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From the fjords of British Columbia to Baja's desert shores: North America's majestic Pacific Coast. McClure's Beach, Pt. Reyes National Seashore, California. Photo: Ken Durling |
From Baja to British Columbia
The Sierra Club here seeks sustainable human communities with clean water and
breathable air, and coastal rivers and watersheds that provide habitat for a rich array of
wildlife.
On Our Agenda
- Permanently protect the remaining ancient forests on federal land.
- Establish new wilderness areas in places such as Northern California's King Range and
new marine sanctuaries at Santa Monica Bay and in Washington's San Juan Islands.
- Protect all remaining free-flowing rivers; restore all wild salmon and steelhead runs to
levels that enable a thriving sport and commercial fishery.
- Remove toxic threats to urban communities and prevent new contamination.
- Significantly increase wetlands acreage.
- Revise water pricing and policies in ways that will encourage conservation.
- Ban oil-and-gas leasing along the entire Pacific Coast.
The Land
This ecoregion extends from the fjords of British Columbia past Puget Sound and the
temperate rainforests of the Olympic Peninsula, along the rugged Oregon, Washington, and
California coasts to the desert shores of Baja California. The Willamette and Great
Central valleys, among the most fertile and productive in the world, lie between the
coastal ranges and the region's eastern boundary, the Cascades and the Sierra Nevada.
Population
40 million.
Economy
The agriculture, fishing, and timber industries are powerful political forces, but
taken together they contribute less than 2% of the gross regional product. Dominant
economic forces are aerospace manufacturing, high tech, and Pacific Rim trading.
150 Years Ago
Millions of salmon migrated each year through San Francisco Bay and up the Sacramento
and San Joaquin rivers, and through the Columbia River and Puget Sound to the streams of
the Northwest.
Nature Meccas
The velvet rainforest and jagged peaks of Olympic National Park in Washington; the tule
elk, heavy fog, and strong winds of Point Reyes National Seashore north of San Francisco;
the dramatic beaches and moist redwood forests of Big Sur along the central California
coast.
Superlatives
The California floristic province, which extends from Oregon's Coos Bay to northern
Baja California, contains one-forth of all the plant species in both the United States and
Canada. Half of these species are unique to the region.
Popular Play
Sailing and kayaking in Puget Sounds, San Francisco Bay, and the Gulf of California;
surfing along the California coast; hiking and camping in the redwood, cedar, fir,
hemlock, spruce, and chaparral of the Coast Range, Olympics, and Cascades; windsurfing in
the Columbia River Gorge.
Enviroclimate
An environmentalist strong in coastal cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles, and
Seattle. The Sierra Club has 180,000 members in this ecoregion. But in many rural areas,
the timber industry and agribusiness control local politics, resisting environmental
reforms.
Conservation High
Most recently, passage of the Condor Range and Rivers Act in 1992, protecting more than
400,000 acres of wilderness, 83 miles of wild-and-scenic rivers, and 109 miles of
wild-and-scenic-study rivers in the Los Padres National Forest in California.
Progress
The Sierra Club played a major role in establishing North Cascades and Redwood national
parks in 1968; Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area in 1978; and Columbia Gorge
National Scenic Area in 1986, it helped draft and pass California's Proposition 65, the
nation's toughest toxics-control law.
Unprotected Treasures
The region's wetlands, fecund havens for waterfowl, have already been reduced by 90% in
California and by 30% in Oregon and Washington.
Biggest Threat
A burgeoning population. California grew the fastest: up 25% between 1980 and 1990. The
Puget Sound area may outpace California in the future, however: it is expecting a 40%
increase over the next two decades, while the Golden State's expansion is slowing.
Celebrators
Poet Robinson Jeffers' work was infused with the spirit of California's wild Big Sur
country. "The seabeaten coast, the fierce freedom of its hunting hawks, possessed and
spoke through him," said Loren Eiseley. "It was one of the most uncanny and
complete relationships between a man and his natural background that I know in
literature." Others singing this ecoregion's praises are Gary Snyder and David Rains
Wallace; its photographers include Ansel Adams, Eliot Porter, Philip Hyde, and Cedric
Wright.
Tells It Like It Is
The Last Redwoods by Philip Hyde and Francois Leydet (Sierra Club Books,
1963); Not Man Apart; Photographics of the Big Sur Coast and Lines from Robinson
Jeffers (Sierra Club Books, 1965); The Wild Cascades, Forgotten Parkland by
Harvey Manning (Sierra Club Books, 1965).
To Learn More
- "The Limit of Paradise," by John Daniel, Sierra, March/April 1994, pp.
65ff.
- Olympic Battleground: The Power Politics of Timber Preservation by Carsten Lien
- The Intertidal Wilderness by Anne Wertheim
- Information Center for the Environment (ICE) (UC
Davis)
Contact:
Sierra Club Northern California/Nevada/Hawaii Office
827 Broadway, Suite 310
Oakland, CA 94607
(510) 622 0290, fax (510) 622 0278
ca-field@sierraclub.org
For the California portion of the Pacific Ecoregion, subscribe to the Sierra Club California
Legislative Alerts. You may also want to read the California
EcoWatch newsletter.
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