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4.2 Agriculture and Forest Resources
4.2 Agriculture and Forest Resources 4.2 AGRICULTURE AND FOREST RESOURCES This section evaluates the potential impacts to agriculture and forest resources associated with implementation of the 2050 RTP/SCS. The information presented was compiled from multiple sources, including the County of San Diego, the State of California Department of Conservation (DOC), the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), CAL FIRE, and local jurisdictions. 4.2.1 EXISTING CONDITIONS Agriculture Overview of Agriculture in the Region Agriculture is not only an important contributor to the economy of the San Diego region; it also is a primary land use in the unincorporated area of the region. San Diego County contains 6,687 farms and agriculture ranked fifth as a component of the region’s economic resources (County of San Diego 2010). San Diego County is the 16th largest agricultural economy among all counties in the nation. The region’s unique topography creates a wide variety of microclimates resulting in nearly 30 different types of vegetation communities. This diversity allows San Diego farmers to grow over 200 different agricultural commodities, such as strawberries along the coast, apples in the mountain areas, and palm trees in the desert (County of San Diego 2010). The region ranks first in both California and the nation in production value of nursery plants, floriculture, and avocados. Statewide, San Diego County is in the top five counties for producing cucumbers, mushrooms, tomatoes, boysenberries and strawberries, grapefruit, Valencia oranges, tangelos and tangerines, honey, and eggs. San Diego County has the largest community of organic growers in the state and nation, with 374 farms growing more than 175 crops (County of San Diego 2009). -
HISTORIC RESOURCES EVALUATION REPORT for the 1118 N ANZA STREET TOWNHOMES PROJECT EL CAJON, SAN DIEGO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
HISTORIC RESOURCES EVALUATION REPORT for the 1118 N ANZA STREET TOWNHOMES PROJECT EL CAJON, SAN DIEGO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA PDS2018-TM-5628 REZ-18-003 Lead Agency: County of San Diego Department of Planning and Land Use Contact: Donna Beddow 5510 Overland Ave., Room 310 San Diego, CA 92123 (858) 694-3656 Preparers: Richard Carrico, M.A. Douglas W. Mengers, M.A., RPA, DPPH Archaeologist/Historian/Tribal Affairs Senior Archaeologist/Historian Recuerdos Research PanGIS, Inc. P.O. Box 387 8555 Aero Drive, Suite 200 Warner Springs, CA 92086 San Diego, CA 92123 (760) 518-1471 (760) 683-8335 __________________________________ __________________________________ Signature Signature Project Proponent: Sean Santa Cruz Hall Land Company 740 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Suite 204 Solana Beach, CA 92075 July 2018 NATIONAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL DATA BASE INFORMATION Authors: Douglas Mengers (PanGIS, Inc.) Richard Carrico (Recuerdos Research) Client/Project Proponent: Hall Land Company Report Date: July 2018 Report Title: Historic Resources Evaluation Report for the 1118 N Anza Street Townhomes Project, El Cajon, County of San Diego, California Type of Study: Historic Resources Evaluation New Sites: 1104 N Anza St; 1112 N Anza St; 1118 N Anza St; 1132 N Anza St; 1136 N Anza St Updated Sites: None USGS Quad: El Cajon 7.5-minute Acreage: 3.176 Permit Numbers: Key Words: El Cajon 7.5-minute quadrangle, El Cajon, Bostonia, N Anza St, Postwar suburban architecture, Postwar Minimal, ranch; P-37-037543; P-37- 037544; P-37-037545; P-37-037546; P-37-037547 i TABLE OF CONTENTS NATIONAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL DATA BASE INFORMATION ......................................................................... i TABLE OF FIGURES ....................................................................................................................................... iii LIST OF ACRONYMS .................................................................................................................................... -
V. R. Todd and R. E. Learned and Thomas J. Peters and Ronald T
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR TO ACCOMPANY MAP MF-1547-A ^UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY MINERAL RESOURCE POTENTIAL OF THE SILL HILL, HADSER, AND CALIENTE ROADLESS AREAS, SAN DIEGO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA SUMMARY REPORT By V. R. Todd and R. E. Learned U.S. Geological Survey and Thomas J. Peters and Ronald T. Mayerle U.S. Bureau of Mines STUDIES RELATED TO WILDERNESS Under the provisions of the Wilderness Act (Public Law 88-577, September 3, 1964) and the Joint Conference Report on Senate Bill 4, 88th Congress, the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Mines have been conducting mineral surveys of wilderness and primitive areas. Areas officially designated as "wilderness," "wild," or "canoe" when the act was passed were incorporated into the National Wilderness Preservation System, and some of them are presently being studied. The act provided that areas under consideration for wilderness designation should be studied for suitability for incorporation into the Wilderness System. The mineral surveys constitute one aspect of the suitability studies. The act directs that the results of such surveys are to be made available to the public and be submitted to the President and the Congress. This report discusses the results of min eral surveys of the Sill Hill (5-304), Hauser (5-021), and Caliente (5-017) Roadless Areas, Cleveland National Forest, San Diego dpunty, California. SUMMARY The Sill Hill, Hauser, and Caliente Roadless Areas comprise approximately 20,000 acres in the Cleveland National Forest, San Diego County, Calif, (fig. 1). Geological and geochemical investigations have been conducted by the U.S. -
