2014 Orange County Spring Count List of Site Locations & Their Numbers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2014 Orange County Spring Count List of Site Locations & Their Numbers 2014 Orange County Spring Count List of Site Locations & Their Numbers Sites Numbers Aliso-Wood Canyons Wilderness Park - 1 32 Aliso-Wood Canyons Wilderness Park - 2 Woods Canyon Trail (and side 32 canyons) Aliso-Wood Canyons Wilderness Park - 3 Parking lot to Wood Canyon 32 Augustine Ranch/Limestone 48 Baker Canyon OC Parks/IRC 27 Banning Ranch 64 Black Star Canyon - 1 Red Rocks Trail (OC Parks/IRC) 41 Black Star Canyon - 2 Ladd Canyon 41 Black Star Canyon – 3 Lower Black Star Canyon (OC Parks/IRC) 41 Black Star Canyon - 4 Lower Black Star Canyon (private) 41 Black Star Canyon - 5 Upper Black Star Canyon – Private 41 Land and Cleveland Nat Forest Blue Jay Campground 58 Bolsa Chica - non-public area restricted access 8 Bolsa Chica - public area - 1 Adjacent to Harriett Wieder Park 61 Bolsa Chica - public area – 2 From Full Tidal Basin north to Warner 61 Bolsa Chica - public area – 2 From Full Tidal Basin north to Warner 61 Bommer Canyon OC Parks/IRC 69 Burris Basin & the adjacent Anaheim Coves Park 35 Carbon Canyon Reg. Park 3 Caspers Wilderness Park 42 Craig Regional Park 33 Crescent Bay 23 Cristianitos, San Clemente 72 Dana Point Harbor 13 Dana Point Headlands 2 Delgado Canyon, San Juan Capistrano 56 Eisenhower Park, Orange 28 El Cariso Hotshots 66 El Toro Cemetery, Lake Forest - 1 21 El Toro Cemetery, Lake Forest - 2 21 End of Pico, TRW Area, San Clemente 73 Fairhaven Cemetery, Santa Ana 79 Fairview Park & Talbert Marsh 53 Falcon Group Campground 67 Gilbert Street yard private 80 Harriett Wieder Reg. Park 30 Harvard Park, Irvine 70 th HB City Beach, 17 St to Beach Blvd. 26 HB Pier 25 1 2014 Orange County Spring Count List of Site Locations & Their Numbers Sites Numbers HCP East Huntington Central Park 54 Heisler Park 24 Huntington Beach Wetlands - 1 Brookhurst Marsh 62 Huntington Beach Wetlands - 2 Talbert Marsh 62 Huntington Beach Wetlands - 3 Magnolia Marsh 62 Irvine Agricultural Fields Muirlands and Alton 44 Irvine Lake 9 Irvine Regional Park – 1 Parking Lot 16 east and Horseshoe Loop 68 Irvine Regional Park - 2 Area around the lake 68 Irvine Regional Park - 3 Area around Parking Lots 9-13 68 James Dilley Preserve 15 John Thomas Leasehold Adjacent to Harriett Wieder Park 31 Laguna Coast Wilderness 45 Laguna Niguel Reg. Park 6 Limestone Canyon – Owls 47 Limestone Canyon – South 46 Los Alisos Sewage Ponds IRWD 49 Los Piños Trailhead – Santa Ana Mts. 57 Mason Regional Park - 1 59 Mason Regional Park - 2 59 Mason Regional Park East 60 Mile Square Park 5 Modjeska/Harding Truck Trail OC Parks/IRC 50 Mouth of San Juan Creek 16 Newport Pier 7 Nix Nature Center 14 Orchard Hills OC Parks/IRC 40 Park Lantern (34405-34411) Dana Point 18 Peters Canyon Reg. Park 19 Poppy Street, Corona del Mar 22 Quail Hill Open Space, Irvine 71 Ramakrishna Monastery 38 Rattlesnake Reservoir IRWD (restricted access) 75 Salt Creek Beach, Laguna Niguel 11 San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary 12 San Juan Creek Trail 17 San Juan Trailhead, Cleveland Nat. Forest 65 Santiago Oaks Reg. Park 81 Santiago Park Nature Preserve, Santa Ana 78 SAR, at Yorba Reg. Park Santa Ana River 1 SAR, Lincoln Ave to Glassell Santa Ana River 34 SAR, Salt Marsh Restoration (ACE) Santa Ana River 63 2 2014 Orange County Spring Count List of Site Locations & Their Numbers Sites Numbers Seal Beach Jetty 77 Seal Beach NWS – North Side Restricted access 76 Seal Beach NWS – South Side Restricted access 76 Serrano Creek Park, Aliso Viejo - 1 20 Serrano Creek Park, Aliso Viejo - 2 20 Shipley Nature Center Huntington Central Park 4 Siphon Reservoir IRWD (restricted access) 29 Telaga Golf Course – East Side San Clemente 74 UC Irvine Nature Reserve Restricted access 36 Upper Newport Bay, East Side 39 Upper Oso Reservoir Restricted access 37 Upper Silverado Canyon - 1 Maple Springs Truck Trail 43 Upper Silverado Canyon - 2 White Canyon (private) 43 Upper Silverado Canyon - 3 Near Silverado Cyn Rd (private) 43 Upper Silverado Canyon - 4 Sweetheart Canyon (private) 43 Upper Silverado Canyon - 5 owls 43 Upper Silverado Canyon - 6 owls 43 Veeh Ranch Park, Laguna Hills 51 Via De Agua, San Juan Capistrano private 55 Village Pond Park, Lake Forest 52 Westminster Memorial Park - 1 10 Westminster Memorial Park - 2 10 3 .
