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| EXPLORE, ENJOY AND PROTECT THE PLANET | ||
| February/March 2004 | ||
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California's Oak Woodlands Need Your Help! Pat Veesart | |
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Close your eyes and try to picture California in your mind. What do you see? The snow-capped Sierra Nevada? Towering redwoods shrouded in mist? The steep cliffs and crashing waves of the Big Sur coastline? Or perhaps golden hills studded with grey-green oak trees under a cyanic sky? Oak woodlands are one of California's signature landscapes - a natural icon of the "Golden State." Oak woodlands are the richest terrestrial wildlife habitat in California. Over 330 species of birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians depend upon them. These woodlands are also home to hundreds of species of plants and play a critical role in protecting soils, regulating water flow in watersheds, and maintaining water quality in streams and rivers. In the last 250 years, California has lost 90% of its majestic valley oaks and one third of all species of oaks combined. Of an estimated 10-12 million acres of original oak woodlands, only some seven million acres remain. Most are degraded to some degree, and only about 4% enjoy protected status. Oak woodlands continue to be impacted by intensive urbanization and agriculture. The California Resources Agency projects that more than 14,000 acres of oaks are lost annually to development, rangeland "improvement," and conversion to more intensive agricultural uses like vineyards. Because oak woodlands are considered "non-commercial" species, they are not subject to state |
laws which regulate timber harvest. Local protections through General Plans, resolutions, ordinances, and voluntary efforts generally have failed to slow the loss of California's oak woodlands. Senate Bill 711, introduced in the state legislature last year by Senator Sheila Kuehl (D-Los Angeles), would require California's counties to prepare Oak Woodland Management plans or ordinances that require mitigation for the loss of oak woodlands and specify minimum mitigation measures. Unfortunately, SB 711 was bottled up in the Assembly Appropriations Committee because of opposition from development and agriculture interests. The author intends to move it out of committee and to a vote in 2004. SB 711 is a common-sense approach to protecting California's vanishing oak woodlands that has the flexibility to allow development and agricultural activities to continue in areas where oaks occur. California's oak woodlands need and deserve protection. If our children and grandchildren are to enjoy California's unique oak-studded landscape, then it is incumbent upon us to take the steps necessary to preserve them now. Please call or write your legislators and ask them to support SB 711, or join Sierra Club California's Legislative Action Network to receive alerts on this and other important state legislation. |