Soda Mountain Wilderness
The Soda Mountain area in southwestern Oregon is an ecological mosaic where the state's eastern desert meets towering fir forests.
Biodiversity:The biodiversity of its fir forests, sunlit oak groves, meadows filled with wildflowers, and steep canyons is unmatched in the Cascade Range. The area is home to a spectacular variety of rare species of plants and animals whose survival in this region depends upon its continued ecological integrity. Roosevelt elk, cougars, black bears, golden and bald eagles, goshawks and falcons roam its lands and skies.
National Monument
In June 2000, the Clinton administration designated 53,000 acres of federal land in the area as the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument to protect this extraordinary biological reserve. That title prevents mineral exploitation and most logging. However, livestock grazing and off-road vehicles still threaten the area.
The Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument was a step forward in protecting the Soda Mountain area and how big a step remains to be seen. When a final management plan for the monument area is completed, wilderness advocates fear the logging trucks and more through loopholes with no regard for Soda Mountain's wild back country areas will further damage it.
Need for Wilderness
That's why local citizens and scientists have been pushing for designation of the Soda Mountain Wilderness for approximately 23,000 acres of the monument back country.
J
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enny creek (and its spring creek
tributary) arises in southeastern Siskiyou County, California. The jenny creek
watershed also includes a portion in southwestern Klamath. The creeks are
managed by the BLM. Surveyor Mountain is the highest point on the watershed.
Named
tributaries of Jenny Creek
Grizzly creek
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Beaver creek
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Johnson creek
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Keene creek
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Spring creek
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Skookum creek
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The Jenny creek marks the
intersection of three major Eco regions. As it flows south, the creek descends
down the east cascade slopes, foothills, and Klamath Falls mountain range.
The streams of Jenny creek support
13 species of fish in the soda mountain wilderness and only 5 are native. The
others have been introduced into Howard prairie and Hyatt reservoirs. Of the
native species three are widely known.
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Red band trout
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Jenny creek sucker
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Speckled dace
Soda mountain wilderness is home to
roughly 255 wildlife species
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10 amphibians
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170 birds
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67 mammals
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16 reptiles
Black tailed deer are a common sight
in the wilderness along with Roosevelt elk. There is concern that wintering elk
and deer compete for available forage. The return of the gray wolves to the
area could help referee this.
River otter and Northern pacific pond turtle were once wide ranging species in the wilderness; they now are locally extinct in parts of the wilderness.
Western Perl shell mussel ranges
from Alaska to central California and also inhabits the soda mountain water
ways.
They have what’s called Benthic
Macroinvrterbrates such as fresh water snails that are an important indicator
of river health and function.
Nerite pebble snail
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Diminvite pebble snail
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Toothed pebble snail
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Fall creek pebble snail
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A
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griculture and residential development
and cattle grazing have significantly reduced willow riparian habitat in the
soda mountain wilderness. These willows are used for nesting willow fly
catcher, bullock orioles, yellow warblers, and gold finches.
Below 3,000 feet a cores landscape of oak
woodland that varies from open savannas with grass to forest with Douglas firs
and ponderosa pines.
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White oak
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Pacific madrone
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Deer brush
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Poison oak
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Oregon grape
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White leaved manzainta
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Bitter brush
Several intermixed conifer species
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White fir
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Sugar pine
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Incense cedar
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Pacific yew
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Juniper
Major Tree species
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Red fir
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White pine
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Lodge pole pine