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Wrigley Memorial & Botanic Garden – Clone
Set at the top of Avalon Canyon, the Wrigley Memorial & Botanic Garden features rare native plants, Catalina Island history and sweeping views across the canyon and San Pedro Channel. The 38-acre garden is open year-round for self-guided visits.
All-Inclusive Catalina Service Retreat
Experience a thrilling weekend getaway on Catalina Island that allows you to make a positive conservation impact while taking in the beautiful sights, exploring trails and beaches, and making new friends with fellow island lovers.
Operation Protect Catalina Island
Operation Protect Catalina Island combines conservation initiatives, habitat restoration and wildfire prevention under one coordinated effort to help establish healthy land and water, bring back native plants and create balance for native species. Together, we can protect the people, livelihoods and native wildlife that depend on one of the most unique places on Earth.
Balance for Native Species
The Catalina Island Conservancy’s goal is to restore balance across Catalina’s ecosystems by managing invasive species, removing deer impacts and protecting rare and native wildlife so the Island can once again thrive. Deer removal is central to that goal. Mule deer were introduced to Catalina Island in the early 1930s (before the Conservancy existed) as a game species for hunting by the
state. They are not native to the Island. As an invasive animal, the mule deer destroy native and endemic vegetation only found on Catalina
Island, which evolved without defense mechanisms against mule deer and outside threats. The deer prefer these plants for a food source as
opposed to invasive plant species.
The deer have no natural predators, so their population goes through extreme boom and bust cycles, ranging from 500 animals to 1,800+
depending on the amount of rainfall. The mule deer are considered wildlife and are managed by the state. There are very strict wildlife laws
in place for this species and feeding them is illegal as it further promotes more extreme boom and bust population cycles and increases the
likelihood of animal-human disease transfer.
Non-native species have long overgrazed the land on Catalina Island, destroying natural habitats along with the vegetation that’s needed
to support native wildlife and help prevent soil erosion, and capture water on the landscape.
Deer are suffering on the Island from thirst and starvation (they are at 8—10x the density as they are on mainland). Deer encounters with
people in Catalina’s inhabited communities (Avalon and Two Harbors) are common, and fawns are often found dead in the streets because
of their desperation for food. Catalina’s deer population is also devastating the Island’s fragile ecosystem as they struggle to survive.
The situation has become untenable for the deer and for the Island’s ecology, leaving the Island at a watershed moment. After consulting
with CDFW, it has been determined that a deer removal program needs to be undertaken as part of an overall plan to revive the Island’s
ecosystem, ensuring that we pass on a healthy and sustainable Island for future generations to enjoy.
Following is an outline of the various methods that have been explored for the removal of the deer and the final determinations on
suitability of methods, based on the Island’s specific challenges and case studies of other island eradications around the world.
Events
Stories
New Shuttle Service to Wrigley Memorial & Botanic Garden
The Catalina Island Conservancy has launched four new daily shuttle services connecting the Trailhead Visitor Center to Wrigley Memorial & Botanic Garden.
Rare Plant Population Observed on Catalina
Rare plant surveys allow for better understanding of the distribution and ecology of the species on the Island during their life cycle.
Conservancy Times – Spring 2022
Celebrating 50 Years of Preserving Catalina Island’s Timeless Nature. Page 4.
We are thrilled to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the non-profit Catalina Island Conservancy. In this issue we commemorate half a century of fulfilling the promise that the Wrigley and Offield families made in 1972 when they founded the Conservancy – to be a responsible steward of our lands through a balance of conservation, education and recreation.
Conservancy Times is a bi-annual publication of the Catalina Island Conservancy, a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit organization established in 1972 to protect and restore Catalina Island for present and future generations to experience and enjoy.
How Native Plants Help Protect Catalina Island from Wildfire
Catalina Island’s native plants do more than just look pretty, they create a system for a fire-resilient landscape. No plant is fireproof, but native plants serve as the best line of defense against invasive grasses, prolonged drought and rising temperatures.