Exactly what species reside in the country's national parks? What are the natural resources in your county and which ones might be most important to conserve? These questions and more can be answered online at the computerized UC Davis Information Center for the Environment. The center aims to serve people who make decisions about how California resources are managed, says center director Jim Quinn, a professor of environmental studies. When the center opened its electronic doors last summer, it was the only online source for the federal endangered species list. It remains the only online source for the California list (an unofficial posting), as well as for a variety of other environmental data from more than 30 collaborating federal, state and private environmental programs. Dry data tables from several sources are being transformed into maps and graphics that are easier for planners, policy-makers and the general public to read and understand. Internet visitors can even find a video model of fish being sucked into city-bound water pipes from the streams feeding the San Francisco Bay and Delta area. Many of the projects, such as the California Rivers Assessment, are experimental, with new and updated information being added daily. The center's Internet address via World Wide Web is http://ice.ucdavis.edu/; via Gopher is ice.ucdavis.edu.