![[Photo]: One of the streams on the Siuslaw National Forest.](../../regional/habitat/images/h_streams.jpg) |
![[Image]: spacer.](../images/spacer_wh.jpg)
Streams
on National Forests in the Pacific
Northwest provide much of the best
remaining habitat for native fish
species. |
When
one thinks of the Pacific Northwest,
most picture deep dark forests with
rain-swollen rivers hiding salmon and
steelhead fresh from the ocean. Although
this picture does mirror many river
systems in the Northwest, it really
portrays only the western one-third
of the States of Washington and Oregon.
The diversity of stream types in the
Northwest is truly amazing- from desert
washes to alpine brooks, to spring-fed
meadow creeks, boulder-strewn cascades,
and the butte-rimmed rapids of large
rivers like the Upper Columbia and
Snake Rivers. Over 20,000 miles of
these streams in the Region support
a wide range of aquatic organisms,
including native cold-water and warm-water
fish, as well as a number of fish species
introduced to provide increased fishing
opportunities.
The Forest Service manages stream habitats
to support healthy populations of these fish
stocks, protect water quality, and to provide
opportunities for human uses such as hiking,
fishing, educational programs and fish viewing.
Management is based on sound scientific information
(see Inventory and Monitoring sections)
and comprehensive, integrated watershed analyses.
Protection is assured through a system of aquatic
refugia and riparian reserves. Where watershed
analysis highlights impacted areas, restoration
programs are developed (at watershed scale)
to help recover natural functions and processes.
This management applies to all streams regardless
of size- in fact, restoration activities tend
to focus on small streams (including intermittent
tributaries) and headwater areas because of
their importance in supplying high quality water
and their function as seasonal refuges for aquatic
organsims.
"Restoration emphasizes
identification and recovery of critical watershed
processes and function. Rock Creek, in a burned,
logged and grazed area on Mt. Hood National
Forest, shows stream and riparian recovery following
fencing, planting and in-channel treatments
from 1984-1999" (Photos above: 1984 Pre-project,
1986 Post-project and Recovery by 1999).
The emphasis for restoration is to identify
and fix causes of problems and not symptoms.
Therefore, stream restoration typically starts
outside the stream channel, from the ridge-tops
working downhill, correcting any erosion/slope
stability and road related problems (including
fish passage and drainage). Riparian and floodplains
are usually next, replacing structure/roughness,
planting, and/or recovering wetland/off-channel
features. Once all these factors have been addressed,
restoration of channel features, such as channel
form (cross-section profile, length/meander
pattern, amount and types of pools) and/or structural
attributes (logs or boulders) are considered.
An excellent example of channel restoration
is Enchanted
Valley, where a reconstructed meandering
channel has replaced an eroding ditch in a coastal
wetland area.
Refer to the regional Forest
Specific page for additional examples
of stream habitat restoration, and Monitoring for
examples of evaluations of stream protection
and restoration practices.
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