EPA Press Release:
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 5, 2013
MEDIA CONTACT: David Yogi, yogi.david@epa.gov, (415)
972-3350
U.S.
EPA Water Quality Grant Aids Native Fish Recovery in Palo
Alto
Grant
helps restore access to 40 miles of spawning habitat for steelhead
trout
SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and partner agencies, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA),
California State Coastal Conservancy (SCC), and San Mateo County Resource
Conservation District (RCD) announced the near completion of work to remove a
fish-passage barrier, improving access to high quality spawning habitat for
migrating native steelhead trout in the San Francisquito Creek
watershed.
The Bonde weir was the last remaining barrier
in the San Francisquito Creek for the steelhead, a federally-threatened species.
The 100-year-old weir was built in tandem with concrete walls to protect the
historic “El Palo Alto” redwood from streambank erosion. Removing the weir will
improve the ability of steelhead to reach 40 miles of upstream spawning and
rearing grounds. The project will also protect and enhance over 120 feet of
streambed by adding new rock material designed to withstand the creek flows
associated with a 100 year storm.
“For the first time in 100 years, steelhead
trout will have additional access to miles of spawning grounds,” said Jared
Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “San
Francisquito is an anchor watershed for restoring a healthy steelhead population
in the Bay.”
San Francisquito
Creek is one of the few remaining free-flowing Bay Area urban creeks not
confined to a concrete channel, and is identified by the Center for Ecosystem
Management and Restoration as one of eight priority watersheds for steelhead
restoration. The creek was designated as “critical habitat” for steelhead by
NOAA in 2005.
San Francisquito Creek, which serves as the
boundary between the cities of Menlo Park and Palo Alto, drains into San
Francisco Bay through a flood control channel. The main-stem of the creek is
approximately 14 miles long and runs from near Searsville Dam to the
Bay.
“We are honored to
help protect one of the last remaining wild steelhead trout populations in the
Bay Area by replacing a structure that strands young fish with natural streambed
materials that create shelter and improve conditions for fish passage from
Searsville Dam to the Bay,” said Kellyx Nelson, RCD’s Executive
Director.
In addition to EPA’s $75,000 grant, the
project was supported with funds from the NOAA Restoration Center, and the SCC,
bringing total funding for the project to $309,400. The grant funds were awarded
to the RCD to manage and coordinate the project.
The Bonde weir
removal and restoration project is part of EPA’s San Francisco Bay Water Quality
Improvement Fund that has invested over $28 million in 48 projects across the
Bay region since 2008. Since the Fund’s inception, EPA’s investments have been
matched with over $100 million from 69 partner agencies and
organizations.
For more information on this project and the
San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund, visit: http://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund
###
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.