Beaver Conservation Translocations: Yét Atwam Creek Watershed

Summary

SCH Number
2025100128
Public Agency
Fish and Wildlife (Headquarters), Wildlife and Fisheries Division – Sacramento
Document Title
Beaver Conservation Translocations: Yét Atwam Creek Watershed
Document Type
NOE - Notice of Exemption
Received
Posted
10/3/2025
Document Description
The project will re-establish a breeding population of North American beavers (Castor canadensis) in the Yét Atwam Creek watershed. Multiple family groups and/or individuals will be captured from healthy source populations, quarantined, and released into the multiple, collaborating landowners’ properties over a 3- to 5-year period. All beavers will be uniquely tagged and a portion of the beavers with be fitted with transmitters. The beavers will be monitored for population establishment, and a variety of ecosystem parameters will be monitored over time to evaluate overall success of the project.

Contact Information

Name
Valerie Cook
Agency Name
California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Job Title
Beaver Restoration Program Manager
Contact Types
Lead/Public Agency / Parties Undertaking Project

Location

Counties
Shasta, Siskiyou
Regions
Northern California
Other Location Info
Yét Atwam Creek watershed

Notice of Exemption

Exempt Status
Categorical Exemption
Type, Section or Code
Class 7, 8; California Code of Regulations, title 14, sections 15307, 15308
Reasons for Exemption
This project is for the maintenance, restoration, and enhancement of the natural resources and environment within and adjacent to the Yét Atwam Creek watershed, ultimately for the overarching objective of protecting the environment. Beavers serve critical ecological roles as both ecosystem engineers and a keystone species; they are a virtually untapped resource in California’s fight against our greatest ecological threats: climate change, drought, wildfires, and habitat loss. The establishment of beavers within the watershed is expected to ultimately result in the engineering of an extensive wetland complex that increases carbon sequestration, reduces downstream sediment transport and deposition, repairs channel incisions, reconnects the streams to their floodplain, increases riparian vegetation/habitat, and creates critical habitat for both wetland- and riparian-obligate species, as well as increases habitat complexity to provide suitable habitat necessary for multiple taxa, species, and life stages within. Further, the retention of water on the landscape is expected to increase groundwater recharge, improve summer baseflows, extend seasonal flows, and increase fuel moisture during wildfire season, effectively creating a green belt that can serve as wildfire buffers or breaks and provide refugia for wildlife.

Attachments

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