Recommended publications
  • Master Plan of Trails, Adopted Oct
    P.O. BOX 8, SILVERADO, CA 92676 SMRPD Draft Master Plan of Trails, Adopted Oct. 14, 2004 The Master Plan of Regional Riding and Hiking Trails Component is countywide in scope. It is a public trail system which traverses the entire county without regard for jurisdictional boundaries and, therefore, intergovernmental coordination is necessary for successful implementation. -from the Recreation Element of the Orange County General Plan The Silverado Modjeska Community Plan and EIR (DEIR 096), prepared by the Environmental Planning Agency and distributed on November 23, 1976, included a variety of non-paved multi-use riding and hiking trails which were in place and inventoried at the time of the DEIR’s adoption. The plan allowed for the addition of recreational trails as proposed by the community. In 2002, under the jurisdiction of the Silverado Modjeska Recreation and Parks District (a State sanctioned Independent Special District), the community and the SMRPD worked together to create an updated Master Plan of Riding and Hiking Trails. As a conceptual plan, it is considered a general expression of community values and is abstract in nature. Purpose The purpose of the Silverado Modjeska Master Plan of Trails is to provide goals and objectives to direct the development and operation of a District-wide public trail system that serves the recreational needs of equestrians, pedestrians (walkers, hikers and joggers), and mountain bikers (non-motorized). Goals Goal 1: Provide a useful, enjoyable, safe, and efficient riding and hiking trail system for the District and to meet the needs and desires of the community. Goal 2: Create trail linkages between open space and recreation facilities, between community, municipal, state, and federal trail systems, and create connectivity to surrounding communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter VII Recreation Element
    CHAPTER VII. RECREATION ELEMENT VII. RECREATION ELEMENT CA/KB OVERVIEW The Recreation Element, one of the nine Regional Riding and Hiking Trails elements of the General Plan, contains Component official policies pertaining to the acquisition, Regional Recreation Facilities development, operation, maintenance, and Component financing of the County's varied recreation facilities, which include regional recreation The first section provides an overview of the facilities, local parks, and riding and hiking purpose of the Recreation Element followed trails. by the Constraints and Opportunities section. The remaining three sections are the The Recreation Element text includes five Recreation Element components as listed main sections: above. Each component includes a master plan with goals, objectives, policies and Purpose of the Element implementation programs. Constraints and Opportunities Local Parks Component VII-1 CHAPTER VII. RECREATION ELEMENT PURPOSE OF THE ELEMENT 1) Environmental; 2) Governmental; The Recreation Element is mandated by 3) Economic/market; and Government Code Section 65303(a). This 4) Legal. Recreation Element sets forth a comprehensive strategy for the acquisition, Policies and implementation programs strive development, operation, maintenance, to mitigate or eliminate these constraints and management and financing of County to maximize identified recreation recreation facilities which are necessary to opportunities. meet Orange County's existing and future recreation needs. This strategy is expressed Constraints as an integrated framework of recreation goals, objectives, policies and programs. Environmental Constraints The policies and programs of the Recreation NOISE Element form an effective implementation The major sources of significant noise plan to meet the established goals. The (65+ CNEL) in Orange County are Recreation Element serves to guide and direct aircraft and highway vehicles.
