The Clatsop Plains COA (34 mi2) extends along the Oregon coast from the Columbia River to Gearhart. It contains Gearhart Fen, the largest contiguous wetland of its kind remaining on the Oregon coast. The Clatsop Plains beaches provide habitat for shorebirds during migration (e.g. Sanderlings) and potential areas for nesting Western Snowy Plovers. This COA creates a contiguous chunk of habitat along with the Necanicum Estuary, Necanicum River, Saddle Mountain, and Tillamook Head COAs.
Recommended Conservation Actions
- Work with collaborators to minimize habitat loss, especially as it related to potential effects of climate change.
- Maintain and restore existing habitats.
- Manage public use to minimize disturbance for shorebirds.
- Plan future developments to maintain key ecological functions and habitats.
Local Conservation Actions and Plans
- Clatsop Plains Elk Collaborative
- Coastal Multi-Species Conservation and Management Plan
- Important Bird Areas
- Oregon Coast Coho Conservation Plan
- Recovery Plan for Lower Columbia River Coho Salmon, Lower Columbia River Chinook Salmon, Columbia River Chum Salmon, and Lower Columbia River Steelhead
Potential Partners
- City of Gearhart
- City of Warrenton
- National Parks Service
- Oregon Parks and Recreation Department
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Special Features
General:
- The coastal beaches within this COA provide habitat for shorebirds during migration and potential nesting area for Western Snowy Plovers.
- Land ownership is primarily small private parcels, with some commercial timber.
- Fish in this COA area heavily impacted, there is less opportunity for conservation actions in this area due to land ownership.
Protected Areas:
- 2nd Street Gearhart Habitat Reserve
- Alder Creek Corridor Habitat Reserve
- Clatsop Ridge
- Clear Lake Habitat Reserve
- Creep and Crawl Lake Habitat Reserve
- Del Rey Beach State Recreation Site
- Forest Stevens State Park
- Gearhart Ocean State Recreation Area
- Mill Creek Conservation Easement
- Neacoxie Prairie Habitat Reserve
- Neacoxie Wetlands Habitat Reserve
- Pacific Ridge Habitat Reserve
- Pacific Wetland Habitat Reserve
- Reed Ranch Habitat Reserve
- Ridge Road Swamp Habitat Reserve
- Skipanon Forest Habitat Reserve
- Spirit Lake Habitat Reserve
- Sunset Beach State Recreation Site
- Wild Ace Lake Conservation Easement
- Yeon Conservation Easement
Previous COA Associations:
- Previously Associated with (2006 COA IDs)
- CR-01 (Clatsop Plains)
- CR-04 (Necanicum Estuary)
- Size Change from 2016 boundaries: +5.1 mi2 (18% increase)
Ecoregions
Coast Range
Oregon's Coast Range, known for its dramatic scenery, is extremely diverse, with habitats ranging from open sandy dunes to lush forests and from tidepools to headwater streams. It follows the coastline and extends east through coastal forest to the border of the Willamette Valley and Klamath Mountains ecoregions
Nearshore
The Nearshore ecoregion includes a variety of habitats ranging from submerged high-relief rocky reefs to broad expanses of intertidal mudflats in estuaries and hosts a vast array of fish, invertebrates, marine mammals, birds, plants, and micro-organisms. This ecoregion encompasses the area from the outer boundary of Oregon's Territorial Sea to the supra-tidal zone, and up into the estuaries.
Key Habitats
Coastal Dunes
Occurring along the Oregon coastline, coastal dunes provide habitat for species that prefer open, sandy habitats with a high degree of disturbance from winds and tides.
Estuaries
Estuaries are broadly defined as partially enclosed coastal bodies of tidally influenced water with one or more inputs of freshwater, and with a free or intermittent connection to the open sea. Estuaries typically occur at locations where freshwater from rivers, streams, or creeks meets saltwater from the nearshore ocean, creating a tidal basin that experiences frequent …
Grasslands
Grasslands include a variety of upland grass-dominated habitats, such as upland prairies, coastal bluffs, and montane grasslands.
