The beach and bluffs with flowers in the foreground at Younger Lagoon Reserve, Santa Cruz, California

Internships

Internships and Volunteer Opportunities

Each quarter, dozens of UCSC undergraduates and community members inern and volunteer at Younger Lagoon Reserve.  Student interns range from first-quarter freshman to graduating seniors and spend between 6 and 15 hours a week working on a variety of projects on the reserve. Reserve staff and student supervisors lead interns in a wide variety of field-based research and hands-on-learning experiences.  Most student interns receive academic credit for their internship through the UCSC Environmental Studies Internship Office.  Other students receive credit for their internship through courses that require an internship.  Some of our internship partners and collaborating classes include the Rachel Carson College Sustainability Internship  (CLEI 155), Restoration Ecology (ENVS 160), Senior Seminar in Environemental Studies (ENVS 196) and the Kenneth Norris Center for Natural History

Students and community members interested in interning or volunteering at Younger Lagoon Reserve are encouraged to start with either a 2-unit internship or a 6-hour a week volunteer commitment with the Younger Lagoon Reserve Habitat Restoration Crew.  Habitat Restoration Crew members are involved with every aspect of habitat restoration, including native seed collection and cleaning, native plant propagation, invasive and exotic species removal, land stewardship, plant and animal identification, and more.

Students that have successfully completed a 2-unit internship at Younger Lagoon Reserve may inquire about 5-unit internships and Senior Thesis projects. These opportunites require sugnificantly more commitment than a 2-unit internship on the part of the student, reserve staff, and faculty advisor, and typically result in a substantive project. Previous projects include original research into methods for native habitat restoraiton, the creation of field guides, GIS projects, and more.

Female student poses for a photo in front of a rock formation at Younger Lagoon Reserve, Santa Cruz, California

“You mean what was the highlight of my undergraduate experience?  Easy, the UCSC Natural Reserves.  They were the foundation for the last three years of my undergraduate experience. Since I got involved with habitat restoration at Younger Lagoon Reserve, I have experienced a mentorship relationship I have not found anywhere else.  It has provided me with several work and volunteer opportunities, connected me with other organizations and provided a sense of place amidst a hazy and hectic undergraduate experience”.

YLR undergraduate intern

Explore Opportunities at Younger Lagoon Reserve

Students gather in a circle in the field by Seymour Center, Santa Cruz, California

Habitat Restoration Internship

What is stewardship? Restoration? Ecology? The Younger Lagoon Reserve Habitat Restoration Field Crew offers opportunities for students to answer these questions. Learn about natural history and build your resume.

Students gather to show research at Younger Lagoon Reserve, Santa Cruz, California

Songbird Banding Program

Songbird banding has a long history at our site. In 1973, William “Breck” Tyler started bird banding at what would later become Younger Lagoon Reserve, before the construction of the Long Marine Lab.

Students hiking the trails through the brush at Younger Lagoon Reserve, Santa Cruz, California

Student Employment

Younger Lagoon Reserve offers paid opportunies for students to work in support of the Reserve’s mission to provide university-level teaching, research, and public service as Field Assistants

Last modified: Jul 18, 2025