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HomeFish and Game CodeDiv. 2Ch. 3Art. 1§ 1021 Monarch Butterfly Conservation Actions

§ 1021 Monarch Butterfly Conservation Actions

Fish and Game Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 1021 Monarch Butterfly Conservation Actions

This law lets the state department do things to protect monarch butterflies and the places they need to live, like fixing habitats, teaching people, and working with private landowners and other groups.

Key Takeaways

  • •The department may take actions like habitat restoration, education, and voluntary deals to help monarch butterflies.
  • •It can work with federal agencies, nonprofits, schools, private landowners, and groups such as the Monarch Joint Venture.
  • •When acting, the department must use the best science and focus on native milkweed, nectar plants, controlling weeds and pests, creating good winter habitats, and using many partnerships.
  • •Not signing a voluntary agreement does NOT mean a permit can be denied or extra mitigation required beyond other laws.

Example

A farmer wants to build a new barn on his land. He can choose to join a voluntary agreement to plant native milkweed and nectar plants for monarchs, but if he decides not to, the state can’t refuse his building permit just because he didn’t join.

The department can help the farmer protect butterfly habitat, but the law says not signing a voluntary agreement can’t be used to block his permit or force extra rules beyond what other environmental laws already require.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 1021 Monarch Butterfly Conservation Actions

(a) The department may take feasible actions to conserve monarch butterflies and the unique habitats they depend upon for successful migration. These actions may include, but are not limited to, habitat restoration on department lands, education programs, and voluntary agreements with private landowners. (b) The department may partner with federal agencies, nonprofit organizations, academic programs, private landowners, and other entities that undertake actions to conserve monarch butterflies and aid their successful migration, including the Monarch Joint Venture. (c) When undertaking actions to conserve monarch butterflies and their habitats pursuant to this section, the department shall use the best available science and consider, as appropriate and feasible, all of the following: (1) Restoring or revegetating monarch caterpillar habitat using regionally or locally appropriate native milkweed species. (2) Restoring or revegetating adult monarch butterfly habitat using regionally or locally appropriate native nectar plant species. (3) Controlling nonnative weed species that threaten native milkweed species, and controlling pests and disease, using current best management practices consistent with integrated pest management principles that pose low risk to monarch butterflies and their habitat. (4)  Incorporating diverse tree species, structures, and arrangements when restoring or establishing winter habitat sites to match monarch butterfly preferences for temperature, light, moisture, wind, and other microclimate characteristics. (5) Increasing the number of partnerships and making the most of partnerships to use residential and institutional landscaped areas, agricultural noncropped lands, transportation corridors, and conservation easements to create, restore, or enhance monarch butterfly habitat. (d) The fact that a project applicant or landowner does not enter into a voluntary agreement to protect monarch butterflies shall not be grounds for denying a permit or agreement or requiring additional mitigation beyond what would be required to mitigate project impacts under other applicable laws, including, but not limited to, the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code). (Added by Stats. 2015, Ch. 478, Sec. 2. (AB 559) Effective January 1, 2016.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

educationagreementpartnershipportacademiceasementthe departmentrestoration

Related Statutes

  • § 1672 Restoration Project Permits
  • § 1002.5 Scientific Research Permit Rules
  • § 1024 Cannabis Site Restoration Study
  • § 1065 Nonprofit Conservation Organization Promotion
  • § 1122.6 Museum Lease At Fish Hatchery

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Fish and Game Code. Section 1021.
View Official Source