Orange County protects coast live oak, Engelmann oak, California sycamore, and other native trees in unincorporated areas through grading, hillside, and oak woodland conservation provisions tied to CEQA review.
Coast live oak and Engelmann oak woodlands are recognized sensitive habitats under CEQA Public Resources Code 21083.4, which requires mitigation for projects that would convert oak woodlands in unincorporated counties. OC Planning applies these standards to discretionary projects in the foothills and canyons, often requiring tree surveys, root-zone protection during grading, replacement at 1:1 to 3:1 ratios, and conservation easements over preserved acreage. Native sycamore and California black walnut also receive protection in some specific plan areas. State and federal Endangered Species Act protections apply to nesting raptors and migratory birds that may use protected trees.
Removing a protected oak without mitigation can trigger CEQA violation findings, restoration orders, and per-tree civil penalties.
Santa Ana, CA
Santa Ana requires permits for removal of street trees managed by the city's Public Works department. Private property tree removal may require a permit depe...
Santa Ana, CA
Santa Ana recognizes significant trees that contribute to the city's character and urban canopy. While the city does not have a formal heritage tree registry...
See how Santa Ana's protected tree species rules stack up against other locations.
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