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  • 1
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/556 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:52:46 | 556 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This publication is an integral part of the Department's high-priority inventory and assessment of coastal marshland and tideflat resources. It is intended as a guide for citizens, planners, administrators, and all others interested in the use and development of coastal lands and waters.Although the resources and problems of Bolinas Lagoon have probably been the subject of more biological and physical investigations than any small estuarine area of the California coast, many of the pertinent reports and information are not readily available to the public.Consequently, it is one purpose of this report to summarize the lagoon's history, ecological attractions, educational values and the problems facing its continued existence. At the same time, it should provide concerned citizens with a knowledge of the sources of additional and more specific information.Publication of this report is consistent with the obligation of the Department of Fish and Game to do everything in its power to protect and maintain the State's fish and wildlife resources. Therefore, its purpose transcends local issues on pollution and development, and the Department is, in fact, submitting a report to the people on the status and future of part of its inheritance and the dowry of coming generations.The report is the third of a scheduled series. It follows similar releases on Upper Newport Bay (Orange County) and Goleta Slough (Santa Barbara county) in March and June of 1970. Documentation of the resources of other critical areas is in progress. There will be future reports of this nature on Elkhorn Slough, Morro Bay, Tomales Bay, Humboldt Bay, and highly threatened marshlands in southern California. (137 pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Bolinas Lagoon ; California ; natural resources ; conservation ; pollution
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 2
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/545 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:49:18 | 545 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The study of the natural resources of San Diego Bay is a part of a high priority inventory and assessment program conducted by the Department of Fish and Game. This report is a guide for citizens, planners, administrators, and all others interested in the use and development of coastal lands and waters. It documents the status and future of natural resources that should be a part of the inheritance of future generations. References appended provide the interested and concerned reader with sources of more specific information.One of a scheduled series, this publication follows similar documents on Upper New-port Bay (Orange County), Goleta Slough (Santa Barbara County), Bolinas Lagoon (Marin County), and Elkhorn Slough (Monterey County). Preparation of this report has been supported by Fish and Wild-Life Preservation funds and by Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid to wildlife programs. (124 pp.)
    Keywords: Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; San Diego Bay ; natural resources ; pollution
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 3
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/557 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:53:13 | 557 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: In spite of its past abuses by man, Humboldt Bay is one of the few coastal estuaries remaining in California that has not been rendered largely unsuitable for wildlife by commercial development, dredging, filling or pollution. Its importance is emphasized considering that about 65 percent of the State's original estuarine tidelands have already been destroyed. The people have demonstrated their concern for our dwindling natural resources. If we are to preserve what remains it will be necessary for the people to exercise the wisest possible use of these resources.Because of the importance of coastal wetlands to the fish and wildlife of California, the Department of Fish and Game has initiated a high priority statewide inventory of these wetlands. This publication is an integral part of that program. It is intended as a guide for citizens, planners,administrators and all others interested in the use and development of coastal lands and waters.The Department has been charged with the responsibility of protecting and maintaining the fish and wildlife resources of the State. This publication is directed towards meeting this responsibility by outlining the specific resources and recreational aspects of Humboldt Bay, elucidating problems,and recommending courses of action for future development.Preservation of the Humboldt Bay resources is much more than a local issue. What is done or not done here can have statewide, national and international implications. It also must be recognized that there is an obligation to future generations. Decisions made today will affect all thosewho follow in our footsteps. (200pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; natural resources ; Humboldt Bay ; California ; wetlands
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  • 4
