Agua Tibia Wilderness

Agua Tibia Wilderness
IUCN Category Ib (Wilderness Area)
Map of the United States
Location San Diego and Riverside counties, California, USA
Nearest city Temecula, California
Coordinates [1]
Area 17,961 acres (72.69 km2) [2]
Established January 5, 1975
Governing body U.S. Forest Service, USDA
Bureau of Land Management

Agua Tibia Wilderness (ATW) is a 17,961-acre (72.69 km2) protected area in Riverside and San Diego counties, California. It is mostly within the Palomar Ranger District of the Cleveland National Forest..[3] The area was originally protected as the Agua Tibia Primitive Area until January 1975 when it was added to the National Wilderness Preservation System with the passage of Public Law 93-632 by the United States Congress.[2] Between its inception and 1984, the ATW was San Diego County's only officially designated wilderness area.[4] The Spanish name, Agua Tibia, translates as warm water.

Its approximate boundaries are:[5]

Contents

Environment

There are no permanent streams in the ATW. The highest landform is Agua Tibia Mountain with an elevation of 4,779 feet (1,457 m)[6].

Though the summer climate is hot, with limited shade and no water sources, there were no fires in the ATW for 110 years. In the last two decades, there have been four fires including the Palomar Mountain Fire (1987), the Vail Fire (1989), the Agua Tibia Fire (2000), and the Poomacha Fire (2007).[5] Its pollution exposure is monitored within the San Diego Air Basin.[7]

Flora

The Agua Tibia Wilderness is home to rare and endemic plants. These include:

Agua Tibia Research Natural Area

The Agua Tibia Research Natural Area (ATRNA), located within the wilderness, comprises 480 acres (190 ha) of Bigcone Douglas-fir – Canyon Live Oak forest. The area was set aside for the study of this forest type in the Peninsular Range province and with emphasis on forest succession, long-range ecological changes and the effects of resource management practices. Bigcone Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga macrocarpa) is a relict species and is endemic to Southern California. This population on the ATRNA is unique for its relatively great age, size, genetic purity, placement near the southern extent of the species' range, and for its remoteness and lack of disturbance by man. Other notable plants in the research area are Laguna linanthus (Linanthus orcuttii ssp. pacificus) and Hall's monardella (Monardella macrantha ssp. hallii). Both are listed as 1B by the California Native Plant Society's Rare Plant Program.[8][9]

References

External links