Late Successional Mixed Conifer Forests
Late successional mixed conifer forests provide a multi-layered tree canopy, including large-diameter trees, shade-tolerant tree species in the understory, and a high volume of dead wood, such as snags and logs.
Natural Lakes
Natural lakes are relatively large bodies of freshwater surrounded by land that were formed through geological processes, such as glacial scouring, tectonic movements, volcanic activity and river meander cutoffs. In Oregon, natural lakes are defined as standing water bodies larger than 20 acres, including some seasonal lakes. Depth is not a reference for characterization of …
Oak Habitats
There are several oak habitat types in Oregon, where oaks comprise most of the canopy. These can include oak woodlands, oak forest, oak chaparral, and riparian oak. Oak savanna is covered in the Grasslands Key Habitat. Oaks may also co-dominate a canopy in oak/fir, oak pine, and oak hardwood habitats.
Flowing Water and Riparian Habitats
Flowing Water and Riparian Habitats include all naturally occurring flowing freshwater streams and rivers throughout Oregon as well as the adjacent riparian habitat.
Wetlands
Wetlands are habitats that are inundated or saturated by surface water or ground water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support vegetation typically adapted for life in sodden soil conditions. While dominated by periods of inundation, the natural ecological cycle may also include dry intervals. Permanently wet habitats include backwater sloughs, oxbow lakes, peatlands, …
Nearshore Key Habitats
Nearshore Habitats encompass the coastal and marine habitats in the area from the 3 nautical mile outer limit of Oregon’s territorial sea, where water depths average 66 m (216 ft) and range from 17 m to 194 m (56 to 308 ft), to the supratidal areas of the shoreline affected by wave spray and overwash …
Species of Greatest Conservation Need
Brant (Observed)
Branta bernicla
Black Oystercatcher (Observed)
Haematopus bachmani
California Myotis (Observed)
Myotis californicus
Caspian Tern (Observed)
Hydroprogne caspia
Chinook Salmon (Documented)
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
Chum Salmon (Documented)
Oncorhynchus keta
Coastal Cutthroat Trout (Documented)
Oncorhynchus clarki clarki
Coastal Tailed Frog (Modeled Habitat)
Ascaphus truei
Coho Salmon (Documented)
Oncorhynchus kisutch
Columbia Torrent Salamander (Modeled Habitat)
Rhyacotriton kezeri
Columbian White-tailed Deer (Observed)
Odocoileus virginianus leucurus
Cope’s Giant Salamander (Modeled Habitat)
Dicamptodon copei
Fork-tailed Storm-Petrel (Observed)
Oceanodroma furcata
Fringed Myotis (Modeled Habitat)
Myotis thysanodes
Harlequin Duck (Observed)
Histrionicus histrionicus
Hoary Bat (Observed)
Lasiurus cinereus
Leach’s Storm-Petrel (Modeled Habitat)
Hydrobates leucorhoa
Long-legged Myotis (Observed)
Myotis volans
Marbled Murrelet (Observed)
Brachyramphus marmoratus
Northern Red-legged Frog (Observed)
Rana aurora
Northern Spotted Owl (Observed)
Strix occidentalis caurina
Olive-sided Flycatcher (Observed)
Contopus cooperi
Oregon Silverspot Butterfly (Observed)
Argynnis zerene hippolyta
Peregrine Falcon (Observed)
Falco peregrinus anatum
Pink sandverbena (Observed)
Abronia umbellata var. breviflora
Western Purple Martin (Observed)
Progne subis arboricola
Red Tree Vole (Modeled Habitat)
Arborimus longicaudus
Silver-haired Bat (Observed)
Lasionycteris noctivagans
Steelhead / Rainbow / Redband Trout (Documented)
Oncorhynchus mykiss ssp
Tufted Puffin (Observed)
Fratercula cirrhata
Western Snowy Plover (Observed)
Anarhynchus nivosus nivosus
Western Toad (Modeled Habitat)
Anaxyrus boreas