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/555 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:52:18 | 555 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The purpose of this report is (1) to document the natural resources of Mugu Lagoon, (2) describe the uses that those resources receive, (3) enumerate the problems that affect them, and (4) recommend measures that will maintain and enhance this wetland area now and in the future. It is intended as a guide to those responsible for resource maintenance of the Lagoon, including the Navy, the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of Fish and Game, as well as to provide information to those interested in the status and future of the Lagoon.This report has been prepared under contract to and fully funded by the Office of Biological Services of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The goals and purpose of this federal office are to review the impact on fish and wildliferesources of land, mineral and water development practices; construction of inshore pipeline canals and refineries; power plant construction/operation and urban development. This report, and five other southern California reports,covering Agua Hedionda (San Diego County), Anaheim Bay-Huntington Harbour (Orange County), the northern Santa Barbara County coastal wetlands, Carpinteria Marsh (Santa Barbara County) and the Nipomo Dunes and Wetlands (San Luis Obispo County), are part of the Department's "CoastalWetland Series." Other reports of the series are listed inside of the front cover. (190 pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Mugu Lagoon ; California ; conservation ; pollution ; wetlands ; natural resources
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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  • 5
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Monterey, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/482 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:46:17 | 482 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This report summarizes the history of the slough, ecological attractions, educational value, and problems facing its continued existence. Appended references provide the interested and concerned citizen with sources of more specific information.As a result of the initial survey of estuarine areas of California(California Department of Fish and Game, 1969), the critical status of the coastal marshes became obvious. This report on Elkhorn Slough is part of the high priority inventory and assessment of coastal wetlands by the Department of Fish and Game, and it is intended as a guide for citizens, planners, administrators, and all others interested in the use and development of coastal lands and waters. As such, this report transcends local issues on pollution and development and, in fact, documents the status and future of natural resources that should be a part of the inheritance of following generations.This publication is one of a scheduled series. It follows similar documents on Upper Newport Bay (orange county), Goleta Slough (Santa Barbara County) and the Bolinas Lagoon (Marin county). (Document has 126 pages)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Elkhorn Slough ; Monterey County ; Moss Landing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 6
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/550 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:50:44 | 550 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: One of the objectives of this report is to document not onlythe ecologic/biological resources of the Napa Marsh but also the aesthetic, recreational, and productive (such as agriculture and salt production) resources of the 73 square miles that once made up a network of wetlands and sloughs and rivers. Thousands of people cross portions of the marsh by automobile every day, undoubtedly assimilating in largely unconscious ways the daily and seasonal ebb and flow of light, colors, birds, clouds and tides. And yet, few stop to consider its value and even fewer have visited or savored its interior waterways and remaining natural marshlands.This report has a second set of objectives: that is, to describe the range of human demands which increasingly threaten parts of the marsh, and to make recommendations which focus on specific problems and offer positive solutions. The recommendations essentially take three forms: preservation and/or acquisition of the most vulnerable parts of the marsh; enhancement of areas that can be restored to tidal action to become once again viable marshland; and protection of the residual values of lands some of which are now committed to other uses but still offer marginal or supplemental habitat to resident and migratory wildlife. It is hoped, then, that this report will be useful to planners, to administrators, to landowners, and to others whose interests are diverse, serving as a guide to decisions which concern both conservation and appropriate development of the Napa Marsh.The report is part of a series of studies of critical California coastal wetlands which have also been addressed to the practical need for management solutions. In addition, this series offers an information resource--in the form of compilations of technical data, interpretive descriptions, and bibliographies--for each of the coastal wetlands which have been identified as critical. This additional information regarding other California coastal wetlandresources and their administration may be obtained from the other reports in the "Coastal Wetland Series" prepared by the California Department of Fish and Game. (145pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Napa Marsh ; California ; San Pablo Bay ; conservation ; pollution ; natural resources
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 7
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/547 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:49:52 | 547 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The California Department of Fish and Game has played a central role in attempting to protect and enhance the remaining 25% of southern California wetlands which have survived the ingress of urbanization and commercialdevelopment since 1900 (U.S. Dept. Interior, 1972). To this end, the Department has published a series of reports documenting California's coastal wetlands resources, including four covering wetlands in southern California (Upper Newport Bay, Frey et al., 1970; Goleta Slough, Spethet al., 1970; Los Penasquitos Lagoon, Mudie et al., 1974; and San Diego Bay, Browning et al., 1973). The following report is an extension of that effort. (131pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; San Dieguito Lagoon ; Batiquitos Lagoon ; California ; Natural resources ; conservation ; pollution
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 8
