Isabelle Lopez credits her parents for setting her on an environmental career path. Her mother inspired a love of nature, but it was her dad鈥檚 obsession with the Californian Condor, the largest North American land bird, that sealed the deal.
鈥淗e鈥檚 not a bird person,鈥 Lopez said. 鈥淢aybe he related it to the Andean Condor,鈥 which is a national symbol of Ecuador, her dad鈥檚 home country.
鈥淢aybe that was his way of feeling at home here,鈥 she said.
As a wildlife and conservation biologist, Lopez has spent a lot of 2023 carefully studying New Hampshire鈥檚 environment while working as a land steward with the Nature Conservancy.
Her day to day included managing invasive species, monitoring to see what different plant and vegetation life is like across 32 preserves, and working on the trail system to make sure that people are still able to enjoy the area.
A colleague once told her, 鈥溾榊ou will always feel at home if you can learn to recognize the species around you.鈥欌
Lopez names tree and animal species with ease. But being outdoors is also a way to feel close to other people, she said. That was one way Lopez would connect with her family and others in Ecuador when she鈥檇 spend summers there.
鈥淵ou can be in a park and look at a really cool bird and someone next to you is also looking at that bird and you're kind of sharing a moment without even really knowing each other or talking to each other, which I think is really, really powerful,鈥 she said.
This video is part of , a video series from the New England News Collaborative.