News

When water levels rise on the Elkhorn River, the Papio NRD has safety measures in place to keep visitors safe. The same goes ...
Photo credit: Chuly Tran Nature enthusiasts shouldn’t miss nearby Elkhorn Slough, one of California’s largest wetlands and an ecological treasure. Local outfitters offer kayak rentals for paddling ...
Results of immediate testing in Elkhorn Slough by scientists from the Moss Landing Marine Lab indicate an alarming increase in trace elements found in the marsh sediment at the slough.
A pod of harbor seals lounging on the banks of Elkhorn Slough (Judy Gallagher via Flickr, CC by 2.0) First Look A Battery Fire Deposits Heavy Metals into Elkhorn Slough Lithium-ion battery ...
Home to a famed aquarium, incredible coastline,whale watching opportunities, and plenty of adorable sea otters, a Monterey ...
MONTEREY, Calif. (KGO) -- When we first met the hungry otters of Elkhorn Slough last year, they were chowing down on a species of burrowing crabs blamed for destabilizing the shoreline. Thinning ...
MONTEREY, California (KGO) — When we first met the hungry otters of Elkhorn Slough last year, they were chowing down on a species of burrowing crabs blamed for destabilizing the shoreline ...
MONTEREY, California (KGO) — When we first met the hungry otters of Elkhorn Slough last year, they were chowing down on a species of burrowing crabs blamed for destabilizing the shoreline ...
MONTEREY, California (KGO) — When we first met the hungry otters of Elkhorn Slough last year, they were chowing down on a species of burrowing crabs blamed for destabilizing the shoreline ...
MONTEREY, California (KGO) — When we first met the hungry otters of Elkhorn Slough last year, they were chowing down on a species of burrowing crabs blamed for destabilizing the shoreline ...
At the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve in California, hungry southern sea otters (Enhydra lutris nereis) are gobbling up the invasive crabs and keeping their numbers in check ...
A recent study was published in the scientific journal Biological Invasions, detailing that otters at the Elkhorn Slough are keeping populations of globally invasive green crab at bay.