    [Show full text]
  • May 14, 2020 City of Mission Viejo Planning Department Mission Viejo
    May 14, 2020 City of Mission Viejo Planning Department Mission Viejo, California 92691 Attention Elaine Lister, Community Development Director Eric Nelson, Vice President of Land Development Trumark Companies 450 Newport Center Drive, Suite 300, Newport Beach, CA 92660 Subject: Cultural Resources Assessment and Summary, El Toro Road TTM 19035 - CEQA MND Project, Mission Viejo, California Dear Mr. Nelson: This memorandum summarizes the cultural resources investigation for the El Toro Road TTM 19035 project. It includes a cultural context, a discussion of cultural and paleontological records searches, and provides mitigation recommendations. Project Location The proposed El Toro Road TTM 19035 project in Mission Viejo involves a Zone Change and a General Plan Amendment from Open Space/Recreation to Residential to allow for the development of 91 multiple-family dwelling units on approximately 3.8 acres; including 1.41 acres of private access ways and parking areas, and 10.63 acres of open space slope and landscaping The project site is located on El Toro Road between Marguerite Parkway and State Route 241. The site is currently undeveloped and consists of a hilly, heavily vegetated terrain ranging in elevation from 845 feet to 1,020 feet. The project site is surrounded by a parking lot and office building to the west, State Route 241 to the east, open space slope and multiple-family land uses to the south and a self-storage facility to the north. Figure 1. Cultural Context A long-standing tenet of New World archaeology has been that man did not arrive in the western hemisphere until about 10,000 to 11,000 Years Before Present (YBP).
    [Show full text]
  • Orange County Vegetation Mapping Update Phase II
    Orange County Vegetation Mapping Update Phase II FINAL VEGETATION MAPPING REPORT April 2015 Aerial Information Systems, Inc. Redlands, California Acknowledgements Mapping vegetation in Orange County, California was one of the most challenging efforts in our long history at Aerial Information Systems. The project would not have been possible without the funding and project management provided by the Nature Reserve of Orange County (NROC). We are grateful for the opportunity to work with Milan Mitrovich, NROC project manager, who provided all the logistic planning and field coordination, in addition to his time in the field. We are also indebted to Todd Keeler- Wolf and Anne Klein, of the California Department of Fish & Wildlife who provided us their expertise and many invaluable hours in the field. We would also like to thank Jennifer Buck-Diaz, Julie Evens, Sara Taylor, Daniel Hastings and Jamie Ratchford of the California Native Plant Society, who provided the accuracy assessment of our vegetation database and mapping product, we appreciate all of their efforts. There were many more people and organizations that helped make this a successful project, and to all we are grateful. However, special thanks to Zach Principe of The Nature Conservancy, Cara Allen from the California Department of Fish & Wildlife, Will Miller from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Jutta Burger & Megan Lulow from the Irvine Ranch Conservancy, and Laura Cohen and Barbara Norton from the Orange County Parks Department for their support in the field. We are also grateful for a highly detailed map, by Rachael Woodfield from Merkel & Associates, which we incorporated into our final product, in addition to Peter Bowler who helped us with the marshlands on the University of California, Irvine.
