Campus Queries: What is the impact of wildfires on wildlife in California?

Campus Queries is a series in which Daily Bruin readers and staff present science-related questions for UCLA professors and experts to answer.

Q: How have the recent wildfires in California affected local wildlife?

A: In light of the recent Woolsey fire that burned through Los Angeles and Ventura counties, UCLA professors said human activities are common causes of wildfires and might contribute to permanent damage to natural habitats inflicted by the fire.

Glen MacDonald, a distinguished professor in the department of geography and the department of ecology and evolutionary biology, said wildfires are common during winter in California, but have been starting earlier and burning longer in the past few years, which can be linked to climate change.

“We are not having much rain last year, which produces more dry fuel in the forest. And the temperature is higher and higher,” MacDonald said. “The result is that we get longer and earlier fire.”

H. Bradley Shaffer, a distinguished professor of the department of ecology and evolutionary biology, added while the intensity of the Woolsey fire doesn’t indicate climate change on its own, climate change is a contributing factor to the increasing frequency and duration of wildfires in California.

MacDonald added wildfires are caused by both human activity and natural causes such as lightning storms, but human activity is a much more common cause.

“Ninety percent of large-scaled wildfire is caused by human factors,” MacDonald said. “It could be accidents such as leaked electricity, a car that broke down or human activity such as smoking and arson.”

Shaffer said the increased intensity of wildfires might lead to lower survival rates for animals.

“Some animals hide underground during the fire and come out when it is finished,” Shaffer said. “The higher intensity of the fire leads to higher temperature, which might be too hot for some small animals and they will die underground.”

Shaffer added that bigger animals that can typically escape fires quickly are also affected because the wildfire destroys their habitats. For example, all but one of the 12 to 13 mountain lions living in the Santa Monica Mountains area survived the most recent fire, but resulting habitat and food scarcities still threaten their lives.

“Sixty percent of the wildland the mountain lions reside (on) are burnt, so a similar population are now sharing much smaller habitat. … Since the mountain lions eat deer, the burning of the grassland result in less deer, and thus less food for the lions,” Shaffer said.

Wildfires can also further impact animal habitats by affecting water storage in soil, Shaffer added. For example, destroying trees along the side of a stream destabilizes the soil, which becomes more likely to collapse into and fill the stream after it rains.

Shaffer said that man-made structures like cities and highways that disrupt natural habitats may make it almost impossible for wildlife populations to recover from wildfires.

“When one part of the habitat gets burnt and the animal died, the population in surrounding areas will usually repopulate the area, … but constructions such freeways now might isolate the burnt area and leaves no corridor for repopulation,” Shaffer said. “The damage then will be permanent.”

USAC recap – Nov. 27

The Undergraduate Students Association Council is the official student government representing the undergraduate student body at UCLA. Council meetings take place every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Kerckhoff 417 and are open to all students. Watch a livestream of the meetings on the USAC Live! channel on YouTube.

Public Comment:

  • Nico Gist, the chapter chair of California Public Interest Research Group and a fourth-year political science student, said CALPIRG recently held several events to promote environmental and public engagement efforts, including a press conference to promote the welfare of bees.

Agenda:

  • The council discussed the removal of the queer-positive display with photographs of LGBTQ representatives on Bruinwalk. The council said it hopes to work with UCLA Student Organizations, Leadership and Engagement in the future to make regulations regarding posting signs and tabling on Bruinwalk clearer and more accessible to campus organizations.
  • The council allocated a total of $5,219 from the contingency programming fund to USAC and non-USAC groups.
  • The council appointed Kevin Beedle as a member of the Student Conduct Committee.

Reports:

