Fencing that prevented tule elk in Point Reyes National Seashore from competing for food with nearby cattle will be removed, the National Park Service says.
The National Park Service has agreed to delay further work to dismantle a tule elk enclosure fence in the Point Reyes National Seashore following a lawsuit by the California Cattlemen’s Association.
To read more coverage on Point Reyes National Seashore, including about the ongoing talks over the future of the cattle ranches and dairy farms, go here. A 46-year-old fence that long straddled ...
The fate of the 2-mile fence that separates the seashore’s largest elk herd from leased farms and ranches is the focal point of the latest legal fight with the National Park Service. To read ...
After a small herd of once-endangered tule elk were relocated to Tomales Point in 1978, their numbers grew over the decades. But several hundred elk died during the severe droughts of 2013-2015 ...
The Center is working to protect free-roaming tule elk herds at Point Reyes National Seashore in Marin County, California. We aim to prevent the National Park Service from caving to ranchers who want ...
Tule elk will be permitted to roam free in Northern California’s Point Reyes National Seashore, the National Park Service announced Monday. As part of a long-awaited park management plan ...
After years of debate, nearly two miles of fencing that prevented Point Reyes National Seashore tule elk from accessing water and competing for food with nearby cattle will be removed, the ...
The National Park Service has agreed to delay further work to dismantle a tule elk enclosure fence in the Point Reyes National Seashore following a lawsuit by the California Cattlemen’s Association.