Amphibian Restoration - High Mountain Lakes [ds103]

This data provides an overview of native amphibian restoration sites in the Sierra Nevada. Following High Mountain Lakes surveys, fish were manually removed at some high elevation lake sites. Removals of non-native trout were done at sites with mountain yellow-legged frogs or with frogs nearby. Fish removal is done without the use of chemicals, using monofilament gill nets and electrofishing. Gill nets catch adult and juvenile fish. Electrofishing is used primarily as a way to remove fish from small tributary streams and fry (less than 70mm) from shallow areas. Current literature has shown that mountain yellow-legged frog populations can rebound quickly after trout removal. Frog population counts at CDFW sites support this finding. The restoration data, along with the related high mountain lakes amphibian, fish and fisheries project data sets represent biological surveys conducted at a series of lakes in the Sierra Nevada ranging from Plumas County in the north to Tulare County in the south. During High Mountain Lake (HML) surveys, Sierra Nevada lentic waters were surveyed for fish, frogs, habitats, stream barriers to fish movement and presence of fairy shrimp. Lakes with fish were surveyed using monofilament gill nets. Amphibians were detected and documented based on direct observation. Contact Sarah Mussulman (916) 358-2838 for additional survey protocol detail and a description of methods. As part of the development of the biological data sets, researchers created a detailed coverage of lakes for (ostensibly) all known lentic water bodies in California above 5000'' elevation. Lake features were digitized from USGS 1:24000 quadrangles and assigned a unique identifying number. High Mountain Lakes (HML) surveys were performed in the Sierra Nevada starting in 2001 and use these unique ID numbers to reference waterbodies. WHAT EACH RECORD REPRESENTS: Each record represents a lake where CDFW has begun removing fish to benefit a population of mountain yellow-legged frogs. The majority of lakes in this dataset are currently fishless; a handful are active fish removal sites.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
accessLevel public
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier c4dba85e-9959-44a6-88ef-623fd9c6142f
issued 2021-09-14T20:41:54.000Z
modified 2021-09-14T20:42:13.000Z
publisher California Department of Fish and Wildlife
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash b800536c034a73a50365616b7ca2c82a582761e5
source_schema_version 1.1
theme {"Natural Resources",Water}
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • amphibian
  • authcdfw
  • california-department-of-fish-and-wildlife
  • california-natural-resources-agency
  • caopendata
  • cdfw
  • ckan
  • ds010320210702wm
  • fish
  • geo
  • geoss
  • habitat-attributes
  • management
  • multi-species
  • national
  • north-america
  • united-states
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer BIOS_Admin
maintainer_email bios@wildlife.ca.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-22T23:27:21.231971
metadata_modified 2025-11-22T23:27:21.231975
notes This data provides an overview of native amphibian restoration sites in the Sierra Nevada. Following High Mountain Lakes surveys, fish were manually removed at some high elevation lake sites. Removals of non-native trout were done at sites with mountain yellow-legged frogs or with frogs nearby. Fish removal is done without the use of chemicals, using monofilament gill nets and electrofishing. Gill nets catch adult and juvenile fish. Electrofishing is used primarily as a way to remove fish from small tributary streams and fry (less than 70mm) from shallow areas. Current literature has shown that mountain yellow-legged frog populations can rebound quickly after trout removal. Frog population counts at CDFW sites support this finding. The restoration data, along with the related high mountain lakes amphibian, fish and fisheries project data sets represent biological surveys conducted at a series of lakes in the Sierra Nevada ranging from Plumas County in the north to Tulare County in the south. During High Mountain Lake (HML) surveys, Sierra Nevada lentic waters were surveyed for fish, frogs, habitats, stream barriers to fish movement and presence of fairy shrimp. Lakes with fish were surveyed using monofilament gill nets. Amphibians were detected and documented based on direct observation. Contact Sarah Mussulman (916) 358-2838 for additional survey protocol detail and a description of methods. As part of the development of the biological data sets, researchers created a detailed coverage of lakes for (ostensibly) all known lentic water bodies in California above 5000'' elevation. Lake features were digitized from USGS 1:24000 quadrangles and assigned a unique identifying number. High Mountain Lakes (HML) surveys were performed in the Sierra Nevada starting in 2001 and use these unique ID numbers to reference waterbodies. WHAT EACH RECORD REPRESENTS: Each record represents a lake where CDFW has begun removing fish to benefit a population of mountain yellow-legged frogs. The majority of lakes in this dataset are currently fishless; a handful are active fish removal sites.
num_resources 6
num_tags 19
title Amphibian Restoration - High Mountain Lakes [ds103]