Crestridge Ecological Reserve
Final Administrative Draft Habitat Management and Monitoring Plan for the Crestridge Ecological Reserve Prepared for State of California The Resources Agency Department of Fish and Game Prepared by Conservation Biology Institute Endangered Habitats Conservancy February 2009 Habitat Management and Monitoring Plan Crestridge Ecological Reserve Endangered Habitats Conservancy ii February 2009 Habitat Management and Monitoring Plan Crestridge Ecological Reserve Table of Contents Section Page 1.0 INTRODUCTION 1-1 1.1 Purpose of Management and Monitoring Plan 1-1 1.2 Property Location, History of Use, and Regional Ecological Significance 1-2 Location 1-2 History of Use 1-2 Regional Ecological Significance 1-6 1.3 MSCP Responsibilities 1-6 1.4 Conservation Bank 1-7 2.0 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION 2-1 2.1 Geographical Setting 2-1 2.2 Adjacent Land Use 2-1 2.3 Geology and Soils 2-2 2.4 Fire History 2-9 2.5 Cultural Features 2-10 2.6 Existing Facilities 2-15 3.0 HABITATS AND SENSITIVE SPECIES 3-1 3.1 Vegetation Communities 3-1 3.2 Sensitive Plant Species 3-2 3.3 Animal Species 3-9 3.4 Habitat Linkages to the Crestridge Ecological Reserve 3-9 Background 3-10 Importance of Crestridge 3-10 Potential Habitat Linkages to Crestridge 3-13 4.0 CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT GOALS AND OBJECTIVES 4-1 4.1 Conservation Issues 4-1 4.2 Biological Elements 4-3 4.3 Public Use Elements 4-7 4.4 Facility Maintenance Elements 4-9 5.0 BIOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT AND MONITORING RECOMMENDATIONS 5-1 5.1 Management 5-1 Exotic Plant Control 5-1 Exotic Animal Control 5-6 Fire Management 5-6 -
4 Tribal Nations of San Diego County This Chapter Presents an Overall Summary of the Tribal Nations of San Diego County and the Water Resources on Their Reservations
4 Tribal Nations of San Diego County This chapter presents an overall summary of the Tribal Nations of San Diego County and the water resources on their reservations. A brief description of each Tribe, along with a summary of available information on each Tribe’s water resources, is provided. The water management issues provided by the Tribe’s representatives at the San Diego IRWM outreach meetings are also presented. 4.1 Reservations San Diego County features the largest number of Tribes and Reservations of any county in the United States. There are 18 federally-recognized Tribal Nation Reservations and 17 Tribal Governments, because the Barona and Viejas Bands share joint-trust and administrative responsibility for the Capitan Grande Reservation. All of the Tribes within the San Diego IRWM Region are also recognized as California Native American Tribes. These Reservation lands, which are governed by Tribal Nations, total approximately 127,000 acres or 198 square miles. The locations of the Tribal Reservations are presented in Figure 4-1 and summarized in Table 4-1. Two additional Tribal Governments do not have federally recognized lands: 1) the San Luis Rey Band of Luiseño Indians (though the Band remains active in the San Diego region) and 2) the Mount Laguna Band of Luiseño Indians. Note that there may appear to be inconsistencies related to population sizes of tribes in Table 4-1. This is because not all Tribes may choose to participate in population surveys, or may identify with multiple heritages. 4.2 Cultural Groups Native Americans within the San Diego IRWM Region generally comprise four distinct cultural groups (Kumeyaay/Diegueno, Luiseño, Cahuilla, and Cupeño), which are from two distinct language families (Uto-Aztecan and Yuman-Cochimi). -
Water, Capitalism, and Urbanization in the Californias, 1848-1982
TIJUANDIEGO: WATER, CAPITALISM, AND URBANIZATION IN THE CALIFORNIAS, 1848-1982 A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History By Hillar Yllo Schwertner, M.A. Washington, D.C. August 14, 2020 Copyright 2020 by Hillar Yllo Schwertner All Rights Reserved ii TIJUANDIEGO: WATER, CAPITALISM, AND URBANIZATION IN THE CALIFORNIAS, 1848-1982 Hillar Yllo Schwertner, M.A. Dissertation Advisor: John Tutino, Ph.D. ABSTRACT This is a history of Tijuandiego—the transnational metropolis set at the intersection of the United States, Mexico, and the Pacific World. Separately, Tijuana and San Diego constitute distinct but important urban centers in their respective nation-states. Taken as a whole, Tijuandiego represents the southwestern hinge of North America. It is the continental crossroads of cultures, economies, and environments—all in a single, physical location. In other words, Tijuandiego represents a new urban frontier; a space where the abstractions of the nation-state are manifested—and tested—on the ground. In this dissertation, I adopt a transnational approach to Tijuandiego’s water history, not simply to tell “both sides” of the story, but to demonstrate that neither side can be understood in the absence of the other. I argue that the drawing of the international boundary in 1848 established an imbalanced political ecology that favored San Diego and the United States over Tijuana and Mexico. The land and water resources wrested by the United States gave it tremendous geographical and ecological advantages over its reeling southern neighbor, advantages which would be used to strengthen U.S. -
