Caltrans and National Park Service Retrofit Project Helps Wildlife Cross Highway 118 in Ventura County, California
Wildlife, large and small, are getting some help from their biologist friends at the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and the National Park Service (NPS) to cross a dozen-mile stretch of State Route 118, a two-lane highway in Ventura County. At the heart of the mitigation project are two goals: to create more habitat connectivity for diverse wildlife species and keep animals from becoming road kill. Paul Caron, a Caltrans senior biologist, said the 118 is dangerous because the two-lane highway appears more benign to animals considering whether to cross it. “Most animals won’t even try to cross the 101,” Caron said. “All of these roads – the 126, 118, and others are all interconnected. What good is it if we just focus on the 101, when they all get killed on … the 118?”