Las Vegas Review-Journal

RESTORATIO­N OF RIVERSIDE HABITATS SEEN AS VITAL IN BATTLING CALIF. FLOODS

-

CALIFORNIA, FROM PAGE 1:

like the least Bell’s vireo, but it is also designed to absorb some of the floodwater, holding it or slowing its flow to reduce levels in the nearby town of Grayson and elsewhere along the rivers.

Dos Rios is only one of many such efforts. Kris Tjernell, deputy director for integrated watershed management at the California Department of Water Resources, said the state was actively working on “upward of 20 or 30” projects, some on its own and some in concert with groups like River Partners.

That number is expected to grow significan­tly since California voters last month approved Propositio­n 68, which includes $300 million for floodplain projects in the Central Valley.

California, and especially the Central Valley, is no stranger to floods. The biggest one in modern times occurred in 1861-62, when 40 days of rain turned the valley into a 250-mile-long lake and led Leland Stanford, the state’s new governor, to take a rowboat to his inaugurati­on in Sacramento.

That flood occurred before most of the state’s dams, levees and other flood-control works were built (and when the population was one-hundredth of what it is today). While not as big, some more recent floods have been severe, including one in 1997 that killed nine people and caused nearly $2 billion in damage.

Most recently, last year, after five years of drought, a string of storms dumped heavy rains on Northern California that led to a near disaster at the Oroville Dam when spillways were damaged as runoff forced the dam’s operators to release large amounts of water. About 200,000 people along the Feather River were evacuated from their homes, and repairs to the dam cost $870 million.

A study published last month found that climate change contribute­d to the problems at Oroville, as human-caused warming in the Sierra Nevada led to more rain and less snow and thus greater winter runoff.

John Carlon, president of River Partners, said floodplain­s that the group had restored on the Feather proved their worth in that event.

“They just absorbed that floodwater beautifull­y — they acted like a shock absorber,” said Carlon, who farms blueberrie­s in the northern valley town of Chico. “It was a big test for this concept and we’re really pleased with how it worked.”

Swain said his research suggested that in California, as in many other parts of the world, severe floods are far more likely as warming continues. “For me the most surprising aspect is that the likelihood of seeing a repeat of this 1862 event over the next 40 years is greater than 50 percent,” he said.

The United States Geological Survey has estimated that a similar event today would force the evacuation of up to 1.5 million people in the Central Valley. Statewide, damage would exceed $300 billion.

No floodplain would help in such a disaster, but projects like Dos Rios can lessen some of the impacts of smaller floods. By allowing water to sweep over its acreage, a floodplain can reduce the river level in a nearby community.

Even lowering a flood stage by a fraction of a foot can in many cases buy time — for farmers to move their cattle, for instance, or for a town to shore up its flood protection or evacuate the area if necessary.

About three-quarters of the land at Dos Rios was owned by a dairy farmer who was tired of dealing with flooding and sold it in 2012 to River Partners, with various state and federal agencies financing the $21.8 million cost. An adjacent farmer then sold his land to the group in 2014 for $9.3 million.

The result is 2,100 acres, including 3 miles of frontage along the Tuolumne River and 4 1/2 miles along the San Joaquin. River Partners is removing berms along the riverfront that the owners formed from earth and rubble to keep the smallest floods out.

A higher, more permanent levee, built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the 1950s, protects about 1,000 acres in the core of the project, back from the rivers. Modificati­ons will allow water to enter, so the area will serve as a giant bathtub, holding up to 10,000 acre-feet of floodwater.

This will not only reduce river levels, but as the water percolates into the land it should provide another benefit, helping to recharge aquifers that have been depleted statewide because of pumping for agricultur­e.

About 600 acres inside the levee have been converted from farmland to riparian woodlands, and an additional 700 acres inside and outside the levee are in the process of being restored. The entire project should be finished by the middle of next decade, Carlon said.

River Partners plants many species — trees like cottonwood and black willow, shrubs like golden currant and valley elderberry and a variety of grasses — all of which can recover after being underwater for months.

The planting, much of which is done by young workers with the state-run California Conservati­on Corps, is done with all the precision of modern agricultur­e. A field about to be restored looks much like any cropland, with furrows and markings where the various young plants are to be placed, all determined ahead of time.

Sometimes the goal is for the floodwater to slow down, as this can reduce downstream levels even more than floodplain­s alone. So in those areas, Rentner said, the mix will include species with relatively stiff stems or trunks that help impede the flow.

“There’s always an opportunit­y to use vegetation and this green infrastruc­ture to lower flood risk — move the water where it will do the most good and redirect it from places that will do the most harm,” she said. “And you can do that in a way that is durable and sustainabl­e over time.”

 ?? JOSH HANER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Lines of trees planted by the California Conservati­on Corps can be seen near the confluence of the Tuolumne and San Joaquin rivers near Modesto, Calif. The trees are seen as a key to restoring the river’s habitats.
JOSH HANER / THE NEW YORK TIMES Lines of trees planted by the California Conservati­on Corps can be seen near the confluence of the Tuolumne and San Joaquin rivers near Modesto, Calif. The trees are seen as a key to restoring the river’s habitats.
 ??  ?? Chalo Gonzalez of the California Conservati­on Corps works to restore the floodplain to its natural state in a plot near Modesto, Calif.
Chalo Gonzalez of the California Conservati­on Corps works to restore the floodplain to its natural state in a plot near Modesto, Calif.
 ??  ?? California Conservati­on Corps workers plant trees and shrubs in a plot near Modesto, Calif.
California Conservati­on Corps workers plant trees and shrubs in a plot near Modesto, Calif.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States