California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) | November 14th, 2008
Summary
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has immense municipal, agricultural, biological and industrial importance to the economy and livelihood of California and in turn to the
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has immense municipal, agricultural, biological and industrial importance to the economy and livelihood of California and in turn to the United States. Plans to improve conditions in the Delta must address both human and biological communities. The region has been altered extensively over the past 200 years from land conversion to agriculture, fluxes in sedimentation rates, levee construction, and a completely re-plumbed network of waterways and hydrology (Thompson, 1957). Remnant, native riparian and wetland plant communities are almost completely removed and there is some question of whether the natural processes that create and maintain them can be restored (Mount and Twiss, 2005). Restoration implementation will be difficult considering the extent of alteration and complexity of both the natural system and cultural setting. The scientific approach to resolve these issues needs to reflect system complexity and represent the many potential response pathways that lead from proposed alterations.
Development of conceptual models to understand these potential pathways is an important first step in understanding restoration implementation (and other management actions) in light of the complexity of the natural system and existing management scheme. The CALFED program is interested in restoring the Delta ecosystem to the extent possible. Riparian Vegetation (RV2) is but one of the natural systems of interest; others include fisheries, wildlife, and other plant communities. The conceptual model presented here deals exclusively with those physical, chemical, and ecological processes relevant to riparian vegetation. Riparian vegetation is important not only for biological conservation of the plant species themselves, but also the other flora and fauna species—and the physical and ecological processes—that depend upon riparian vegetation. Although the restoration of riparian vegetation as a component of a healthy riverine landscape has cultural and economic importance, these aspects are not included in this model.
The conceptual model of riparian vegetation presented here is actually a sub-model of the larger floodplain processes/habitat model (Figure 1). The RV Sub-model is general by design, and is intended to provide a framework for potential expansion or adaptation to more-refined models of individual species, habitats, and/or entire landscapes. Spatially, we focus specifically on the floodplain or land area beginning at the upper edge of the emergent vegetation zone, then moving up in elevation and inland from the water, ending when non-floodplain areas, open water, or marsh is encountered. Together, the Floodplain model and the RV Sub-model can be used to analyze various “scenarios,” ranging from potential restoration or research actions, to water management decisions, to placement of bank protection at a specific Delta levee site. In addition, to highlight key differences in conditions that occur in the Delta, we present here two specific applications of the RV Sub-model that we generalize as a being dominated by tidal processes and another dominated by more riverine processes.