The California Department of Fish and Wildlife has released a Statewide Elk Conservation and Management Plan.
The plan has undergone extensive public review and will help guide state wildlife managers’ efforts to maintain healthy elk herds.
The plan builds on the success of efforts to reestablish elk in suitable historic ranges, and management practices that have resulted in robust elk populations throughout the state.
It includes objectives for providing public educational and recreational opportunities, habitat enhancement and restoration, and minimization of conflicts on private property.
“This plan demonstrates CDFW’s commitment to build upon its strong foundation for the continued conservation of this iconic species for future management of California’s elk populations,” said CDFW Wildlife Branch Chief Kari Lewis.
There are three subspecies of elk in California: Roosevelt (Cervus canadensis roosevelti), Rocky Mountain (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) and Tule (Cervus canadensis nannodes). California’s 22 Elk Management Units, or EMUs, collectively comprise the distribution of all three species within their respective ranges in the state.
Management activities on those lands include controlling invasive weeds, installing water sources, conducting research and planting food plots.
Lake County is home to tule elk. The Lake Pillsbury Tule Elk Management Unit in Lake County includes land 300,000 acres near Lake Pillsbury within the historical tule elk range.
The plans said the department directly manages only a small fraction of land within current elk range.
The department owns six properties where elk land management activities occur: Grizzly Island Wildlife Area in Solano County, San Antonio Valley Ecological Reserve in Santa Clara County, Cache Creek Wildlife Area in Lake County, North Coast Wildlife Area Complex in Del Norte and
Humboldt counties, and Carrizo Plains Ecological Reserve in San Luis Obispo County, and undesignated mitigation land (the future North Carrizo Ecological Reserve) in San Luis Obispo County.
The plan addresses historical and current geographic range, habitat conditions and trends, and major factors affecting all three species statewide, also in addition to individually addressing each EMU.
The EMU plans include herd characteristics, harvest data, management goals, and management actions to conserve and enhance habitat conditions on public and private lands.
More information about California’s Elk Management Program can be found on CDFW’s Web site.
2018 California Department of Fish and Wildlife Elk Plan by LakeCoNews on Scribd