Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve


1700 Elkhorn Road
Watsonville, CA 95076
(831) 728-2822

(directions)


Otters and Elkhorn Slough


Elkhorn SloughElkhorn Slough is a jewel on California’s coastline and one of the 25 most significant biodiversity hotspots in the world. Its acreage is second in size only to the wetlands in the San Francisco Bay Area. While it offers a variety of rich habitats and vegetation for hundreds of species of birds, fish and other wildlife, it’s under constant threat from human activity, pollution and erosion.


This region is home to one of the largest populations of southern sea otters on the California coast. Still, their numbers today are but a fraction of what they were a few hundred years ago when they numbered well over 100,000 along the entire West Coast, from Alaska to Mexico. Hunters nearly wiped them out in the 18th and 19th centuries.


Today, federal law protects the otters from hunters, but they face other dangers nearly as deadly. More sea otters seem to be getting sick and researchers want to find out why.

More by Topic: Environment, Biology
More by Location: Monterey County
Accessible: No
Difficulty: Moderate
Duration: 1.7 hours

Print and Go - Otters and Elkhorn Slough

Use this printable pocket guide to go on your own exploration of Elkhorn Slough.
quest_print_go_elkhorn_slough.pdf (574.1 KB)

Designing an Exploration on Google Maps

Like the Explorations on the QUEST site? Use this place-based educational guide for educators and group leaders to create similar science-based maps with youth.
QUEST_ExplorationCreation.pdf (550.5 KB)