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CARCD WCB - Natural & Working Lands Pollinator Habitat Project

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Forecasted
Planning/Design
Implementation
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Contents

Project Overview

Basics

Restore & Protect Native Fish and Wildlife
Species Management & Recovery Programs
Restore/Reconnect Habitat
CARCD WCB - Natural & Working Lands Pollinator Habitat Project

Planning/Design
Funding will be used to partner with Amador County landowners and community groups to design and install pollinator habitat on natural and working lands. Projects will expand wildlife corridors and assist wildfire recovery.

Funding will be used to aid the expansion of monarch habitat through the harvesting of Amador County native milkweed seed, amplification of the region's currently limited milkweed inventory, and distribution to local landowners and community groups.

2023
2024
2027
9/13/2024

Project Attributes

Footprint Acres
None

Location

To zoom, hold down Shift and drag a rectangle.

  • Amador

  • Not in a National Forest

  • Jackson Creek (1804001207)

  • Upper Mokelumne (18040012)

  • WUI Defense

Organizations

Funder
  • California Wildlife Conservation Board
Lead Implementer
  • Amador Resource Conservation District
Partners
  • California Association of Resource Conservation Districts
  • California Wildlife Conservation Board
Other Partners Audubon California, Great Valley Seed Company, Heritage Growers, Monarch Joint Venture, The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation

Contacts

Anna Mariscal - Amador Resource Conservation District (Amador Resource Conservation) (anna@amadorrcd.org)

Performance Measures

Expected Performance Measures

Acres of Plants Installed Condition: Unspecified Not Provided
Completed Planning Documents Plan Type: Habitat Plan 2 count
Special Status Species Sites Protected or Re-established Action Performed: Protected Not Provided

Reported Performance Measures

Reported Performance Measures are not relevant for Projects in the Planning/Design stage.

Financials

Budget

$251,000.00
$251,000.00
$0.00
$0.00
Total
CARCD Climate Habitat Block Grant (WCB) $251,000.00 $0.00 $251,000.00
Total $251,000.00 $0.00 $251,000.00
Comment: None provided

Reported Expenditures

2023 2024 2025 2026 Total
CARCD Climate Habitat Block Grant (WCB) $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Grand Total $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00

Note: None provided

Pillars of Resilience

Pillars of Resilience

This project addresses habitat loss by expanding monarch, pollinator, and other wildlife habitat on public and private lands. Project will also increase and improve monarch data gathered through the use of Integrated Monarch Monitoring Program (IMMP) data collection and monitoring protocols vital to shaping our understanding of how monarchs interact with their environment, documenting conservation efforts, and tracking the population and its habitat as they change over time.
This project addresses pollinator habitat recovery in areas of wildfire recovery, as well as assists landowners in restoring habitat alongside their wildfire mitigation and fuel-reduction efforts.

Project Details

Attachments

No attachments

No attachments

Notes

No Notes entered.

External Links

No External Links entered.

Photos

Photos

  •  

    Corridor has become overgrown and crowded - removing invasive plant species, thinning debris, and replanting with native species will help improve the habitat for pollinators & wildlife.
(Timing: Before) (~51 KB)
Credit: Anna Mariscal

    Corridor has become overgrown and crowded - removing invasive plant species, thinning debris, and replanting with native species will help improve the habitat for pollinators & wildlife.
    (Timing: Before) (~51 KB)
  •  

    Landowner has noted that wildfire recovery has benefitted certain plant species over others, with more sensitive native species that were present pre-Butte Fire not able to compete nor regenerate.
(Timing: Before) (~53 KB)
Credit: Anna Mariscal

    Landowner has noted that wildfire recovery has benefitted certain plant species over others, with more sensitive native species that were present pre-Butte Fire not able to compete nor regenerate.
    (Timing: Before) (~53 KB)
  •  

    Riparian wildlife corridor provides a consistent water source for wildlife, staying moist and damp during recent years' extended drough
(Timing: Before) (~52 KB)
Credit: Anna Mariscal

    Riparian wildlife corridor provides a consistent water source for wildlife, staying moist and damp during recent years' extended drough
    (Timing: Before) (~52 KB)

Credits: The Tahoe Central Sierra Project Tracker tool has been developed through generous funding from the California Tahoe Conservancy. This project tracker was created and developed by TCSI and Environmental Science Associates.

ProjectFirma is a service provided by Environmental Science Associates (ESA), which builds on the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency's EIP Project Tracker. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation. Source code is available on GitHub.

Copyright (C) 2026 Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and ESA | Code last updated (compiled) at 2026-01-12 17:53:58.