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January-March
2007
WEB EXTRA: Looking Ahead on the Napa River
In our January-March 2007 feature, "Valley of Water
and Wine," we highlight the innovative work of landowners along the
Napa River who are initiating restoration projects on the upper
reaches of the river. The Rutherford Dust Society, a group of mid-valley
growers, is poised to start moving dirt this year to enhance salmon
and steelhead habitat on 4.5 miles of the river.
Just downstream, the California Land Stewardship
Institute (CLSI) is starting an ambitious project to improve habitat
along another 10 miles of the river's channel. That project
highlights two notable aspects of river restoration work in the
North Bay: a budding movement for sustainable agriculture, which
includes restoration of watersheds for fish and other wildlife as a
key component; and the use of computer modeling by restoration
planners to guide the work.
Fish-Friendly Farming
About half of the landowners in the area slated for
restoration by CLSI are also part of an innovative program called
Fish-Friendly Farming (FFF). Growers enroll in the program and
participate in training workshops about habitat restoration and
water quality issues, but the key to the program is that it moves
quickly from training and study to actual restoration work.
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View of the Napa River, looking south from
Yountville. Restoration efforts here will eventually expand
the river's narrow riparian corridor. Photo by David Page, http://www.pagephotos.com/ |
A farmer works with technical advisors to develop a
farm conservation plan that covers the entire property, not just
planted areas. "[The program] really errs on the side of the
environment," says Laurel Marcus, executive director of the
California Land Stewardship Institute, who developed the
Fish-Friendly Farming initiative in 1999. "It looks at everything
that can affect water quality. It looks at all the creeks, all the
different features that can affect habitat. Most of this is coming
from pretty well established ideas on how to reduce erosion and
increase water quality."
Many similar programs rely on self-assessment to
monitor progress, but Marcus's program includes detailed
photo-monitoring to make sure the farm conservation plan is having
the desired effect.
"The program generates restoration. Instead of
studying things a lot, it cuts right to the restoration," says
Marcus. And farmers often drive the process. "In the nearly 10 years
that I have directed the program, I've been impressed with the
sincere interest farmers have in improving the environment and their
willingness to go well beyond any regulatory requirement."
The program's web site includes testimonials from
participating growers, including this one from Tom Piper of Fetzer
Vineyards: "The Fish Friendly Farming program rounded out our
operation by bringing erosion control practices on roads and
environmental enhancement and restoration projects to our streams.
We've learned to go beyond accepting what we have to enhancing it
for fish and wildlife."
The program was designed specifically for grape
growers in the Russian River drainage. In 2002, Marcus joined with
Napa farm groups to expand into the Napa Valley. Today, the program
covers Mendocino, Sonoma, Napa, and Solano counties and includes
over 100 vineyards, some with multiple sites. Currently, there are
50,000 acres enrolled, and Marcus's organization recently received a
grant to enroll 25,000 more acres by 2009. Current participants
include high-profile wine labels like Fetzer, Beringer Blass, and
Mondavi.
However, it's not yet possible to pick up a bottle of
wine in your local store and know if it came from a certified Fish
Friendly vineyard. A marketing plan to make that happen is now being
developed and should be launched in early 2008, says Marcus. Visit
http://www.fishfriendlyfarming.org/ for more
information.
Watershed Modeling
Most growers probably know a lot more about their own
land than the farm up the road, but rivers, of course, don't respect
property boundaries. Actions upstream can make a world of
difference—allowing different restoration projects to have
cumulative good effects, if done well, or making downstream
vineyards and towns more prone to flooding, if not.
The California Land Stewardship Institute is working
with other scientists at UC Davis and at Philip Williams &
Associates (PWA), a private consulting firm, to develop complex
computer models of the river channel and its flood plain.
In fact, building those models is the first step in
the restoration work. Andy Collison of PWA, explains that the larger
project will be guided by two different digital simulations of the
river.
The first is a hydraulic or flood model that can
"predict the depth and velocity of water in response to a rainfall
event." The model will extend beyond the river channel into the
surrounding flood plain, and it will allow planners to try out
different scenarios to see how changes in certain parts of the
watershed will either improve or worsen flooding downstream. It will
also allow agencies to zero in on flood-prone lands that are
marginal for agriculture but could make prime restored habitat.
The second model, to be developed by Eric Larsen of UC
Davis, is called a morphological or meander model. "He has developed
a method of predicting how rivers will migrate over time," says
Collison. Here again, potential changes to the channel can be tried
out in the model, and then researchers can predict erosion rates in
specific areas on the river, which means that a grower with land on
an eroding bend in the river would have a good idea how long it will
take for the river to erode into cultivated acreage.
"That should allow us to identify particular bends to
focus on," explains Collison. "And then if we make changes elsewhere
in the system, how does that rate change in that spot? Does widening
the channel upstream change erosion rates?"
Though flood modeling is used all over the world, the
model on the Napa River is fairly unusual in its inclusion of the
full flood plain. Larsen's meander model has been developed very
recently and used mostly here in Northern California, including on
the Sacramento River.
[Dan Rademacher]
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