat for wide-ranging mammal species including mountain lions, bobcats, coyotes, deer, black bears, badgers, and several species of bats. Riparian woodland, annual grassland, oak woodland, and other habitat areas of the Preserve serve as a migratory stopover and breeding areas for neotropical migratory songbirds. The beaches, rocky intertidal, and other coastal habitats support flocks of migrating and over-wintering shorebirds and critical haul-outs for local and wide-ranging marine mammals such as harbor seals and elephant seals. The value of these habitats to wide-ranging and migratory species varies seasonally and by habitat quality but the Preserve, by its size and concentration of high-quality habitats, is a stronghold for these species.

Staff Stories

Point Conception Institute Anthony LaFetra Research Fellow, Erica Nielsen

Point Conception Institute Anthony LaFetra Research Fellowship

The Nature Conservancy (TNC) is pleased to announce that the inaugural Point Conception Institute Anthony LaFetra Research Fellow is Dr. Erica Nielsen, a coastal marine scientist who shares the deep passion for California and its native wildlife that Anthony LaFetra personified throughout his life.

Serving for 57 years with the Rain Bird Corporation, including as president and chief executive officer, Mr. LaFetra evolved Rain Bird from a local company based in Glendora into a global irrigation leader promoting water efficiency. In addition to his decades of leadership with Rain Bird, Mr. LaFetra was a gifted fly fisherman, an avid skier, and a lover of nature, as well as an engaged philanthropist who supported land preservation, native wildlife, and education. Mr. LaFetra passed away at age 80 in January 2021, survived by his daughter and son, his sister and her husband, and four grandchildren.

In September 2022, Mr. LaFetra’s family made a generous gift of $1,900,000 to TNC to establish an endowment for the Point Conception Institute Anthony LaFetra Research Fellowship, which will support a term fellowship that offers graduate and postgraduate researchers the remarkable opportunity to synthesize data and advance knowledge about coastal ecosystems and how they can be restored and protected in the face of a changing climate and other threats.

After a highly competitive search that attracted dozens of applicants from around the country, Dr. Erica Nielsen was selected as the program’s first fellow. Dr. Nielsen’s fellowship will be based at the Point Conception Institute, a global conservation
science center based at the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve in Santa Barbara County.

Dr. Nielsen has extensive experience in coastal marine science and is a field leader in bringing advances in molecular ecology to systematic conservation planning. She holds a Ph.D. and M.Sc. in zoology from Stellenbosch University in South Africa and a B.Sc. in biology from the University of California, Santa Cruz. For her graduate work, Erica pioneered the integration of marine species’ genetics into conservation planning, or “seascape genomics.” Dr. Nielsen most recently served as a postdoctoral associate at the University of California, Davis.

As the climate crisis takes hold around the world, there is a pressing need for living laboratories where the future of resilience and sustainability can be designed. Protected areas like Dangermond Preserve can serve as proving grounds for bold conservation action and engines of knowledge generation if their data and lessons learned circulate beyond their borders.

During her two-year fellowship, Dr. Nielsen will lead coastal research collaborations with the Point Conception Institute and leverage and synthesize data on coastal biodiversity, species range shifts, and climate change to increase the pace, scale, and effectiveness of conservation.

As a fellow Californian, Dr. Nielsen embodies many of the same values as Anthony LaFetra: a love for California’s natural heritage and native wildlife, a passion for education, and both a local and global perspective. The Point Conception Institute Anthony LaFetra Research Fellowship will serve to advance the conservation of biodiversity and critical eco- system processes and functions—and provide an
unparalleled legacy of research and collaboration for future generations.

Jinsu on the Dangermond Preserve collecting data that will underpin the construction of the Freshwater Digital Twin.

By Jinsu Elhance, Conservation Technology Associate at the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve

Collecting Drops of Data at the Dangermond Preserve

Every drop of water and every byte of data has a story, interwoven with the tapestry of our environment. Both possess the power to shape the world around them at each stage of their life cycles. As rainwater disappears into the earth before flowing through creeks and rivers, its journey parallels the flow of data among conservationists, researchers, land stewards, and policymakers. Each step in this data cycle contributes to our understanding of water and its conservation. At the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve, The Nature Conservancy’s preserve in Santa Barbara County, where native ecosystems have been protected from extensive development, scientists are pioneering a concept known as the Freshwater Digital Twin — a groundbreaking tool that merges the narratives of water and data into a transformative whole.

A Digital Twin is an interactive 3D map of a system. While these models have been developed primarily for urban infrastructure, the Dangermond Preserve is pioneering their application to complex natural environments. The Freshwater Digital Twin is an online map on which researchers, land managers, and other conservation workers can observe a real-time representation of the preserve’s hydrology. Users can click on points representing sensors installed in streams, tanks, and wells to download the most current data. Users can also view how the preserve changes under different climate scenarios, as the map visualizes potential future water dynamics.