    [Show full text]
  • Species Accounts -- Animals
    SoCal Biodiversity - Animals Arboreal Salamander Amphibian SoCal Biodiversity - Animals Arboreal Salamander Amphibian Arroyo Toad Arboreal Salamander Arboreal Salamander (Aneides lugubris) Management Status Heritage Status Rank: G5N5S4 Federal: None State: None Other: Species identified as a local viability concern (Stephenson and Calcarone 1999) General Distribution Arboreal salamander occurs in yellow pine and black oak forests in the Sierra Nevada, and in coastal live oak woodlands from northern California to Baja California. The species also occurs in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada from El Dorado County to Madera County and on South Farallon, Santa Catalina, Los Coronados, and Ano Nuevo islands off the coast of California (Petranka 1998, Stebbins 1951, Stebbins 1985). Arboreal salamander occurs from sea level to an elevation of about 5,000 feet (1,520 meters) (Stebbins 1985). Distribution in the Planning Area Arboreal salamander reportedly occurs in the foothills and lower elevations of every mountain range on National Forest System lands, although it is seldom seen (Stephenson and Calcarone 1999). There are records of occurrence for this species on the Los Padres National Forest near upper San Juan Creek and on the Cleveland National Forest near Soldier Creek (USDA Forest Service file information), San Gabriel foothills east to Day Canyon, and in the San Jacinto Mountains (Goodward pers. comm.). Systematics There are four species in the genus Aneides in the western United States, three of which occur in California (Stebbins 1985). Of these three, only arboreal salamander ranges into southern California. Most of the Aneides salamanders climb (Stebbins 1985). Arboreal salamander consists of two chromosomally differentiated groups that intergrade in south and east-central Mendocino County, about 56 miles (90 kilometers) north of the San Francisco Bay region (Sessions and Kezer 1987).
    [Show full text]
  • Southern California Indian Curriculum Guide a Resource for Teachers
    2002 North Main Street Santa Ana, California 92706 714.567.3600 www.bowers.org Funded by The Boeing Company Also available on CD-Rom Important Southern California Indian villages relative to modern cities. Major Indian territories are also shown. M o h a l a r a R i v e r v a C e t R S a n i v Iron Mt e r e k C r e a North Baldy m O i E N Atam-pa-t o C r e e k C c D a a r a g San Antonio Pk j P n e o n T u j u N v S E R R A N O San Fernando i Little Bear Acha-va-t A R Valley Kayah-pia-t C P adjudju-t a Walnut-t S Nanamu-vva-t ke n a ar La N Cucamonga Pk yo n Be B e r n a r d Hosaku-pa R i n o i v e r hahamo M R E Kukamo Musku-piz-bit o u n l t a F Kawe Asuksa e i i Azusa n s San Bernardino Mau r b San Bernardino Peak Puwipui M a K otaina-t Nilengli i San Gorgonio Mt s San Gabriel G a s n i Sibat Toibi Colton A o Wacha-vak M Akura S n o Pomona Arhangk an Redlands ro Hout T n Hikavanu-t im g LOS ANGELES Hungu-va-t o a Awi t C Apachia eo Yukai-pa-t Maronga Santa Monica C C r a Toloka-bi W ny r.