Appendix C - Natural Resources Report
APPENDIX C - NATURAL RESOURCES REPORT Cuyamaca Rancho State Park Equestrian Facilities Project Final EIR Page 444 January June 2010 Table of Contents Table of Contents 1.0 Project Introduction.....................................................................................................4 1.1 Project Location..........................................................................................................4 1.2 Project Description .....................................................................................................4 1.3 Consultation and Survey Dates...................................................................................4 1.4 Limitations that May Influence Results......................................................................5 2.0 Environmental Setting.................................................................................................5 2.1 Existing Environment/Environmental Baseline..........................................................5 2.2 Hydrology ...................................................................................................................5 2.3 Jurisdictional Waters of the United States Including Wetlands .................................6 2.4 Soil Series ...................................................................................................................7 2.5 Vegetation Communities ............................................................................................8 2.6 Biocorridors ................................................................................................................9 -
Cuyamaca Rancho State Park 13652 Highway 79 Julian, CA 92036 (760) 765-3020
Our Mission The mission of California State Parks is Cuyamaca to provide for the health, inspiration and idden waterfalls and education of the people of California by helping H Rancho to preserve the state’s extraordinary biological more than 100 miles of diversity, protecting its most valued natural and cultural resources, and creating opportunities trails through forest State Park for high-quality outdoor recreation. and meadow silently witness the regrowth of Cuyamaca Rancho California State Parks supports equal access. State Park. Prior to arrival, visitors with disabilities who need assistance should contact the park at (760) 765-3020. If you need this publication in an alternate format, contact [email protected]. CALIFORNIA STATE PARKS P.O. Box 942896 Sacramento, CA 94296-0001 For information call: (800) 777-0369 (916) 653-6995, outside the U.S. 711, TTY relay service www.parks.ca.gov Cuyamaca Rancho State Park 13652 Highway 79 Julian, CA 92036 (760) 765-3020 © 2010 California State Parks (Rev. 2016) Printed on Recycled Paper E ast of San Diego, Cuyamaca Rancho (”what the rain left State Park offers respite from the dry behind”), Iguai’ (“the Southern California landscape. The nest”), Wa-Ku-Pin’ (“warm park’s 24,700 acres of oak and conifer house”), Mitaragui’ forests and expansive meadows are broken (“crooked land”), Pilcha’ by running streams. (“basket bush”), and Located in the Peninsular Range of Guatay’ (“big house”). mountains, Cuyamaca Peak, at 6,512 feet, Historic mention of the is the second highest point in San Diego Cuyamaca Kumeyaay County. From the peak, visitors can see begins in 1782 when Anza-Borrego Desert State Park to the east Spanish Lt. -
South Coast and Montane Ecological Province
Vegetation Descriptions SOUTH COAST AND MONTANE ECOLOGICAL PROVINCE CALVEG ZONE 7 March 30, 2009 Note: This Province consists of the Southern California Mountains and Valleys Section or "Mountains" (M262B) and the Southern California Coast Section or "Coast" (262B) Note the slope gradients as follows: High gradient or steep (greater than 50%) Moderate gradient or moderately steep (30% to 50%) Low gradient (less than 30%) CONIFER FOREST / WOODLAND DM BIGCONE DOUGLAS-FIR ALLIANCE Bigcone Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga macrocarpa) - dominated stands are found in the Transverse and Peninsular Ranges from the Mt. Pinos region south. The Bigcone Douglas-fir Alliance is defined by the clear dominance of this species among competing conifers. It has been mapped sparsely in four subsections in the Coast Section, and infrequently in seven subsections and abundantly in four subsections of the Mountains Section. These pure conifer or mixed conifer and hardwood stands occur at lower elevations, generally in the range 1400 – 5600 ft (426 - 1708 m) in the Coast Section and up to about 7000 ft (2135 m) in the Mountains Section. Although mature individuals are capable of sprouting from branches and boles after burning, intense or frequently repeated fires and drought cycles will tend to eliminate this conifer. However, Bigcone Douglas-fir may become locally dominant with Canyon Live Oak (Quercus chrysolepis) as an associated tree on protected mesic canyon slopes, but not at the highest elevations. Sites in this Alliance are usually north facing at lower elevations and south-facing or steeper slopes at upper elevations. Shrub associates commonly include species of Ceanothus, Birchleaf Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus betuloides), California Buckwheat (Eriogonum fasciculatum), Chamise (Adenostoma fasciculatum), and shrub forms of the Live Oaks (Quercus spp.). -
