Bear Creek Riparian Restoration [ds2816]

Every year since 2002, members of the BCWG have participated in the international education and outreach program, World Water Monitoring Day, by collecting basic water quality measurements at eleven locations along Bear, Ash and Lack creeks within the Bear Creek Watershed. During this once-per-year monitoring event, BCWG members observed areas with little riparian cover and high water temperatures. These high water temperatures adversely affect the aquatic ecosystems and fishery of Bear Creek. Additionally, this lack of riparian vegetation makes stream banks more susceptible to erosion and ultimately leads to increased sediment delivery to the river.Building on the existing conditions documented in the Bear Creek Watershed Assessment, and the restoration goals and objectives identified in the Management Strategy, the BCWG proposes to purchase equipment to record diurnal stream temperatures, dissolved oxygen, pH, turbidity and electrical conductivity throughout the anadromous reaches of Bear Creek. The BCWG will use this temperature and water quality data to guide riparian revegetation efforts in developing a shading riparian canopy that will protect and enhance cold water resources within the range of anadromy.Implementing stream monitoring and riparian planting at this time meets several objectives outlined in the Bear Creek Watershed Management Strategy including:Implement temperature monitoring aimed at defining the existing temperature regime both seasonally and spatially;Collect baseline data and monitor temperature and flow as they relate to fish abundance;Rehabilitate habitat with projects that are adaptively integrated with other goals of the Management Strategy;Develop public outreach programs to educate Bear Creek Watershed residents and government agencies and officials about the efforts of the BCWG to maintain and improve watershed health.Implementing a restoration project of this type would also help identify areas in the watershed that are consistently in poorer condition to enable the development of restoration prescriptions (stream/ riparian/ sediment source reductions) that can improve those conditions.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
accessLevel public
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier 8175be19-4a37-4cc0-9e46-5b390d1ef0cb
issued 2020-01-22T21:02:05.000Z
modified 2021-05-14T20:54:38.000Z
publisher California Department of Fish and Wildlife
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 1bed0b9902ab9a9c03657fde85d77ec3fe20df82
source_schema_version 1.1
theme {"Natural Resources",Water}
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • authcdfw
  • bear-creek
  • california-department-of-fish-and-wildlife
  • california-natural-resources-agency
  • caopendata
  • cdfw
  • chinook
  • ckan
  • ds281620190408wm
  • geo
  • geoss
  • monitoring
  • national
  • north-america
  • restoration
  • riparian-restoration
  • salmon
  • shasta-county
  • steelhead
  • turbidity
  • united-states
  • water-quality
  • water-temperature
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer BIOS_Admin
maintainer_email bios@wildlife.ca.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-21T19:52:00.798887
metadata_modified 2025-11-21T19:52:00.798892
notes Every year since 2002, members of the BCWG have participated in the international education and outreach program, World Water Monitoring Day, by collecting basic water quality measurements at eleven locations along Bear, Ash and Lack creeks within the Bear Creek Watershed. During this once-per-year monitoring event, BCWG members observed areas with little riparian cover and high water temperatures. These high water temperatures adversely affect the aquatic ecosystems and fishery of Bear Creek. Additionally, this lack of riparian vegetation makes stream banks more susceptible to erosion and ultimately leads to increased sediment delivery to the river.Building on the existing conditions documented in the Bear Creek Watershed Assessment, and the restoration goals and objectives identified in the Management Strategy, the BCWG proposes to purchase equipment to record diurnal stream temperatures, dissolved oxygen, pH, turbidity and electrical conductivity throughout the anadromous reaches of Bear Creek. The BCWG will use this temperature and water quality data to guide riparian revegetation efforts in developing a shading riparian canopy that will protect and enhance cold water resources within the range of anadromy.Implementing stream monitoring and riparian planting at this time meets several objectives outlined in the Bear Creek Watershed Management Strategy including:Implement temperature monitoring aimed at defining the existing temperature regime both seasonally and spatially;Collect baseline data and monitor temperature and flow as they relate to fish abundance;Rehabilitate habitat with projects that are adaptively integrated with other goals of the Management Strategy;Develop public outreach programs to educate Bear Creek Watershed residents and government agencies and officials about the efforts of the BCWG to maintain and improve watershed health.Implementing a restoration project of this type would also help identify areas in the watershed that are consistently in poorer condition to enable the development of restoration prescriptions (stream/ riparian/ sediment source reductions) that can improve those conditions.
num_resources 6
num_tags 25
title Bear Creek Riparian Restoration [ds2816]