
A new partnership between CSUCI and the Santa Barbara Zoo will enrich academic opportunities for students and enhance wildlife conservation, education and research throughout the region.
President Richard Yao and zoo President and CEO Richard Block signed a memorandum of understanding in April, paving the way for future collaboration and a zoo-owned- and-managed conservation center on the CSUCI campus.
âBy partnering with a world-class zoo right here in our backyard, we are strengthening our commitment to be a âconservation campusâ on the Central Coast,â said Yao. âWe are excited about the opportunities for our students to work side by side with zoo personnel and CSUCI faculty to protect and reestablish threatened species in our region and to develop vital skills in conservation education and management. It is our hope that students and faculty from all disciplines and majors will have a chance to make an impact through our partnership with the zoo.â
âWe are excited to partner with CSUCI to establish the first zoo-owned-and-managed facility accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums on a university campus,â Block said. âThrough this alliance, we look forward to expanding our zoo conservation programs and providing a learning laboratory where students can assist in the important work of wildlife conservation, education, zoo management and marketing, animal husbandry, guest services, and more. The opportunities to align our programs and resources with CSUCI are limitless.â
The partnership resolves the zooâs need for more space in which to expand its wildlife conservation efforts. At its 28-acre Santa Barbara site, the zoo is running out of room to house a growing collection of threatened and endangered species, including Western snowy plovers, California red-legged frogs, California condors, and Western pond turtles, which it hopes to shift to the CSUCI conservation center.
Work for the conservation center will begin later this year on a 60,000-square-foot site on the western edge of the campus near Modoc Hall. In the meantime, collaborations between the zoo and CSUCIâs varied disciplines are being explored. The Performing Arts program is working with the zoo on live performances for visitors. Students in a Spanish capstone course are translating the zooâs educational materials into Spanish. And CSUCI is teaming up with the zooâs Early Explorers Preschool to bring its bachelorâs degree in Early Childhood Studies to Santa Barbara County in Fall 2023.