BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//ChamberMaster//Event Calendar 2.0//EN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:P3D
REFRESH-INTERVAL:P3D
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART:20230524T020000Z
DTEND:20230524T030000Z
X-MICROSOFT-CDO-ALLDAYEVENT:FALSE
SUMMARY:SNARL Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Changes in fire regime\, including increases in large\, high severity fires\, are transforming the forests of the Sierra\n\nNevada\, with implications for broader biodiversity. Bat communities are adapted to use every section of our\n\nforests\, from chasing down beetles above the canopy to resting in leaf litter on the ground! Rachel will discuss\n\nhow the diverse bat community of the Sierra Nevada respond to their fire-prone landscape\, with a focus on her\n\nresearch in Plumas National Forest\, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks\, and Devils Postpile National\n\nMonument.\n\nDr. Rachel Blakey is an Assistant Professor of Global Change Biology at Cal Poly Pomona. Before arriving at her\n\nacademic forever-home\, she worked in the drought and fire affected ecosystems of both Australia (her\n\nhomeland) and the Western US\, receiving her PhD from University of New South Wales and a Postdoctoral\n\nFellowship at UCLA.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Changes in fire regime\, including increases in large\, high severity fires\, are transforming the forests of the Sierra</p>\n\n<p>Nevada\, with implications for broader biodiversity. Bat communities are adapted to use every section of our</p>\n\n<p>forests\, from chasing down beetles above the canopy to resting in leaf litter on the ground! Rachel will discuss</p>\n\n<p>how the diverse bat community of the Sierra Nevada respond to their fire-prone landscape\, with a focus on her</p>\n\n<p>research in Plumas National Forest\, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks\, and Devils Postpile National</p>\n\n<p>Monument.</p>\n\n<p>Dr. Rachel Blakey is an Assistant Professor of Global Change Biology at Cal Poly Pomona. Before arriving at her</p>\n\n<p>academic forever-home\, she worked in the drought and fire affected ecosystems of both Australia (her</p>\n\n<p>homeland) and the Western US\, receiving her PhD from University of New South Wales and a Postdoctoral</p>\n\n<p>Fellowship at UCLA.</p>\n
LOCATION:Page Center at SNARL - 1016 Mt Morrison Rd. Mammoth Lakes\, CA
UID:e.2291.2777
SEQUENCE:3
DTSTAMP:20260417T150949Z
URL:https://business.mammothlakeschamber.org/events/details/snarl-seminar-05-23-2023-2777
END:VEVENT

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