Scientists working with iPads to collect data in a tidal pool along the shore.
Intertidal Research UCSC researchers use iPads to enter over 3,300 data entries along transects during low-tide intertidal biodiversity surveys. © Walter Heady/TNC

Science at the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve

The Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve sits at a zone of ecological convergence—where northern and southern species mix in both the land and sea. The Preserve serves as a living laboratory and regional center for learning. Through the Point Conception Institute, we partner with a variety of collaborators to develop and implement research on the Preserve.

A living laboratory

Research conducted at the Preserve focuses on understanding the ecological function of the Preserve while contributing to the broader goals of conserving biodiversity. TNC’s research provides the scientific foundations for stewardship, protection, and restoration while exporting this knowledge to advance conservation policy and land management.

Trailer with an antenna and solar panels attached, surrounded by fencing in a grassy field with ocean in the background.
Pole-mounted camera with a solar panel attached in front of a barbed-wire fence.
Visitors look down at a map of the Dangermond Preserve on the ground.
Scientists working with iPads to collect data in a tidal pool along the shore.
Workers tending to a pile burn in a green, grassy field framed by trees.

Key Projects

Two scientists work in a grassy field.
Research Elizabeth Hiroyasu and Moses Katkowski run vegetation transects on the Dangermond Preserve. © 2022 Erin Feinblatt

Discoveries at the Dangermond Preserve

Learn more about research and scientific discoveries at the Dangermond Preserve in this storymap experience.

A handful of coast live oak acorns.
Coast live oak acorns Moses Katkowski shows a handful of coast live oak acorns. © Erin Feinblatt/TNC