  • Internal Vice President Robert Blake Watson said his office will hold an off-campus living fair Jan. 20 to inform students about their housing options. He added his office released Respect, Accountability, Integrity, Service and Excellence program applications, which are due Feb. 1. RAISE aims to award scholarship funds to students who have helped other students. He also added his office is working with Residential Life to provide a storage space on the Hill for art supplies. He also added his office is working with the Student Wellness Commission to provide students free wheelchairs in the Good Clothes Good People redistribution center.
  • External Vice President Jamie Kennerk said her office met with UC Payroll, Academic Personnel, Timekeeping and Human Resources officials to discuss payment issues. She also added administrators asked her office to remove a queer-positive display organized in response to a preacher yelling at students with a bullhorn.
  • General Representative 1 Ayesha Haleem said her office will host a South Asian Picnic at Sunset Recreation Center on Saturday, which is a destressing event for students. She added her office is working to develop bylaws for the new International Student representative position.
  • General Representative 2 Bella Martin said her office will attend the North Westwood Neighborhood Council meeting to advocate for bike lanes Wednesday. She added her office is working with Kennerk to phase out the use of textbook access codes.
  • General Representative 3 Eduardo Solis said his office is petitioning to add a suicide hotline phone number to the back of BruinCards. He added that his office attended a meeting with the UCLA immigration policy team to discuss support for undocumented students.
  • Transfer Representative Jessica Kim said her office is working to hire a full-time college academic counselor in the Transfer Center.
  • A representative for the Campus Events Commission said the office will screen “Anna and the Apocalypse” on Thursday and “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” on Sunday.
  • Community Service Commissioner Bethanie Atinuke Sonola said 31 organizations will be attending the Nonprofit Networking Night, which will be held in February.
  • Cultural Affairs Commissioner Sarena Khasawneh said her office will be holding winter-themed destressing events for students next week, including ornament making and smashing plates.
  • Facilities Commissioner Julia Ho-Gonzalez said a multipurpose room in the John Wooden Center will close for construction Monday, which she said she hopes will be completed by spring quarter.
  • Financial Support Commissioner Jay Manzano said his office will meet with the BruinCard office Friday to discuss BruinCard fees. He added his office ordered $6,500 worth of iClickers to expand the office’s iClicker library. He also added his office will hold a lab coat drive next week to expand the office’s lab coat lending program.
  • Student Wellness Commissioner George Louis Faour said his office’s Active Minds committee held a mental and physical self-care workshop Tuesday. He added his office’s BruiNecessities committee will co-host an oral health fair Wednesday in De Neve Plaza. He also added his office is working to provide free crutches and wheelchairs to students.

‘Spotted on Bruinwalk’ to return after three-year hiatus, this time run by USAC CEC

A student government office is reviving a forum for students to submit missed connections and interesting sightings around campus.

Spotted on Bruinwalk, through which students were formerly able to report things observed on campus, will be revived by the Undergraduate Students Association Council Campus Events Commission after a three-year hiatus. The new site will be advertised in the next weeks and will be launched at the beginning of winter quarter, said Alley Madison, USAC Campus Events commissioner.

The original website, which launched in 2010, allowed students to post anonymously about people they saw but were unable to interact with on campus. Spotted on Bruinwalk stopped posting content in 2015 for unknown reasons.

Olly Sholotan, the CEC director of online marketing and a fourth-year musical theater student, said that the CEC is interested in creating a new online community.

“CEC has been very events-based so we think it’d be very cool to explore the community-building aspect of our reach,” Sholotan said. “This will be a really cool way for the campus to be connected.”

Chynna Porrata, a fourth-year nursing student, said since Spotted on Bruinwalk became inactive, the UCLA Secrets Facebook page has been a popular alternative for posting anonymously about missed connections.

“If the Campus Events Commission can bring this concept back on another format people will use, I say go for it because it’s entertaining and nice to hear about stories of people just appreciating each other on a daily basis,” Porrata said.

Furkan Yalcin, a fourth-year political science student, said he thinks the idea is fun, but added it may not be a meaningful use of student fees.

“When you think of student government offices, their initiatives are usually for the greater good of the UCLA community,” Yalcin said. “I don’t know what purpose this serves for the community.”

Ramneek Singh, former finance director of the Sikh Student Association and fourth-year mathematics/economics student, said he believes USAC’s funding priorities are mismanaged because he has had trouble with requesting funding in the past.

“Whenever we ask USAC for money, it always comes too late or there’s too little to pay for the event,” Singh said.

The previous iteration of Spotted on Bruinwalk often contained controversial content. The old site, run by anonymous moderators, included some sexualized content.

For example, one student commented on another student they saw returning from an event.

“Saw you on the way back from your fashion show,” the anonymous student said. “I have a nice big package for you, if you know what I mean.”

Francis Steen, a communication professor, said online anonymity can have mixed results.

“It could be a boost to self-disclosure and, depending on feedback, it can be trial balloon for someone to disclose something about themselves they might otherwise be shy to admit,” Steen said. “Some anti-social or hateful comments could start gaining traction that people would be ashamed of if they had to own up to it.”

