And that’s how the Conservation and Environmental Stewardship Apprenticeship Program (CESAP) was born. It’s for girls and folks of marginalized gender identities from ages 13 to 18. And it gives them hands-on skills with the kinds of scientific work that we do at the park and the kinds of scientific communication that we do. So in 2019, we had one CESAP apprentice, which was myself, and now we have 40, plus a wait list.
My capstone project is building a machine learning model that can categorize the different species that we see in our trail cameras in order to expedite the data processing. Because one issue that we’ve had is having to manually go through these videos — it is really important for us to be able to comb through it more efficiently.
I’m also creating a workshop for the EcoLogik Institute so that the youth within the EcoLogik Institute can learn how to do this themselves.
I’m choosing the four most common mammals that we see here. So, you have gray foxes, skunks, feral cats, and raccoons. And a lot of them have very similar body shapes.
If we’re taking too long to recognize a problem, we might be too late to solve it. So the quicker we can get at identifying problems and coming up with creative solutions to them, especially when it comes to habitat loss, invasive species or climate change — the faster that we can fix those problems and save the world around us.”
- Aamir Asadi, Robotics Engineering and Critical Race and Ethnic Studies student at UC Santa Cruz, Intern with the EcoLogik Institute and American Conservation Experience