Los Angeles Times

A SAVE SITUATION?

Debate is underway on whether the so- called ecology pond at L. A.’ s only nature preserve should be allowed to survive

- By Louis Sahagun

With the Chatsworth Reservoir on life support fromthe drought, a vigorous debate is underway over whether the so- called ecology pond at Los Angeles’ only nature preserve should be allowed to survive.

The pond, in the rocky foothills of the west San Fernando Valley, had teemed with wildlife for seven decades. Today, it is a shallow sump surrounded by mud and littered with the skeletons of mostly invasive aquatic species that died as the water receded.

The L. A. Department of Water and Power, which owns the 1,325acre preserve, stopped filling it with potable water because of mandatory state reductions requiring the city to curb overall water use or pay financial penalties.

Pressured by environmen­talists and homeowners groups, the DWP started replenishi­ng the pond June 25 with recycled water hauled from constructi­on sites around the city. So far, more than 75,000 gallons have been delivered, barely enough to keep up with evaporatio­n.

The utility and Los Angeles City Councilman Mitchell Englander, whose district includes the preserve, are trying to develop longterm sustainabl­e solutions for the pond area, which served as a debris basin to hold urban runoff until taken out of service in1960.

“The real problem at the preserve is that the debris basin has filled with silt over the past several decades, leaving behind a very shallow pond,” said Marty Adams, deputy senior assistant general manager at the DWP. “We ultimately have to clean it up.

“Our immediate goal, however, is to not let anything bad happenin

the preserve’s habitat, while not putting any more drinkingwa­ter in there.”

As those efforts continue, environmen­tal activists and evolutiona­ry biologists are debating the pond’s future.

Environmen­talists contend that maintainin­g a deep, permanent body of water in the preserve is the only way to ensure the longterm survival of the wetlands on a key migration route for numerous bird species.

But some scientists regard the pond as nothing more than an unnatural ecosystem that has spawned invasive species, which in turn killed off native plants and animals. Those scientists say the reservoir should be allowed to dry up so that the invasive species die off and native creatures can return and thrive.

“It’s a bogus ecosystem with invasives that are destructiv­e to species that evolved there over thousands of years without a permanent pond,” said Sam Sweet, a herpetolog­ist at UC Santa Barbara. If it goes dry, invasive bullfrogs, red- eared slider turtles, mosquito fish and crayfish will disappear.

By contrast, Sweet said, “native species don’t like drought, but they can survive it.”

Greg Pauly, curator of herpetolog­y at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, said that in Southern California’s Mediterran­eanlike habitat, the area had little standing water until the reservoir was built.

“Native species out there such as western toads adapted over millions of years to prolonged dry periods,” Pauly said. “As horrible as it may sound to environmen­talists passionate about maintainin­g a permanent pond in the reservoir, we ought to let that pond go dry.

“I think nonnatives are OK, or at least mostly tolerable,” he added, “in some habitats, for instance, completely urbanized ponds in isolated city parks, but certainly not Chatsworth Reservoir.” That kind of talk rankles Mark Osokow, a retired DWP biologist and spokesman for the San Fernando Valley Audubon Society. The problem at Chats worth Reservoir is that through mismanagem­ent, the DWP has failed to provide enough water to keep the pond healthy, Osokow said.

As for the non native creatures, he said: “Sowhat? The wetlands attract all sorts of native birds that eat nonnative red- eared slider turtles and crayfish. So we’ve got an ecological system that is actually sort of in balance.

“We’ve got to do the best we can with what we’ve got,” Osokow said. In this case, that’s “a beautiful little ecosystem with migrating birds and turtles that some people don’t like.”

Volunteers from the Southweste­rn Herpetolog­ists Society made a distressin­g discovery about the pond two weeks ago after they built a wobbly plywood bridge thatwas long enough to span surroundin­g mud flats, which are the consistenc­y of peanut butter.

“We normally don’t get involved in turtle rescues,” said Sharon Shingai, a spokeswoma­n for the society. But in this case, they hoped to rescue at least one or two western pond turtles, California’s only species of freshwater turtle.

Unfortunat­ely, “there weren’t any out there,” Shingai said.

Instead, the group pulled out 41 nonnative red- eared and yellow- bellied slider turtles in two days. They are among the world’s most destructiv­e invasive species.

“We’re still trying to find homes for them,” Shingai said. “We want to make sure they go to responsibl­e parties who know how to take care of them and will not re- release them into the wilds.”

The DWP is struggling to balance inherently conflictin­g uses for the preserve. The utility’s primary mission is to maintain a complex water system for millions of people citywide, not to protect invasive turtles.

“The problem at the preserve is that the community wants to keep water in a pond that is actually a debris basin,” Adams said.“We ultimately have to clean that basin out, and look for new ways to put water— perhaps storm flows and high groundwate­r— back into it.”

Historical­ly, storms occasional­ly filled scattered sites with water, but only long enough for native species such as the western spadefoot toad to lay eggs, then bury themselves in the silt and hibernate until the next heavy rains.

The last spadefoot toad sighting in the greater Los Angeles area was in 2011near the preserve pond. Spadefoot toads, which get their name from a distinctiv­e hard, black projection on the underside of each hind foot, had not been seen in the region for more than a decade.

Today, that toad lives alone in a terrarium at the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History.

 ?? Photograph­s by Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? AN IBIS stands in the “ecology pond” at the Chatsworth Reservoir nature preserve. The pond once teemed with wildlife.
Photograph­s by Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times AN IBIS stands in the “ecology pond” at the Chatsworth Reservoir nature preserve. The pond once teemed with wildlife.
 ??  ?? A DEAD CRAYFISH sits atop dried earth at the pond, which receded when the city stopped filling it with potable water.
A DEAD CRAYFISH sits atop dried earth at the pond, which receded when the city stopped filling it with potable water.
 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? A KILLDEER stands guard near her eggs in the shrunken pond. Some scientists regard it as nothing more than an unnatural ecosystem that has spawned invasive species, which in turn killed off native flora and fauna.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times A KILLDEER stands guard near her eggs in the shrunken pond. Some scientists regard it as nothing more than an unnatural ecosystem that has spawned invasive species, which in turn killed off native flora and fauna.

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