The new Spotted on Bruinwalk will have a submission platform available online, but as of now the platform is still in development, Sholotan said.

CEC will moderate all entries to make sure nothing personally identifies anyone or threatens student safety, Madison said. The office will also remove comments that make students uncomfortable when requested.

Sholotan said that the CEC wanted Spotted on Bruinwalk to be less serious and more wholesome at heart.

“The whole vibe behind Spotted is that it’s wholesome,” Sholotan said. “We’ll be screening for anything creepy or inappropriate.”

CEC will advertise the revival on its social media, using the hashtag “SpottedonBruinwalk” and highlighting posts that will be accompanied by cartoons, Madison said. She added the office will give select students who interact with the platform VIP tickets to one of the CEC concerts for Valentine’s Day.

With the revival of the site, Steen said he believes students must learn to communicate face to face.

“One of the things you need to learn at university is learning to talk to people in real life, look them in the eye and starting a conversation,” Steen said.

The Rundown: Nov. 28

Women’s volleyball
Angie Forburger, assistant Sports editor

Despite finishing the year with a losing record for the first time in program history, UCLA women’s volleyball (13-14, 8-12 Pac-12) had three players earn All-Pac-12 recognition.

Sophomore outside hitter Mac May was named to the 2018 All-Pac-12 First Team, picking up her second All-Pac-12 award after being recognized as an honorable mention last season.

May led the Bruins this season in total kills and kills per set with 373 and 3.69, respectively. She was also first for UCLA in service aces with 34. The sophomore totaled eight double-doubles, 1.86 digs per set and recorded double-digit kills in 21 matches this year.

Senior libero Zana Muno earned an All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention for the 2018 season alongside junior middle blocker Madeleine Gates. This was Muno’s first All-Pac-12 recognition since she earned an honorable mention as a freshman in 2015. Gates was named to the All-Pac-12 First Team last season.

Muno finished her final season as a Bruin with an average of 5.15 digs per set, good for first among all Pac-12 liberos. She recorded the fourth-most digs in Bruin history over her career with 1,607, and broke the UCLA single-match record in digs with 38 against Washington State earlier this month.

Gates recorded an overall hitting percentage this season of .312 and led UCLA with 107 total blocks and 1.06 blocks per set. The junior hit over .300 in 16 matches this season and set a career high of 11 blocks against San Diego in September.

While Gates will not be back in action with the Bruins until August, May and Muno will play for UCLA on the beach volleyball team beginning in February.

Women’s soccer
Gabriel McCarthy, assistant Sports editor

Two Bruins received recognition this week after their season came to an end.

UCLA women’s soccer sophomore forward Ashley Sanchez was named a MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist, the award given to the best soccer player in both men’s and women’s NCAA Division I soccer at the end of the season.

The award is voted on by a panel of Division I coaches and three finalists for the trophy will be announced Dec. 7. The winner will be announced Jan. 4 at the Missouri Athletic Club in St. Louis.

Sanchez led UCLA in all scoring categories this season, recording 10 goals and 15 assists for 35 points. She ranked second in the nation in assists and set a UCLA record for assists in a game with four, as well as for finishing the season scoring a goal or assisting in 13 straight matches.

Senior defender/forward Hailie Mace was named the UCLA/Muscle Milk Student-Athlete of the Week after scoring twice in the Bruins’ quarterfinal match against North Carolina. Mace scored twice in under a minute to equalize the match at 2-2 before UCLA fell in penalty kicks. Mace finished her career with 24 goals and 12 assists in 74 games started.

Wang’s Word: Honesty, jests and the occasional friction between Chip Kelly and the media

The first time I spoke to Chip Kelly was after he raced through the latter part of the recruiting cycle and signed his first freshman class in February 2018.

I wasn’t expecting any answers on the level of Jim Mora’s fervor or Steve Alford’s loquaciousness, but I was curious as to how Kelly would approach the media after a disastrous 2-14 season in San Francisco and a year as an ESPN analyst.

Kelly honestly answered the questions in that press conference and every one afterward. His answers could be quite forthcoming, and they sometimes trended toward being misleading, but he was, for the most part, honest.

But he wasn’t immune to the occasional mishap with the media. One question I asked after Saturday’s game against Stanford seemed to strike a nerve.

