-
On May 4, volunteers from San Simeon to Half Moon Bay will collect water to analyze its quality and sustainability.
-
The US Forest Service has canceled oil company Carbon California’s applications to drill and frack in the Sespe Oil Field, in Ventura County.
-
Locals of San Luis Obispo County can check out not only books from their nearby library, but also seeds for their garden with the the Seed Library Program.
-
A camping and campfire ban at a popular beach along the Big Sur Coast will be in place for the next two years. The decision was made by the California Coastal Commission to reduce trash left behind by campers.
-
A new state report on climate change and how it's affecting parks, like Montana De Oro, has just been released. It also looks into how to implement solutions.
-
30% of all marine mammals rescued by the Marine Mammal Center experienced some form of harassment prior to their rescue, according to a recent report from the nonprofit.
-
Central Coast fishermen filed a lawsuit over the planned offshore wind development off Morro Bay's coast.
-
KCBX host Kim Foster spoke with NPR environment correspondent Nathan Rott to discuss California's changing environment and his reporting in Ukraine.
-
The first wind farm built along the California coast is up and running.
-
A recent study shows that the presence of sea otters helps stabilize Elkhorn Slough in Monterey County. By consuming lots of burrowing shore crabs, otters slow erosion of the creek banks in the salt marsh habitat.
-
The federal initiative targets ecologically diverse areas like San Luis Obispo, where about 70% of native vegetation has declined.
-
Love is in the air, and not just for humans. Frogs are feeling it too. Residents may hear the mating call of the Pacific Tree Frog, better known as the Pacific Chorus Frog for its “singing."