• en_US
  • es_MX
  • About Us
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
No Result
View All Result

  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Publications
  • Business Directory
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Report News
SDNews.com
Home News

Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks

Tech by Tech
November 16, 2011
in News, Peninsula Beacon
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks
0
SHARES
12
VIEWS
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks

Which population-control method would you gopher?

Several recreational parks in Ocean Beach give residents an opportunity to exercise their pets and themselves. The parks are also a nourishing home to local wildlife. Sometimes the presence of this wildlife — at least the ones classified as nuisances — means city intervention using various methods of population control that frequently pit animal activists and enthusiasts against those who simply want the problem taken care of. A prominent example of this dilemma is that involving a furry, reclusive creature that takes up residence in OB’s grassy havens — the pocket gopher. Known for building complex underground tunnel systems, the massive digging work is done by only one gopher per labyrinth. Experts say gophers are solitary and do not like company. A single gopher can be responsible for hundreds of dirt mounds and is frequently blamed for destroying parks and gardens, killing trees, plants and shrubbery. Their vegetarian diet consists only of roots from trees, shrubs and grass, as well as flowers and other plants. The furry critters’ destructive eating behavior often leads to being categorized as rodents or pests. Gophers are easily identified by their long front teeth, small ears and eyes and very short tails. They usually don’t grow longer than 10 inches in length. Oversize front legs and teeth are used to push dirt through the tunnels onto the grass above, frequently causing holes and hazards that can seriously injure an animal or jogger. Parks like Dusty Rhodes, Robb Field, Cleater Park and Dog Beach Park all demonstrate signs of gopher intrusion and damage. Gopher enthusiasts like to emphasize the animals’ positive influence on the local ecosystem. The burrowing helps aerate the soil and helps speed up the formation of new, richer soil by bringing minerals to the surface and mixing plant materials and fecal waste into it — leading to better plant growth. Not everyone, however, is a gopher fan and not everyone appreciates the destruction resulting from the gopher burrowing. To prevent the local parks from being destroyed, trees and plants are often protected by screen fencing and underground netting, bare ground or barriers of six inches of coarse gravel, according to gardening enthusiast Jay Kurcaba . “The trick is,” Kurcaba said, “to plant annual grains rather than seasonal plants. Their roots don’t provide enough food or nutrients to the hungry gopher.” Normally, gopher overpopulation is mitigated by natural predators like coyotes, weasels, large snakes and owls. Only one of these four hunters is a regular in the Ocean Beach area, however — the white barn owl. A couple of years ago, white barn owls began nesting between the area of Sunset Cliffs Boulevard and Beacon Street and between Cape May and Del Monte streets. The owls mainly feed on rats and mice in those areas. Instead of pesticides or other pricey methods used by the city’s Park and Recreation Department to control the gopher population, some Ocean Beach residents have suggested relocating a few of the owls to the Cleater Park, Dusty Rhodes/Rhodes Ranch and the Dog Park areas. OB residents like Mary Richards and Scott Richard exercise their dogs daily at Dusty Rhodes Dog Park. The two share similar views on the gopher problem. They both take a “live and let live” approach. “Gophers are here for a purpose,” said Richards. “Let nature take its course. I definitely do not agree with poison. It pollutes the ocean.” Richard agreed. “I wouldn’t want my dogs to get sick from a poisoned gopher or from pesticides they come in contact with,” he said. “It should be a natural, inexpensive solution.” Richard and Richards said they believe relocating the owls would be very beneficial. James Whalen of Ocean Beach also supports a more natural approach to the removal of gophers. “They shouldn’t be eradicated, but they definitely need to be controlled,” Whalen said. “It got out of hand last year when the main park [Dusty Rhodes/Rhodes Ranch] was overrun with hundreds of gopher holes. People ended up injured from stepping into holes all over the place.” While Whalen said he doesn’t object to relocating owls to the local parks, he sees other natural solutions already taking place. “Inside the dog park [the fenced-in area inside Dusty Rhodes Park], we don’t have a problem,” Whalen said. “It’s self-regulating, our dogs take care of it. They dig them up [the gophers]. Not a day goes by without the dogs catching a gopher or two.” Of course, more traditional methods are being applied by the city in lieu of an owl relocation, often becoming the source of local myth as to how gopher control is actually being done. Clay Bingham, director of community parks for the Park and Recreation Department, said city officials are aware of resident concerns over the gopher-control methods being used and sought to set the record straight. “To keep our parks safe for house pets and the public, we apply a very low-level gopher-control pesticide product called ‘Gopher Getter 2’ at all four [Ocean Beach] parks,” Bingham said. “The only difference is in the frequency of applications of the product. “Dog Beach Park, Robb Field and Dusty Rhodes get treated with the same frequency — once every week,” he said. “Cleator Park, on the other hand, only receives an application of the gopher control product once a month. … To insure the most professional and safest handling of the product, a professional applicator contractor has been hired by the city of San Diego to apply the gopher control.” Bingham said community parks staff members are available to answer questions or field concerns over the gopher control, and to collect suggestions or ideas about alternate means of nuisance abatement. Residents may call (619) 221-8901 — a direct line to staff members Mondays through Fridays from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Previous Post

New adventures in drinking and dining

Next Post

Pacific Beach boasts its own ‘Little Miss Sunshine’

Tech

Tech

Related Posts

A red wood gavel
News

Murder trial for North Park stabbing moves forward

by Neal Putnam
May 7, 2023
sdsu housing
Mission Valley News - News

Developer selected for first affordable housing project at SDSU Mission Valley

by SDNEWS Staff
April 12, 2023
balboapark
Downtown News

April news briefs from in and around San Diego

by SDNEWS Staff
April 11, 2023
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks
Downtown News

Town hall: America’s largest landlord raises rent, evicts tenants in SD

by Juri Kim
April 10, 2023
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks
Downtown News

Traffic safety campaign launches with posters at intersections where people died

by Juri Kim
April 7, 2023
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks
Downtown News

Local chapter of “Banking on Our Future” protest big banks’ fossil fuel ties

by Juri Kim
April 5, 2023
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks
News

Two rare Amur leopards born at zoo

by SDNEWS Staff
March 28, 2023
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks
News

Community planning groups now required to meet in person

by Dave Schwab
March 8, 2023
Next Post
Local wildlife’s impact on Ocean Beach parks

Pacific Beach boasts its own ‘Little Miss Sunshine’

[adinserter block="1"]
  • Business Directory
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Publications
  • Report News

CONNECT + SHARE

© Copyright 2023 SDNews.com Privacy Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • en_US
  • es_MX
  • Report News

© Copyright 2023 SDNews.com Privacy Policy