Why did he call a timeout with 44 seconds remaining in the first half, facing fourth and goal from the one-yard line, with plenty of time still on the play clock?

“What time did we score with? We ran some plays after that,” Kelly said, after asking me to repeat my question.

Yes, UCLA ran one play after that since it was fourth-and-goal from inside the one-yard line after an offside penalty by Stanford. The Cardinal, one way or another, would get the ball back.

If Kelly had let the clock run down until the play clock nearly expired before calling timeout – and UCLA scored anyways – Stanford would have gotten the ball back with about 20 seconds left on the clock, compared to 40.

To be fair, my original phrasing was vague – I couldn’t quite remember the down and distance at the time of the timeout, but I did recall how I found Kelly’s decision to quickly call timeout odd.

I tried to clarify my question twice and was interrupted both times.

“Your point of your question is that you have it automatically in your head that we were going to score,” Kelly said. “So if we ran out of time and didn’t get an opportunity to score, you would be asking me why didn’t I call a timeout. Anybody can play that side of the fence, … I don’t care how much time is left on the clock. That has nothing to do with it. You got to give yourself ample enough time to score. We scored and we were happy about that. But if we didn’t score, we may have needed more plays.”

That’s sound reasoning, except for the fact that the play was fourth-and-goal from the one-yard line, and the odds of getting a first down by throwing the ball and drawing a penalty are infinitesimal. Oh, and your best offensive player also happens to be your running back.

Kelly isn’t obligated to answer every question he receives. It’s his responsibility to address the media, but he probably has other things on his mind, such as rebuilding a Pac-12 program.

It is well within his rights to set boundaries on what he will and won’t divulge – he’s made it clear that, during games, the only injury updates he hears are whether the player is in or out of the game, so he can’t comment on specifics postgame.

He has also maintained that his focus was on each upcoming opponent and not on any retrospection. To Kelly’s credit, he stuck to that line throughout the season.

So after the season finale against Stanford, could he offer any early reflections on how his first year at UCLA ended?

“From a game that just ended three minutes ago?” Kelly said while checking his wristwatch. “I think I’ll take a little more time before I reflect on that.”

Yes, sometimes he could – intentionally or not – take questions too literally.

After the Utah game, Daily Bruin Sports editor Ryan Smith asked Kelly if he was OK with graduate transfer quarterback Wilton Speight running the ball eight times with freshman backup quarterback Dorian Thompson-Robinson unavailable to play.

“Yeah,” Kelly said.

But he could also provide some respite from the droning churn of the football season.

On more than one occasion this season, Kelly would lighten the mood by poking fun at Los Angeles Times’ beat reporter Ben Bolch.

The funniest encounter I witnessed was when Bolch asked Kelly about Colorado wide receiver Laviska Shenault Jr.

Bolch couldn’t pronounce the player’s name – to be fair, none of the reporters could – and Kelly seized the opportunity.

“You have to pronounce his name for me to answer the question,” he replied.

No one did, but Kelly eventually answered the question, nonetheless.

In his first season in Westwood, Kelly was consistent in his relationship with the media. There were some thorny moments, but that’s to be expected when he sees the same faces three or four times a week and has to answer questions from them.

Even with the occasional trolling, – like randomly dropping Milli Vanilli in the middle of an answer about not believing in the idea of carrying momentum into next season – Kelly kept things real. Now he gets a well-deserved break from the media.

After losing veterans, men’s tennis searches for doubles pairings with chemistry

The Bruins will not be able to rely on familiar faces for doubles success this season.

Following the departures of graduated seniors Martin Redlicki and Austin Rapp, and potentially current junior Evan Zhu, UCLA men’s tennis may be without three of its six starting doubles players from last year.

“(Redlicki) has been such an unbelievable doubles player for four years in a row. He’s a two-time NCAA doubles champion, and yes, (Rapp) always did a good job for us,” said Coach Billy Martin. “We’re still waiting to hear about (Zhu), so we could potentially lose three really great doubles players, so that’s always a shakeup.”

Martin said UCLA may now look toward some of its younger players to fill the gaps in the doubles lineup, but creating effective doubles teams for the upcoming season has been difficult.

Martin said he works to find players with skill sets that complement one another, while also hiding each individual player’s weaknesses.

