Spenceville Wildlife Area


The Spenceville Wildlife Area is an wildlife preserve managed by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. It is located in the Sierra Nevada Foothills, within Nevada County and Yuba County of northern California.

Geography

The preserve is approximately east of the town of Marysville and Beale Air Force Base in the eastern Sacramento Valley. The elevation of the area varies from.

Natural history

Spenceville is a foothill oak woodland of Blue oak and Foothill gray pine, and a grassland habitat. It is notable for many species of native birds and wildflowers, including the California endemic Yellow mariposa lily.
The geology of the Spenceville area is part of the Smartville Block formed during the Middle Jurassic epoch 200 million years ago. The Smartville Block is a part of the California Mother Lode for gold, and consequently Spenceville has had its share of mining activity. Cleanup from copper and zinc mining continues to this day.
The area was originally home to the Maidu and Nisenan Native Americans and evidence of their grinding holes and lodge pits still exist.

Recreation

Spenceville hosts a variety of activities: hiking, biking, hunting, hunting dog field trials, target shooting, camping, equestrian trail riding, birding, and primitive camping. A popular trail leads to a double waterfall called . There can be a high level of rattlesnakes seasonally.

Conservation

The Spenceville Wildlife Area may be environmentally impacted by the Waldo Dam Project proposed by the Yuba County Water Agency, and by housing development proposed between Beale Air Force Base and the wildlife area.