    [Show full text]
  • Behind the Hills by Bradley Beylik Who Shall Gather the Smoke of The
    Behind the Hills By Bradley Beylik Who shall gather the smoke of the dead wood burning, Or behold the flowing years from the Sea returning? The days have gone down in the West, behind the hills into shadow. - J.R.R Tolkien, Lament for Eorl the Young Driving up ash-stained Silverado Canyon Road, three thousand evacuated residents of the Silverado area were making their way home. A week earlier, mandatory fire evacuations had turned them into refugees. Staring blankly out their car windows, they crossed the barricades that had kept them away. They were prepared to assess what had been lost in the fire. The hills that once preserved the look of ranch lands and riparian woodlands, the lost look of a more rural Orange County, were a dusty black. Here and there, short brown sage bushes stuck out of the soot blanket. Their leaves were singed away. Bundles of low, lobe-like cactus were melted like green plastic. All week, government investigators in navy blue t-shirts with block letters on the back— ATF, FBI, FEMA, OCFA—stood with bent backs, digging and sifting through the ash at the entrance to Silverado Canyon, looking for any clues that might lead to the capture of the arsonists. There were people from the forest service, local cops, and reporters. The officials all milled around, marking things with tape and talking to the reporters. A foreign force had invaded the secluded canyon community. *** Flames licked the dark sky. From the view looking east from Signal Peak in Newport Beach, the long north-south canyon called Santiago looked like a rift in the earth, ringed with the lumbering black shapes of the Santa Ana Mountains, spewing the earth’s innards skyward.
    [Show full text]
  • THE PRESERVE at SAN JUAN Final Environmental Impact Report – EIR No
    THE PRESERVE AT SAN JUAN Final Environmental Impact Report – EIR No. 618 SCH # 2006051110 December 2017 OC Public Works, OC Development Services/Planning 300 North Flower Street Santa Ana, CA 92703-5000 TABLE OF CONTENTS The Preserve at San Juan Final EIR Page 1. Introduction .....................................................................................................................1-1 1.1 Introduction ...............................................................................................................1-1 1.2 Format of the Final EIR ............................................................................................1-1 1.3 CEQA Requirements Regarding Comments and Responses .................................1-2 2. Response to Comments ................................................................................................2-1 Letter 1: State Clearinghouse ...........................................................................................2-2 Letter 2: U.S. Fish and Wildlife .........................................................................................2-5 Letter 3: US Forest Service Cleveland National Forest Trabuco Ranger District ......... 2-12 Letter 4: California Department of Fish and Wildlife ..................................................... 2-19 Letter 5: California Department of Transportation ......................................................... 2-35 Letter 6: CalFire ............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Mar/Apr 2017
    March/April 2017 California In My Garden—Saturday, April 8, 10 am to 4 pm Twenty—20—gardens throughout Orange County, our 14th California native plant garden tour! Sign up to receive the FREE tour guide/ticket at occnps.org. These will be mailed from mid-March to April 4. After that, visit the website for more information. Then gather a car full of friends, pack a lunch, and enjoy the day! CALENDAR Native Gardener’s Corner-Member’s Tips, Tricks, and Techniques Mar 2 ....................BoD meeting This column is a regular newsletter feature offering chapter members and local experts a Mar 4 ..........IRC Wildflower Day chance to briefly share information on many things related to gardening with natives. Mar 12 .........................field trip The request for this edition of the OC-CNPS newsletter is: “Do you grow any native plants Mar 16 ............Chapter meeting because they are especially entertaining, interesting, or just plain weird?” Mar 17 .........................field trip Leon Baginski-“Although not strictly native, I enjoy my organ pipe cactus. Slow grower but Mar 19 .........................field trip always reminds me of my trip to the national monument of the same name. Also love my Mar 26 .........................field trip ocotillo!! It is so odd for coastal garden. Unfortunately gophers seem to like the roots.” Apr 2 ............................field trip Laura Camp-“We have pipevine (Aristilochia californica) blooming right now outside the Apr 6 .....................BoD meeting Tree of Life office. The dutch pipe
    [Show full text]
  • 2000 Proposal to Designate Critical Habitat