The Dangermond Preserve, encompassing 24,346 acres of protected land, serves as a living laboratory where scientists delve into the mysteries of California's ecosystem dynamics. Nestled at the convergence point of marine and terrestrial ecosystems along the state's coastline, it holds the key to unraveling the intricate relationship between water and life. Within the preserve lies the Jalama watershed, meandering through hilly canyons and lush vegetation before ultimately merging with Jalama Creek and the vast ocean. This setting presents an unparalleled opportunity to study the water system holistically. It is here that I embark on a mission to collect data throughout the basin, constructing a digital model that captures the preserve's water dynamics. This distinctive interpretation of the Digital Twin concept enables us to observe and study the natural environment through a digital abstraction. The future of groundwater in California hinges on the quality of analysis conducted in such invaluable initiatives.

In my prior life as a data scientist, my curiosity was immersed in theoretical models and algorithms. However, I yearned for data science applications that facilitated meaningful contributions to our planet. In my job as a Conservation Technologist at the preserve, I draw upon my knowledge of environmental science, statistics, and technology to address broader questions about how to achieve a sustainable future. Now that I work in the field, I spend my days surrounded by the captivating beauty of untouched landscapes. Venturing into the field allows me to collect data that will underpin the construction of the Freshwater Digital Twin. Our digital twin relies on a water budget model to enhance our comprehension of the intricate relationships between precipitation, streamflow, and groundwater storage.

Today, my journey takes me deep into the chaparral, surveying wells and deploying sensors in riverbeds, capturing the unique stories within every droplet of water. By collecting data from precipitation patterns observed by weather stations, estimating streamflow through an intricate model developed by the Nature Conservancy, and monitoring groundwater levels with pressure transducers installed in wells, we weave together the threads of water's narrative. I embark on an early morning expedition, traversing winding roads in an ATV laden with well-survey equipment. As I arrive at each well, I carefully brush away foliage to deter rattlesnakes before removing the cap from the casing. Spending hours meticulously recording the conductivity, temperature, and depth of the water, alongside details about the sensor, the surroundings, and any noteworthy observations, I capture the essence of each well's story. When I’ve finished, I download the data onto a field computer, from which I’ll later upload it into the models within the Digital Twin. Finally, the sensor is redeployed or replaced, continuing its data collection until the following year.

Like my personal journey intertwining data science and environmental science, the development of valuable digital abstractions like the Digital Twin hinges on ground truth. The data we collect in the field, much like a drop of water, possesses its own unique story. It flows among conservationists, researchers, land stewards, and policymakers, informing their work and thereby creating an impact at every step of its journey. Just as water is essential to life, this data will ultimately contribute, in its own right, to preserving the well-being of our planet.

Fighting Fire with Fire

To keep natural lands resilient in the face of megafires, we must restore “good fire” to our landscapes. TREX (Training Exchange) is how TNC and our amazing partners train the controlled burn practitioners of tomorrow. CLICK THE UPPER LEFT PHOTO to start this slideshow from a recent training session in California.

Two people walking through oak trees with speckled sunlight.
Elizabeth reaches up to a tree branch to take live fuel moisture samples.
Elizabeth and Moses stretch a measuring tape to create a transect on a grassland.
Three burn practitioners in yellow jackets stand on a trail in preparation of a controlled burn.
A man stands on a hill with controlled burn equipment while others stand in the background in yellow jackets.
Firefighters in yellow jackets hold axes and walk a trail next to a low burn.
Elizabeth kneels in the ashes while collecting a sample.
2 controlled burn practitioners in yellow jackets clean up the ashes of a controlled burn using a hose and shovel.
A woman in a yellow jacket holds a fire hose over her shoulder while she soaks ashes after a controlled burn.
A person holds acorns with both hands.
Oak grove on the Dangermond Preserve.

By Ben Miner, Director of the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve; November 28, 2022

5 Years of Conservation at the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve

As we near the five-year anniversary of the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve, we would like to take a moment to reflect on the progress we have made at this 24,460-acre living laboratory. This is my first year as director of this amazing place and it is an honor to help chart the course to so many groundbreaking conservation goals. Take a look at this video to learn about our work at the preserve directly from scientists and staff.

I am pleased to share the 2022 Dangermond Preserve annual report. In this report, you’ll find updates on our growing staff of experts, research discoveries with huge implications for the future of water conservation, and updates on partnerships that are rapidly expanding our influence as a hub for environmental science and education.