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Here's How to Design a Wildlife Crossing That Wildlife Will Actually Use (KCET)

Roll down your windows while cruising down the 101 through Agoura today, and you'll see a few one or two story buildings, brown rolling hills, and depending on the season, some green trees. But if everything goes according to plan, then by 2021 you'll be able to see a massive bridge arching over the highway, connecting restored habitat on either side of one of the nation's busiest roadways. The wildlife crossing at Liberty Canyon, when completed, promises to be the world's largest urban wildlife crossing.

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California Desert to be Protected by Renewable Energy Plan (The Pew Charitable Trusts)

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management has issued an historic and far-reaching decision balancing conservation with renewable energy development across a vast swath of the California desert. It's called the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan, or DRECP, and will permanently protect significant areas of public lands in the California desert—including the Silurian Valley, Mayan Peak, and Chuckwalla Bench.

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Magical Mojave: A Full Moon Tour (NBC)

The Desert, is might be accurately stated, is lush with pure mystery and magic. One minute we're rambling along a clutch of creosote bushes, lost in reverie, when a darting catches our eye (a small bird, perhaps, or a lizard). Its wonders are plentiful and surprising, but we mostly experience them by the light of our planet's nearest star. To see someplace epic, like the Cadiz Dunes Wilderness Area, by the light of our lunar satellite is something pretty darn special, and if it is a full moon? Well, right there you have a walk to remember, even if you don't spy any lizards or birds along the way.

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Land trust celebrating its 10-year anniversary (Hi-Desert Star)

The Mojave Desert Land Trust is celebrating 10 years of acquiring California desert property to preserve from development. Donations have helped the land trust protect over 60,000 acres of the Mojave Desert. The Mojave Desert Land Trust was formed in 2006 by a small group of people who believed the desert landscape was facing increasing threats from inappropriate development and renewable energy projects.

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