California Coastal National Monument

Special Features and Perspectives

This unusual National Monument includes all the islands, rocks, exposed reefs and pinnacles off the 840-mile California coast above mean high tide. Part of a narrow and important flight lane in the Pacific flyway, this breathtaking intersection of broken land and sea provides essential feeding and nesting habitat for some 200,000 bird species, including the bald eagle.

A Photographer's and Birdwatcher's Heaven

The California Coastal National Monument may be the most photographed of the BLM's monuments, and rightly so: the California Coastal National Monument overwhelms. White-capped waves crash into the vertical cliffs and deeply crevassed surge channels, while frothy water empties back into the ocean. At land's end, the islands, rocks, exposed reefs, and pinnacles off the coast above mean high tide provide havens for sea mammals and birds, attracting the interest of zoologists, marine biologists and even the U.S. Coast Guard, through its marine protected species program.

Waters of this zone are rich in nutrients from upwelling currents and freshwater inflows, supporting an estimated 200,000 breeding seabirds, including the endangered California least tern, the endangered brown pelican, the snowy plover and others birds which depend on the coastal rookeries for breeding. The rocky shores of these islands and rocks also provide forage, habitat and breeding grounds for a number of threatened sea mammals and pinnipeds ('fin-footed' creatures, including seals, walruses, sea otters, as well as some crustaceans and birds).

"... A life-cycle living laboratory for marine mammals, seabirds and shorebirds, and breeding nesting areas safe from terrestrial predators....the Monument is some of the only relatively undisturbed inter-tidal zone remaining on the California coast...providing an important 'baseline' reference habitat." -- B.J. Griffin (see note 1)

The area provides a rich classroom for tourists and all students of marine life. An ecosystem like this, which exists between the wet and dry, is "the most fragile ecosystem in the world," according to U.S. Rep. Sam Farr one of the chief promoters of the area's National Monument declaration. (see note 2)

Monument Management

The BLM cooperatively manages the monument through an existing agreement with the California Department of Fish and Game and California Department of Parks and Recreation.

Notes

  1. B.J. Griffin, Executive Director of Marine Mammal Center, "Scoping Comments on California Coastal National Monument," to U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management California Coastal National Monument, The Marine Mammal Center, October 25, 2003.
  2. RockyMountainNews.com, January 31, 2003.

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