    Thursday, June 8, 2000 Part II Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service 50 CFR Part 17 Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Proposed Designation of Critical Habitat for the Arroyo Southwestern Toad; Proposed Rule VerDate 11<MAY>2000 13:48 Jun 07, 2000 Jkt 190000 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 4717 Sfmt 4717 E:\FR\FM\08JNP2.SGM pfrm03 PsN: 08JNP2 36512 Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 111 / Thursday, June 8, 2000 / Proposed Rules DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR [email protected]. Please submit these millimeters (mm) (2.2 to 3.2 inches comments as an ASCII file and avoid the (in.)), dark-spotted toad of the family Fish and Wildlife Service use of special characters and any form Bufonidae, with females larger than of encryption. Please also include ``Attn: males. Adult arroyo toads have a light- 50 CFR Part 17 [RIN number]'' and your name and olive green or gray to tan dorsum (back) RIN 1018ÐAG15 return address in your e-mail message. with dark spots and warty skin. The If you do not receive a confirmation venter (underside) is white or buff and Endangered and Threatened Wildlife from the system that we have received without dark blotches or spots. A light- and Plants; Proposed Designation of your e-mail message, contact us directly colored, V-shaped stripe crosses the Critical Habitat for the Arroyo by calling our Ventura Office at phone head and eyelids, and the anterior Southwestern Toad number 805/644±1766. portion of the oval parotoid glands (just 2. Public hearings: Two public behind the eyes) are pale.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Annual Report Nature Reserve of Orange County
    NNaattuurree RReesseerrvvee ooff OOrraannggee CCoouunnttyy County of Orange Central/Coastal NCCP/HCP 22001199 AANNNNUUAALL RREEPPOORRTT Natural Communities Coalition 13042 Old Myford Road Irvine, CA 92602 www.occonservation.org NATURE RESERVE OF ORANGE COUNTY ANNUAL REPORT 2019 Table of Contents BACKGROUND AND INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................... 1 RESERVE MAPS .......................................................................................................................1 Coastal Reserve Map .................................................................................................. 2 Central Reserve Map .................................................................................................. 3 1.0 ORGANIZATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND ANNUAL REPORT OVERVIEW ................... 4 1.1 Board of Directors Milestones in 2019 ............................................................... 4 2.0 SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM STATUS AND WORK PLAN 2019-20 ...................................... 5 2.1 Introduction ...................................................................................................... 5 2.2 Work Plan Table ................................................................................................ 8 2.3 Project Descriptions ........................................................................................ 10 2.4 Habitat Restoration and Enhancement Summary Tables .................................. 90 3.0 CONSERVATION CUSTODIAL FUNDS ........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Foraminifera of the Monterey Shale and Puente Formation, Santa Ana Mountains and San Juan Capistrano Area, California
    Foraminifera of the Monterey Shale and Puente Formation, Santa Ana Mountains and San Juan Capistrano Area, California GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 294-M Foraminifera of the Monterey Shale and Puente Formation, Santa Ana Mountains and San Juan Capistrano Area, California By PATSY BECKSTEAD SMITH SHORTER CONTRIBUTIONS TO GENERAL GEOLOGY GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 294-M UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1?60 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR FRED A. SEATON, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Thomas B. Nolan, Director For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington 25, D.C. - Price 40 cents (paper cover) CONTENTS Page Page AbstracL-------------~---------------------------- 463 Faunas-Continued Introduction ______________________________________ _ 463 Geographic divisions-Continued Acknowledgments ______________________________ _ 464 Area west of Oso Creek _____________________ _ 473 Previous work _________________________________ _ 464 Faunal summary _______________________________ _ 476 Preparation of samples _____________________________ _ 464 Correlation of formations and stages _________________ _ 478 General geology ____________________________________·_ 464 Conclusions _______________________________________ _ 478 Stratigraphy ___________________________________ _ 464 Systematic catalog _________________________________ _ 480 Structure _____________________________________ _ 466 Family Lagenidae ______________________________ _ 480 Faunas ___________________________________________
    [Show full text]