Quartzville Creek Area, COA 112

COA ID: 112

Photo Credit: Anne Mary Myers, ODFW

The Quartzville Creek Area COA (82 mi2) extends from the BLM land near Crabtree Mountain eastward into the Cascades, toward Lucky Butte and South Pyramid Peak.  The area includes a major tributary of the Middle Santiam River (Quartzville Creek) and is largely comprised of federally managed late-successional mixed conifer forest southwest of Mount Jefferson.

Local Conservation Actions and Plans

Potential Partners

Special Features

General

  • A portion of Quartzville Creek that runs through this COA is designated as a Wild and Scenic River.
  • This COA is located adjacent to the Middle Santiam Wilderness Area.
  • The Quartzville Creek Basin provides significant percentage of breeding habitat for the harlequin duck.  Harlequin ducks typically breed along mid-sized mountain streams with boulder substrate.
  • In 2022 there was a reintroduction of Chinook salmon above Green Peter Dam on Quartzville Creek.
  • Crabtree Lake and the surrounding valley are designated as an Outstanding Natural Area by the BLM.  This area has a combination of remnant old-growth forest, wetlands, and unique geological features that support a diversity of fish and wildlife species.  There have been many restoration efforts focused in this region, including Good Neighbor Authority agreements between the BLM and ODFW.
  • The Breitenbush and North Santiam River Watershed was selected as a Beaver Emphasis Area for ODFW’s South Willamette Watershed in 2023.  ODFW and partner groups have been conducted beaver surveys within the watershed since then to better understand beaver prevalence in the area.

Protected Areas

  • Carolyn’s Crown-Shafer Creek Research Natural Area
  • Crabtree Lake Outstanding Natural Area
  • Middle Santiam Wilderness Area
  • Willamette National Forest

Previous COA Associations

  • Previously Associated with (2006 COA IDs)
    • WC-05 (Quartzville Creek area)
  • Size Change from 2016 boundaries: +23.0 mi2 (39% increase)

Specialized Local Habitats

  • Cliffs, / rock outcrops, Talus
  • Forest openings
  • Old growth forest
  • Unique rock formations (pinnacles)

Ecoregions

Key Habitats

Species of Greatest Conservation Need