Applying Reconciliation Ecology Concepts To Salmonid Habitat ...

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Applying Reconciliation Ecology Concepts To Salmonid Habitat Restoration And Enhancement

Mike Burke, Nick Nelson, Greg Koonce, Manny DaCosta and Marty Melchior

Motivations

•  Share experiences in planning and implementing salmonid habitat enhancement in highly altered, yet natural settings that are critically important for conservation of salmonids.

•  Use a pair of contemporary ecological paradigms to frame the associated nuances and complexities.

Outline

•  Definitions •  Context •  Introduce Case Study •  Design Application •  Results – Habitat and Utilization

Definitions Novel Ecosystem

(Seastedt et al. 2008):

•  Interactions between altered river systems and alien species are resulting in unprecedented combinations of species in habitat quite different from undisturbed habitat •  ‘In managing novel ecosystems, the point is to not think outside the box, but to recognize that the box itself has shifted.’

Reconciliation Ecology

(Rosenzweig 2003):

•  Practical approach to living with the new reality of these ecosystems for which recovery may be unattainable or even inadvisable •  Manage these systems to provide desirable attributes, in particular to conserve biodiversity and critical species

Application Context

Focused on Physical Habitat Improvement: •  Interaction of the altered physical processes can be similarly unprecedented •  Nearly all habitat restoration effort is a direct application of reconciliation ecology •  WRT to stream processes and how they create, destroy and maintain habitat, it is essentially important to not only understand that the ‘box’ has moved, but also: •  Is the box still moving? •  In what direction and how fast? •  What is left in the box to work with?

Case Study

Dry Creek: •  230 mi2 watershed •  150 years of impacts lead stream far from its state at time of European contact •  Chinook and coho salmon, steelhead trout •  Critical resource for regional recovery of coho and steelhead •  Abundant cold water in late summer over gravel substrate, rare for region (artifact of regulation) •  Microcosm of overlapping alterations within a 14-mile reach of stream downstream of dam

Legacy of Alteration

•  1850 - 1900: Deforestation and agricultural conversion •  1910 – 1975: Instream gravel mining

•  Led to systemic incision (20 -25 ), slowed by end of period •  Disconnection of lateral habitats and floodplain

Legacy of Alteration

•  1980 - present: dam construction and regulation

•  Curtails sediment continuity and floods, elevates base flow •  Veg encroachment, sequester alluvium, channelization , •  Efficient at transporting available gravels

Current Function (what s left and where s it going) •  Laterally and vertically stable, minimal disturbance

•  limited lateral habitat creation/revitalization – limited refugia •  limited recruitment of substrate and LWD • 

it s stuck – not empowered or able to create new habitat

Current Function (what s left and where s it going) •  Highly efficient at transporting available sediment with regulated hydrology •  limited roughness, short substrate residence time

•  Deficit of riffle habitat •  Poor quality pools: swift water, limited complexity and cover

Prescriptions

•  Disturbance!: §  thin overbank vegetation to enable recruitment of legacy substrate and promote geomorphic change §  energy dissipation

Prescriptions

•  Sediment Augmentation: § 

seed riffles with sediment caliber that is better fit for regulated hydrology,

§  Energy breaks improve residence time for substrate

Prescriptions

•  Supplement LWD: §  Provide cover and complexity, §  Foster habitat development – scour and deposition §  Enhance substrate residence time

Prescriptions •  Rejuvenate lateral habitats and floodplains: §  Backwaters, side channels, alcoves §  Adjust to present base level and hydrology

Feedback (so far) •  Intensive monitoring of fish utilization

Feedback (so far) •  Intensive monitoring of fish utilization

Feedback (so far) •  Intensive monitoring of fish utilization

Summary Points §  Nearly all river systems are moderately to substantially altered from their predisturbance state, yet are essential for conservation of critical species. §  The paradigms of the novel ecosystem and reconciliation ecology are useful for characterizing the realities of physical habitat enhancement planning and implementation. §  In order to successfully achieve habitat enhancement objectives, it is necessary to reconcile the history of alteration, current physical function and future trajectory. §  Often, intervention is required to nudge the physical system towards a trajectory that can sustain and replenish the habitat that is enhanced.

Applying Reconciliation Ecology Concepts To Salmonid Habitat Restoration And Enhancement Citations §  Moyle, P.B., 2013. Novel Aquatic Ecosystems: The New Reality for Streams in California and Other Mediterranean Climate Regions. River Res. Applic., DOI 10.1002/rra.2709. §  Rosenzweig, M.L. 2003. Win-win Ecology: How the Earth’s Species Can Survive in the Midst of Human Enterprise. Oxford University Press. Oxford. §  Seastedt, T.R, Hobbs, R.J, Suding, K.N. 2008. Management of Novel Ecosystems: Are Novel Approaches Required? Frontiers in Ecology and Environment 6: 547-553

Acknowledgements §  Sonoma County Water Agency, NMFS, CDFW