“If someone has a really weak side, then we want to make sure that their weak side is in the middle of the court so the other person can take the shot and there’s no confusion,” Martin said.

Martin said the search to find players with complementary skill sets who will work well together is ongoing.

“I can’t tell you how many times during the summer, I’m looking at guys coming in and I say, ‘Gosh, this is going to be a really great pair. I can just sense it,'” Martin said. “Then, it ends up being no chemistry.”

Martin said that no amount of practice can create a bond that certain teams do not possess.

“In a lot of cases this fall, we just haven’t been able to find that chemistry,” Martin said.

However, Martin said two Bruins seemed headed in the right direction. Sophomore Bryce Pereira teamed up with freshman Max Wild in two tournaments this fall and Martin said he was impressed with the pairing.

The pair advanced to the quarterfinals at the Southern California Intercollegiate Championships in Los Angeles and won the doubles draw of the Larry Easley Memorial Classic in Las Vegas.

Pereira explained that it can be difficult sometimes to adjust to new partners.

“Sometimes you are too good of a friend with the other person, so you don’t play well with one another, or you just don’t like the other person,” Pereira said. “You have to balance out. There’s always a lot of pros and cons when you play with others.”

Wild attributed the pair’s good chemistry to Pereira’s previous doubles experience.

“I’ve always thought of (Pereira) being such a great doubles player and he did so well for us last year – it made it that much more exciting for me to play with his experience,” Wild said.

Martin said that, although they are difficult to deal with, shakeups occur every three to four years.

“The players realize it, the coaches realize it, so we have to do everything we can to have our bases covered,” he said.

Bruins on right track as first season under Chip Kelly reflects positive change

The Bruins’ first season under Chip Kelly is in the books.

UCLA football closed out its 2018 campaign with a 3-9 overall record after an 0-5 start and finished with a conference record of 3-6 – good for fifth place in the Pac-12 South.

Despite the constant ebbs and flows throughout the season, sophomore cornerback Darnay Holmes said that coach Kelly’s impact on the program in year one has the Bruins on the right track.

“Right when (Kelly) walked in, he came in with installing in us a growth mindset,” Holmes said. “There are going to be a lot of ups and downs in life and definitely on the field so as you guys can see, we played our butts off since day one. We came up short several times, but next year, those little setbacks are not going to be setbacks, they’re going to be W’s.”

One player who will not be around next season to experience the next stages of UCLA’s turnaround, however, is graduate transfer quarterback Wilton Speight.

Kelly named Speight the team’s starting quarterback out of fall camp after he transferred from Michigan, where he had spent the previous three years.

Speight – who missed the final nine games of Michigan’s 2017 campaign with a spinal injury – reinjured his back in the Bruins’ season-opener against Cincinnati. He did not return as the permanent quarterback until the second half of UCLA’s Nov. 3 contest at Oregon, but Speight said that he feels as though he has helped create a positive culture in his lone year within the program.

“I do feel that I was able to come in and help kind of guide this ship in the right direction,” Speight said. “Not saying I took a major part in that or anything. But (I) just tried to show up every day and do everything I could to better the program.”

Speight also said that he has noticed a considerable improvement in the team’s growth and attitude since the first few weeks of the season.

“When I came here in June, we had guys that were hungry, but maybe didn’t know what they were hungry for in terms of how can we operate to build a successful program – not a successful team, but a successful program,” Speight said. “And I think if you look at the growth from Cincinnati to Stanford, it’s a completely different ball club.”

Following the Bruins’ five-game skid to open the year in which they were outscored by an average of 18 points per game, they picked up three wins in their last seven contests and were only outscored by a total of 24 points during that span.

Among those victories were wins over California (7-4, 4-4 Pac-12) and Arizona (5-7, 4-5), but the defining moment of the year for UCLA was its triumph over crosstown rival USC (5-7, 4-5).

Not only did the win mark the end of a three-year losing streak to the Trojans, but Kelly said after the game that it helped the players understand that the work and perseverance they had shown throughout the year was beginning to pay off.

“I think (I’m) more happy for (the team) because we have a process that we go through,” Kelly said. “And I think it validates the process for those guys and they understand what this process is all about.”

With UCLA ineligible for a bowl this season, Kelly will now have time to turn his attention to continuing the rebuild of the program. He did not get a full recruiting cycle in his first season as the head coach, but he already has nine commits ready to go for 2019.