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Humboldt Bay

Articles in category Humboldt Bay
Title Modified Date
Photo Gallery Jan 20, 2018
Birding Humboldt Bay Jul 22, 2024
West Coast Gray Whale “Unusual Mortality Event” Continues Mar 24, 2023
Sport Clamming in Humboldt Bay Apr 01, 2022
Safety Tips for Cleaning & Cooking Dungeness Crab Oct 02, 2023
Fisheries Oct 02, 2023
A Birder's Paradise Oct 02, 2023
Why Should We Make Humboldt a Dark Sky County? Mar 08, 2025
2024 Humboldt Bay Symposium Videos Available Online! Nov 22, 2024
2023 Year in Review Oct 04, 2024

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Humboldt Bay Geography

Located on California's rugged North Coast, roughly 250 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge, Humboldt Bay is California's second largest natural estuary. Humboldt Bay's four major watersheds drain approximately 250 square miles.

The Humboldt Bay watershed encompasses the ancient Headwaters Forest and privately-owned industrial timberlands, agricultural lands mostly used for raising dairy and beef cattle, salmon-bearing streams, huge expanses of tidal mudflats, and a variety of wetlands, including the only substantial area of salt marsh between San Francisco Bay and Coos Bay, Oregon. Humboldt Bay's salt marsh is home to many fascinating plants, including the rare Humboldt Bay owl's clover (Castilleja ambigua ssp. humboldtiensis) and Point Reyes bird's beak (Cordylanthus maritmus ssp. palustris).

Along the Bay's wind-swept coast lies an extraordinary dune ecosystem. Sand dunes are formed from sediments washed away from the erosive soils of the Franciscan Assemblage by plentiful and intense rainstorms. These sediments are carried to the ocean by the many rivers of the area, and are deposited near river mouths. Two of these rivers, the Mad and the Eel, feed sediments into the dunes of the Humboldt Bay region via longshore transport, summer ocean swells, and predominant northwesterly winds. In the winter, large storm waves continue the dune-building cycle by scouring the beach and washing sediments back out to sea. The net effect is the continual building and movement of dunes. Many of the morphological features of Humboldt Bay sand dunes have been stabilized by non-native European beachgrass, iceplant, and yellow bush lupine, all of which were intentionally planted for dune stabilization.

Public lands around the Bay protect and enhance the ecosystem and its wild inhabitants. The Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge protects wetlands, dunes, mudflats, eelgrass beds, and other vital habitats for migratory birds, including the black brant. The Refuge also includes the Lanphere Dunes, one of the most pristine remaining dune ecosystems in the Pacific Northwest. Another publicly-owned jewel is the Arcata Marsh & Wildlife Sanctuary. The Arcata Marsh is an example of the community's involvement in environmental politics, innovative uses of land, and applications of appropriate technology in a small urban community. The marsh has multiple uses, including recreation, wildlife habitat, education, and wastewater treatment.

Click HERE to download a high resolution aerial view of Humboldt Bay.

 

 

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