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/537 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:48:39 | 537 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The purpose of this report is: 1) to document the natural resources of Carpinteria Marsh, 2) outline the uses those resources receive, 3) enumerate the problems and conflicts of use that affect those resources, and 4) recommend measures that will protect and enhance the marsh and its resources. It is intended as a guide for citizens, planners and administrators of all private and public entities interested in the status and future of the marsh.This report has been prepared under contract to and fully funded by the Office of Biological Services of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The goals and purpose of this federal office are to review the impact on fish and wildlife resources of land, mineral and water development practices, such as offshore oil and gas exploration, development andproduction; construction of inshore pipeline canals and refineries; power plant construction/operation and urban development. This report, and five other southern California reports, covering Agua Hedionda (San Diego County), Anaheim Bay-Huntington Harbor (Orange County), Mugu Lagoon(Ventura County), the Northern Santa Barbara County Coastal Wetlands and the Nipomo Dunes and Wetlands (San Luis Obispo County), are scheduled to be part of the Department's "Coastal Wetland Series" that includes reportson the natural resources of Upper Newport Bay (Orange County), Goleta Slough (Santa Barbara county), Bolinas Lagoon (Marin County), Elkhorn Slough (Monterey County), San Diego Bay and Los Penasquitos Lagoon (San Diego County), Morro Bay (San Luis Obispo County), Humboldt Bay andthe Eel River Delta (Humboldt County), Lake Earl and the Smith River Delta (Del Norte County) and Bodega Harbor (Sonoma County). (103pp.)
    Keywords: Ecology ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; natural resources ; Carpinteria Marsh ; California
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 9
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/546 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:49:33 | 546 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The Lake Earl/Smith River Delta area is a key coastal wetland situated in northern California. The Lake and Delta have retained much of their value to wildlife and serve as an important link in a chain of such wetlands that extend southward along the Pacific Ocean from Alaska to South America. Millions of water-associated birds of the Pacific Flyway utilize these areas as feeding and resting stops along their migration paths. In California, these wetlands also serve as a significant portion of the available wintering grounds for a major share of the birds within the flyway.The Smith River is also one of the State's most productive salmon and steelhead streams. Anadromous fish produced here provide thousands of angler use days to sport fishermen and contribute substantially to the commercial fishing catch off the northern coast.Because of the importance of coastal wetlands to the fish and wildlife of California, the Department of Fish and Game has initiated a high priority statewide inventory and assessment of these wetlands. This publication is an integral part of that program.This report identifies specific resources and uses; directs attention to problems; and recommends courses of action needed to insure resource protection. It is intended as a guide for citizens, planners, administrators and other interested in the use and development of California'scoastal land and waters. (132pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Lake Earl ; Smith River Delta ; California ; Conservation ; Pollution ; Natural Resources
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  • 10
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/551 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:51:14 | 551 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The purpose of this report is to document the natural resources of a portion of that remaining habitat, a small 18-square mile section of coast in southern San Luis Obispo and northern Santa Barbara counties, that is considered the largest and most beautiful coastal dune-lagoon complex in California.Initially, this report was to deal solely with the wetland ecosystems of the Santa Maria River. It became obvious, however, that the Santa Maria is but a small part of a unique assemblage of sand dunes and wetlands that stretches north from the river to the City of Pismo Beach. Through time, the biological entities of this entire region have become closely interrelated. To exclude the dunes and speak only to the wetlands, would not adequately document the resources of an extremely complex and diverse section of coast. It was therefore resolved to include within the report the natural resources of over 12,000 acres that will be referred to as the Nipomo Dunes and Wetlands.This report is one of a series dealing with critical coastal wetlands. In addition to documenting the natural resources of a unique coastal ecosystem, it also identifies the use those resources receive and the problems affecting them. Also included are recommendations for the conservation of these resources. In its entirety the report is intendedas a guide for planners, administrators and all those concerned with the future of the California coast, and specifically the Nipomo area.This report has been prepared under contract to and fully funded by the Office of Biological Services of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The goals and purpose of this federal office are to review the impact on fish and wildlife resources of land, mineral and water development practices, such as /offshore oil and gas exploration, development andproduction; construction of inshore pipeline canals and refineries; power plant construction/operation and urban development. This report, and five other southern California reports covering Agua Hedionda (San Diego County), Anaheim Bay-Huntington Harbor (Orange County), Mugu Lagoon (Ventura County), Carpinteria Marsh (Santa Barbara County) andthe Northern Santa Barbara County Coastal Wetlands, are scheduled to be part of the Department's "Coastal Wetland Series" (see inside front cover).
