The Accidental Ecosystem: People and Wildlife in American Cities – Zoom recording

San Joaquin kit fox in Bakersfield suburbs. Photo: CSUS ESRP / Tory Westall

Free in-person and live-streamed lecture with Dr. Peter Alagona

This event occurred March 2, 2023
Please follow this link to view the Zoom lecture recording: The Accidental Ecosystem: Zoom recording

Since WW II, cities in North America, South America, Europe, Australia, and parts of East Asia have attracted unprecedented numbers of wild animals even as many wildlife populations have declined or been decimated in other “wilder” ecosystems. Most American cities, in particular, now have more wildlife in and around them than at any time in their history. How did this happen? And what does it mean for people, wildlife, cities, and even nature itself on our increasingly urban planet? In this talk, Peter Alagona will answer these questions in relation to his new book, The Accidental Ecosystem: People and Wildlife in American Cities, published in spring 2022 by the University of California Press.

Dr. Peter Alagona. Courtesy photo.

Peter Alagona is a professor in the Environmental Studies Program at UCSB. Before arriving at UCSB, he studied at Northwestern, UCLA, Harvard, and Stanford. He is the author of around 5 dozen articles and 2 books on American environmental history and human relations with wildlife, including his most recent book. He is also the founder and facilitator of the California Grizzly Research Network, which conducts research on the past and potential future of brown bears in California.