Yosemite National Forest
Yosemite History
In East Central California, Yosemite National Park spans the eastern portions of Tuolumne, Mariposa, and Madera County. Approximately 3.7 million tourists have come to love and visit the park on an annual basis, spending time on a seven square mile sector of the 760,000 acre park. Yosemite is known for the enormous rocks dating as far back as ten million years in age, with one particular known site: The half dome, where hikers may climb the treacherous rock (Yosemite National Park, 2011). With such a large amount of tourists, the park calls for a well developed management team.
Yosemite Tourism and Ownership Establishment
Yosemite was officially discovered in 1855 by James Mason Hutchings, Thomas Ayers, and other tourists to the area. The two were among the first to create publicity for the area, making artwork and articles about the wildlife and experiences, and sending them to the more established areas of the American east coast. It was this publicity that helped Yosemite get the tourist attention it desired. Soon, lodging and roads were built, ignoring the already established Native American living areas (Harris, Tuttle, & Tuttle, 2003).
As tourism grew in the area, concern for its preservation caught political attention. President Abraham Lincoln began the preservation of the area by passing the Yosemite Grant, where it was decided that specific land would be reserved for tourist purposes, while the rest of the land in the area would remain protected and wild. The United States government determined in 1872 that California would name Yosemite as the second national park, following only behind Yellowstone National Park. The process of making the area a national park was not simple: It included evicting from the area those that had already established homesteads, including founder Hutchings. It was eventually determined that Hutchings would remain the park guardian, but others were still required to leave (Harris, Tuttle, & Tuttle, 2003).
As tourism increased into the early twentieth century, the federal government was unable to ignore the problems humans caused to the natural habitat and environment. In 1916, the United States National Park Service was formed, and it immediately took over responsibility for Yosemite Park. At the turnover, park tourism exploded, causing many problems for the new management to solve in decades to follow (Harris, Tuttle, & Tuttle, 2003).
3.0 Park Management Primary Issues
3.1 Animals
The United States National Park Service's main goal is to retain the life of the park, but one concern has been that of the animals. The California Golden Bear and the California Condor are among a few of the animals that have become extinct since the European-American colonization. After colonization, thirty seven other species have been harmed, being placed on the endangered species list (National Geographic, 2001).
Of greatest concern in recent years is the American Black Bear. With the growth of tourism and therefore human food, the American Black Bear has been increasingly stealing food from humans, whether it is abandoned food, disposed food, or edibles left in tents, backpacks, or automobiles. As the bear must become more creative to obtain the human food, it has become more aggressive to the human being. Not assisting in the problem, tourists are unaware of the significant harm they cause or the risks they run. Many of the tourists encourage the bears to take human food in an attempt to obtain a good photograph or snapshot (National Geographic, 2001).
3.2 Plant Life
Along with problems in the animal kingdom, the Yosemite plant life has also experienced problems. From when Hutchings and Ayers originally settled at Yosemite, nearly 130 non-native plants have been introduced into the Yosemite habitat. The non-native plants have come to interfere with the native plant life, some taking over others' communities entirely. The non-native plants have also increased nitrogen capabilities in the soil, making the soil harder to provide growth to the native plants. The...
Environmental Effects on Species Habitats in the Southern California Mountains Southern California is not for everybody. "Some people view the climate and laid-back lifestyle with longing. Others perceive the area, and its inhabitants, as a little too far over the edge" (Hutchings 2001:4D-Z). While the region may not appeal to all types of humans, it does attract a wide range of species who make their home in the mountainous areas
Because of the newer mobility of a significant amount of suburban America, driving to national parks was even more an option. The more people visited the Parks, it seemed, the more of a synergistic effect upon their funding and use (Jensen and Guthrie, 2006). By the Johnson Administration in the 1960s, coupled with more media attention, there was increased public awareness of America's natural treasures. This was now that "Parks
These calls are done in a rapid series of low-pitched throaty notes (Great1 pp). A study titled, "A Comparative Analysis of Plasticity in Larval Development in Three Species of Spadefoot Toads," reported by David Reznick in the June 01, 2000 issue of Ecology, evaluated four salient features of the Wilbur and Collins (1973) model for amphibian metamorphosis (Reznick pp) H.M. Wilbur and J.P. Collins offered an evolutionary explanation for the
Virgin.net/john.cletheroe/usa_can/usa/cascade.htm Early California history: An overview. Retrieved January 16, 2005 from Web site: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cbhtml/cbintro.html Introduction to a Sierra Nevada Gallery. The Sierra Nevada Gallery. Retrieved January 16, 2005 from Web site: http://www.sierranevadaphotos.com/intro.html Klamath Mountains. Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved January 16, 2005 from Web site: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9045718 Michaelsen, J. And Chamberlin, S. Queen Calafia slept here. University of California, Santa Barbara. Retrieved January 16, 2005 from Web site: http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~joel/g148_f04/readings/intro_04.html Parsons, J.J. (1987). A geographer looks at the San
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