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Nipomo Dunes ; California ; natural resources ; pollution ; conservation
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 11
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/548 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:50:08 | 548 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The purpose of this report is to document the natural resources of Los Penasquitos Lagoon, San Diego County; to outline and evaluate proposed developments affecting those resources; and to recommend measures that will protect and enhance the lagoon and its environs.The necessity for a report of this nature has become apparent with the progressive destruction of California's coastal wetlands over the past fifty years. These wetland resources, which are virtually irreplaceable, are essential to the continued existence of many forms of resident fish and wildlife and to the preservation of migratory shorebirds and waterfowl. Approximately 60 percent of the tidal wetlands in California has already been destroyed (Speth, 1970); and, it is estimated that only 10 percent isleft of the original acreage of coastal marshland in San Diego County. The future of the remaining wetland habitats continues to be threatened. There is an urgent need, therefore, for sound planning to protect these wetlands and to prevent their otherwise inevitable disappearance as a valuable natural resource. (100pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Los Penasquitos Lagoon ; California ; Conservation ; Pollution ; natural resources
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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  • 12
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/553 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:51:52 | 553 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: One of a Coastal Wetland Series, this report is a synthesis of information accumulated on wetland areas of which little was known until the last two decades. It is hoped that the knowledge herein will aid local and state agencies and governments in their efforts to create sound plans for the preservation, management and wise use of the natural resources of the esteros; and, at the same time, to perpetuate the present uses of the surrounding agricultural lands which also are becoming a threatened resources in northern coastal California.This report, then, will: 1) document the natural resources of the Esteros Americano and de San Antonio; 2) substantiate uses of those resources; 3) discuss problems and conflicts of existing and potential uses as they affect the resources; and 4) recommend measures to protect, maintain and enhance these important wetland resources. (145 pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; Humboldt Bay ; California ; natural resources ; conservation ; pollution ; wetlands
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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  • 13
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    California Department of Fish and Game | Sacramento, CA
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/552 | 8 | 2020-08-24 03:51:32 | 552 | California Department of Fish and Game
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This report has been prepared under contract to and fully funded by the Office of Biological Services of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The goals and purpose of this federal office are to review the impact on fish and wildlife resources of land, mineral and water development practices, such as offshore oil and gas exploration, development and production; construction of inshore pipeline canals and refineries; power plant construction/operation and urban development. This report, and five other southern California reports, covering Carpinteria Marsh (Santa Barbara County), Anaheim Bay-Huntington Harbor (Orange County), Mugu Lagoon (Ventura County), the Northern Santa Barbara County CoastalWetlands, and the Nipomo Dunes and Wetlands (San Luis Obispo County), are scheduled to be part of the Department's "Coastal Wetland Series" (see inside front cover). (154 pp.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Environment ; natural resources ; Agua Hedionda Lagoon ; California ; pollution ; conservation ; wetlands
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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