North American beaver (
Castor canadensis) have been thought to be non-native to San Luis Obispo Creek but
Bolton recorded in "Anza's California Expeditions" that in April 1774, Father Cavaller of
Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa gave
Juan Bautista de Anza "thirty-odd beaver skins" along with other local gifts including fine Indian baskets and "the skins of eight bears, the animals for which the region was renowned". returned to the creek in 2017 after a Various barriers to
fish migration have been created on San Luis Obispo Creek and its tributaries, since the city of San Luis Obispo developed. Stage Coach Dam on the upper reaches of the creek was removed in 2002. It had been built in the early 1900s to create a water supply reservoir, but was filled in with
sediment. Other barriers have been removed as well, often by creating notches in the middle to concentrate low flows or adding rock
weirs to back up the water over an obstacle or provide a more gradual change in elevation. In 2017,
Pacific lampreys (
Entosphenus tridentatus) returned to the creek after a six-year absence. ==See also==