Community Corner
Outfoxing Climate Change: Endangered Species Provides Lesson In Biodiversity
Living on the campus of CSU Bakersfield is a litter of healthy San Joaquin kit fox pups and their mother.

BAKERSFIELD — An endangered species of fox that has surfaced on a Central Valley college campus is providing proof that one of the biggest weapons against climate change is maintaining biodiversity of the planet.
Early morning, as the sun rises at Cal State University Bakersfield, it's quiet. But when night falls, it can get a little wild, as in "wildlife."
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Researchers in the biology department puncture a can of cat food, and then secure it with a stake in the ground. Overnight, the camera records all the wildlife that sniffs out the can and tries to dislodge it.
Some of the critters that come by to lick the can are common to the area: such as skunks, opossums, feral cats, and raccoons. But one species raised some eyebrows: the San Joaquin kit fox. The tiny fox is an endangered under both California and federal law.
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"I think we're all very surprised to see the kit fox is doing so well in urban areas," noted scientist Abigail Gwinn from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Gwinn is the unit biologist for Kern County and specializes in endangered species.
Gwinn said since the late 1960s, the number of San Joaquin kit foxes has dramatically declined, partly due to habitat loss. These creatures once thrived in the grasslands across the Central Valley. Experts believe climate change will threaten even more loss.
But a video provided to CBS News Bay Area by parking officer Mechelle Kenison tells a hopeful story. In the clip, a litter of healthy kit fox pups is seen playing around their mother, having the time of their lives.
Cal State University Bakersfield released the below statement regarding the preservation of the San Joaquin kit fox:
The protection of the San Joaquin kit fox population is essential to California State University, Bakersfield's longstanding efforts to protect the biodiversity and ecosystem of our campus. Students, faculty, staff and university leadership work together to make CSUB a sustainable campus. To that end, we continue to partner with California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which has offered guidance and support over the years. We also work with leading consultants to ensure that we are prioritizing the needs and safety of the San Joaquin kit fox when conducting maintenance and other activities on our campus.
In addition, CSUB is in the planning stages of forming an Ecosystem Committee, which will include students, faculty and staff and bolster and coordinate the sustainability efforts already taking place on our campus.
At this time, ground-squirrel control has been discontinued as we move forward together to identify a long-term solution to the overpopulation of the ground squirrels on our campus.
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