Oregon District Hydrologic StudiesAdaptive Management of Wood River Wetland for Optimized Water Quality, Water Yield, and Wildlife Habitat, Upper Klamath Lake Basin, Oregon |
PROJECT CHIEF: Kurt D. Carpenter <kdcar@usgs.gov>
COOPERATOR: Bureau of Land Management
Background
Upper Klamath Lake and adjacent Agency Lake in southern Oregon (fig. 1) experience episodes of poor water quality during algal blooms and periods of algal die off that may contribute to fish kills in the lakes and downstream reaches of the Klamath River in northern California. Scientists suspect that increased nutrients draining into the lakes as well as changes associated with loss of wetland habitat around the lakes contribute to such blooms. In an effort to reduce nutrient loading into Agency and Upper Klamath Lakes, property owners are initiating restoration efforts, including wetland restoration, and are in need of scientific data and information to guide these efforts. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) recently acquired a 3,200 acre parcel of former wetland--the Wood River Wetland--located adjacent to Agency Lake (fig. 2). The BLM has asked the USGS to develop and implement a monitoring strategy that will assist them with evaluating the adaptive management of the wetland to achieve the goal of optimizing for water quality, water yield, and wildlife habitat.
In addition, preliminary water and nutrient budgets will be developed for the wetland, including inputs from surface and ground water. A preliminary water budget will be constructed for the wetland during the first year. To determine the distribution of water elevations within and around the wetland, the USGS will install staff gages in the Wood River, Seven Mile Canal, the property adjacent to the wetland on the upland side, and at three locations within the Wood River Wetland. Estimates of the influx of ground water (and nutrients) into the wetland will be made by sampling newly installed piezometers and existing artesian wells in the wetland. The various surface inflows to the wetland (Wood River, Sevenmile Canal, and overflow drains from the adjacent property) and outflows (pump water) also will be monitored. Evapotranspiration will be estimated from published studies or calculated from available climatological data.
Based on the findings of Phase I, management alternatives will be explored and implemented, and habitat and water-quality conditions in the wetland will be monitored. Also, wetland processes thought to be occurring during Phase I, such as denitrification and nutrient uptake and/or release by wetland vegetation and algae, will be examined and/or quantified during subsequent years in Phase II.
Source: http://oregon.usgs.gov/projs_dir/woodr_wetland/index.html