Clearing an endangered woodrat’s nest off a lot
Photo by Anonymous |
Photo by Anonymous |
An El Granada resident has posted a series of photographs that show a crew clearing a lot of vegetation and, ultimately, a nest of what was probably a San Francisco dusky-footed woodrat.
The photos are a rare opportunity to see a bit of the local wildlife in the process of being wiped out. The photos show the lot being cleared, the nest in the middle of the newly-created clearing, and the same clearing without the nest. According to the person posting the photos, the lot was surveyed and the woodrat nests marked before the lot was cleared. He described the area as riparian habitat on the banks of a year-round creek.
San Francisco dusky-footed woodrat (Neotoma fuscipes annectens) listed by the California Fish and Wildlife Service as a "federal endangered and threatened species that may be affected by projects in Santa Clara County".
Coincidentally, this woodrat may be holding up the development of five vacant parcels in San Carlos.