Central Mountain Subregional Plan San Diego County General Plan
Central Mountain Subregional Plan San Diego County General Plan Adopted January 3, 1979 Adopted August 3, 2011 Amended November 18, 2015 – GPA14-001 December 14, 2016 – GPA 12-004, GPA16-002 Introduction ............................................................................................ 1 Chapter 1 – Community Character ........................................................ 54 Chapter 2 – Land Use: General ............................................................. 59 Residential ...................................................................... 63 Commercial ..................................................................... 66 Industrial ......................................................................... 69 Agricultural ...................................................................... 70 Civic ................................................................................ 74 Inholdings ........................................................................ 77 Private and Public Residential Treatment Centers........... 81 Specific Planning Areas................................................... 82 Chapter 3 – Housing .............................................................................. 84 Chapter 4 – Mobility ............................................................................... 85 Chapter 5 – Scenic Highways/Route & Scenic Preservation .................. 88 Chapter 6 – Public Facilities and Services ............................................. 95 Chapter 7 – Safety .............................................................................. -
Buy This Book
Excerpted from buy this book © by the Regents of the University of California. Not to be reproduced without publisher’s written permission. INTRODUCTION This book is an attempt to present to general readers not Panamint Range, because for the most part the wildflower trained in taxonomic botany, but interested in nature and seeker does not travel in the desert in summer. their surroundings, some of the wildflowers of the California mountains in such a way that they can be identified without technical knowledge. Naturally, these are mostly summer The California Mountains wildflowers, together with a few of the more striking species that bloom in spring and fall. They are roughly those from the In general, the mountains of California consist of two great yellow pine belt upward through the red fir and subalpine series of ranges: an outer, the Coast Ranges; and an inner, the forests to the peaks above timberline. Obviously, the 286 Sierra Nevada and the southern end of the Cascade Range, in- plants presented cannot begin to cover all that occur in so cluding Lassen Peak and Mount Shasta.The Sierra Nevada,an great an altitudinal range, especially when the geographical immense granitic block 400 miles long and 50 to 80 miles limits of the pine belt are considered. wide, extends from Plumas County to Kern County. It is no- Mention of the pine belt in California mountains will nat- table for its display of cirques, moraines, lakes, and glacial val- urally cause you to think of the Sierra Nevada, but of course leys and has its highest point at Mount Whitney at 14,495 feet this belt also extends into the southern Cascade Range (Mount above sea level. -
Documents Pertaining to the Adjudication of Private Land Claims in California, Circa 1852-1904
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/hb109nb422 Online items available Finding Aid to the Documents Pertaining to the Adjudication of Private Land Claims in California, circa 1852-1904 Finding Aid written by Michelle Morton and Marie Salta, with assistance from Dean C. Rowan and Randal Brandt The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ © 2008, 2013 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Finding Aid to the Documents BANC MSS Land Case Files 1852-1892BANC MSS C-A 300 FILM 1 Pertaining to the Adjudication of Private Land Claims in Cali... Finding Aid to the Documents Pertaining to the Adjudication of Private Land Claims in California, circa 1852-1904 Collection Number: BANC MSS Land Case Files The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California Finding Aid Written By: Michelle Morton and Marie Salta, with assistance from Dean C. Rowan and Randal Brandt. Date Completed: March 2008 © 2008, 2013 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Collection Title: Documents pertaining to the adjudication of private land claims in California Date (inclusive): circa 1852-1904 Collection Number: BANC MSS Land Case Files 1852-1892 Microfilm: BANC MSS C-A 300 FILM Creators : United States. District Court (California) Extent: Number of containers: 857 Cases. 876 Portfolios. 6 volumes (linear feet: Approximately 75)Microfilm: 200 reels10 digital objects (1494 images) Repository: The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ Abstract: In 1851 the U.S.