330 likes | 491 Views
Implementing Sediment and Pathogen TMDLs in the North Bay: Napa River Watershed Leigh Sharp, Executive Director Napa County Resource Conservation District November 4, 2012. A Project of the Napa County Resource Conservation District
E N D
Implementing Sediment and Pathogen TMDLs in the North Bay: Napa River WatershedLeigh Sharp, Executive DirectorNapa County Resource Conservation DistrictNovember 4, 2012 A Project of the Napa County Resource Conservation District in collaboration with North Bay Watershed Association and San Francisco Estuary Partnership with funding from the US EPA San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund
Napa River TMDL Information • Listed for sediment, nutrients, pathogens • TMDLs adopted for sediment and pathogens • Sources of sediment • Channel incision & bank erosion, roads, gullies, and sheet erosion • associated with vineyards, grazing, rural lands, parks and open space, and public works • Sources of pathogens • On-site sewage disposal systems, sanitary sewer systems, municipal runoff, grazing lands, confined animal facilities
Major Project Tasks Implement Sediment TMDL in Napa River Watershed • Conduct outreach • Complete rural road assessments • Implement road improvements in Heath Canyon watershed Implement Pathogen TMDL in Napa River Watershed • Conduct outreach and education to land managers with confined animal facilities • Implement identified projects to manage runoff & erosion Coordinate with other NBWA partners Watershed Monitoring • Sediment and fisheries related monitoring
Humboldt County Accomplishments to Date: Road Treatments Roads influence the hydrology of a watershed • Poorly constructed and maintained roads concentrate runoff, increase erosion, and potentially deliver sediments to streams • Studies demonstrate that up to half of all anthropogenic sediment entering streams comes from road-related erosion
Excess sedimentation and increased runoff impairs stream function • May: • Pollute water supplies • Increase potential for flooding • Accelerate stream bank erosion and trigger landslides • Erode or harm riparian vegetation
Excess sedimentation impairs aquatic habitat • Suffocates fish eggs in spawning beds • Loss of aquatic habitat
Nothing in nature mimics a road……but roads are necessary Our goal is to treat roads with practices that are safe for travel and most mimic nature China
Sediment delivery from road-related erosion can be episodic or chronic • EPISODIC sediment delivery • Sediment delivery is episodic when it occurs as soils fail in response to storm events or other triggers. The delivery from a site may occur once, or in pulses over an indeterminate time period. Stream crossing washouts, road-related landslides, and gullying can produce episodic sediment delivery. • CHRONIC sediment delivery • Sediment delivery from road surfaces and cutbanks is chronic because it occurs continuously during rainfall events that produce surface runoff
Episodic sediment delivery results from poorly designed stream crossing Road surface Culvert Road fill Natural stream grade
Aggraded sediments above inlets can cause crossings to wash out Napa County
Channel scours below outlet Napa County: treated by RCD in 2009
Stream crossing fails and produces episodic sediment delivery Napa County: treated by RCD in 2009
Low impact design for a culverted stream crossing on a non-fish bearing stream Road surface (4% outslope) Trash rack Road fill (2:1 slope) Culvert Natural stream grade
Fail-safe features impede plugging of culverts and prevent sediment delivery if crossing floods Napa County: treatments in 2010
Examples from Heath Canyon Worktreated in 2011 Old culvert inlet New inlet set at grade
Examples from Heath Canyon treatments Old culvert outlet New outlet set in at base of fill
Old culvert outlet New outlet set in at base of fill New inlet set at grade
Armored fill crossings may be sufficient on seasonal-use roads
Sediment delivery from road-related erosion can be episodic or chronic • EPISODIC sediment delivery • Sediment delivery is episodic when it occurs as soils fail in response to storm events or other triggers. The delivery from a site may occur once, or in pulses over an indeterminate time period. Stream crossing washouts, road-related landslides, and gullying can produce episodic sediment delivery. • CHRONIC sediment delivery • Sediment delivery from road surfaces and cutbanks is chronic because it occurs continuously during rainfall events that produce surface runoff
Fine sediments are generated as vehicles mechanically break down the road surface
This is what happens to that powdery dust when it rains Napa County
Physical features show surface lowering over time Exposed culvert Napa County: treated by RCD in 2011
Shape of road surface can concentrate flow and promote erosion Berm Napa County: treated by RCD in 2009 Runoff Before
Low impact road surface design disperses flow across the landscape Rolling dip • Ditch • removed • Berm • removed Runoff Outsloping Napa County: treated by RCD in 2009 After
Examples from Heath Canyon Work treated in 2011 Rolling Dips Runoff Runoff Road runoff from side road treated separately, runoff dispersed via rolling dips (away from gully and stream) Road runoff from both roads delivering to a gully and a stream
Runoff Before
Rolling Dip Runoff After
Preliminary Numbers • 6,144 yd3 of sediment delivery to waterways avoided • 4.71 miles of road treated • 32 stream crossings upgraded • 83 rolling dips installed Napa County: No treatment needed
Use the right tool for the job Napa County: RCD treatments 2009-2011
Plan for cultural resources too Napa County: RCD Treatments 2011
Additional Funding Partners • California Department of Fish and Game • Napa County (Measure A) • California Department of Conservation • Private Landowner Napa County: treatment by RCD in 2010
Next Steps…… • Complete additional road assessments • Work with rural landowners with confined animals • Develop more QAPPs