Good Roads, Clear Creeks
Reducing erosion to improve aquatic habitat:
The single largest cause of salmon population decline in the Mattole is excessive erosion into streams, largely from roads and streambank failures. Sediment suffocates salmon eggs by clogging spawning gravel, and fills in cool, deep pools which serve as critical rearing habitat.
Starting at the headwaters and working downstream, sediment sources like culverts, poorly draining or abandoned roads, stream bank failures and landslides are prioritized and treated. Access roads are storm-proofed, abandoned roads are recontoured, and stream crossings are upgraded to meet fish passage and sediment delivery guidelines.
Staff visit with landowners to identify erosion sites with the potential to deliver sediment into watercourses. Findings from these visits and follow-up field surveys are then presented to landowners in the form of a customized report. With permission from landowners, the Council then carries out the prescribed restoration work.

NEWS:
GRCC has completed its 2009 work season and will resume treatments in the summer of 2010. This year we treated a total of 96 sites and prevented over 135,000 cubic yards of sediment from entering the Mattole and its tributaries!
COMMUNITY SERVICES:
Need help with roads and erosion? We offer free, confidential road work and erosion maintenance consultations to help landowners meet their stewardship goals. Please contact Joel at our Upriver office for more information on how to get involved.
PROGRAM DETAILS:
After funding is secured, the implementation phase begins. This generally includes heavy equipment work to storm proof access roads by replacing culverts and reshaping road segments to improve drainage systems. In addition, eroding streambanks are stabilized with rock structures in conjunction with willow planting and unstable segments of unused roads are decommissioned. Other implementation techniques include handwork to treat remote sites where streambanks are eroding. Local heavy equipment operators and Council personnel complete all of the work within the implementation phase.
Petrolia Project Area
An eroding streambank along the mainstem Mattole river prior to project implementation
In
2007, GRCC personnel performed a sediment source assessment on the
roads and erosive streambanks within the lower Mattole area. The scope
of this project encompasses the area from McGuiness Creek to the
Mattole River estuary. GRCC staff identified over 100 sites with the
potential to reduce 72,540 cubic yards of sediment from entering the
watercourses. The implementation phase began in the summers of 2008 and
will reach completion in 2011.
To measure the effectiveness of
the upcoming sediment reduction work in the Lower Mattole, turbidity
samples were taken at selected creeks. Turbidity, a measure of the
water's cloudiness, is an indicator of the amount of sediment a stream
is carrying and therefore it's suitability for fish habitat. Samples
were collected during the winter of 2008 and the project will continue
for up to four years. The results will give us a better understanding
of how to make our work more effective.

The
same eroding streambank site as the above photo after project
completion in summer 2009. The slide was stabilized by reducing the
slope, anchoring the toe with rip rap, installing a "bioengineered rip
rap wing deflector" (large wood and boulders anchored into place to
deflect the current and prevent further erosion), and the planting of
willow, alder, and other native riparian species.
Blue Slide, Mattole Canyon & Grindstone Creek
As the largest sediment savings project to date, GRCC will stabilize over 300,000 cubic yards of sediment by the end of this project in October 2010. This geographic area of the Mattole watershed has unstable geology and is prone to large landslides. Numerous instream large-rock and willow-bioengineered structures have been installed at the toe of major slides along these creeks. These structures are designed to stabilize the stream bank by directing the force of the water away from unstable areas. This work facilitates accelerated growth of streamside vegetation, further stabilizing the riparian corridor and shading the creek. Numerous roads have also been storm-proofed within this large project area.

An undersized culvert on Blue Slide Creek (left) is replaced with a bridge to allow for unimpeded high water flows in the winter. This culvert acted as a velocity barrier during high flows as the creek was forced, at high speed, through the undersized culvert.


In the summer of 2009, GRCC replaced this failing bridge abutment (left) that was leaking toxic creosote into Mattole Canyon Creek with a solid cement foundation that will withstand 100-year floods (right).
Eubanks Project Area
During the summers of 2006, 2007 and 2008 the GRCC program performed erosion control projects within Big Finley, Little Finley, Buck, Deerlick, Eubanks, and Nooning Creeks; all tributaries to the Mattole River. Approximately 70,760 cubic yards of sediment have been prevented from entering the Mattole River watershed. Several miles of road have been reshaped through crowning and outsloping. Over fifty culverts have been installed, all designed to withstand a 100-year flood events. Some of the most significant work included replacing old culverts that were impeding fish access and installing bottomless pipe arches. These structures allow salmon and steelhead trout to freely migrate under the road expanding their spawning and rearing habitat.
Ranchlands Water Quality Program
The MRC seeks to foster good working relationships with all land owners throughout the watershed and has developed this program as a means of outreach and relationship building with the ranchland ownership sector of the community.
To date, sediment assessments have been performed on six ranches (not including three large
ranches within the Bear Creek and Blue Slide to Grindstone project areas that have participated in the GRCC program). GRCC staff is actively pursuing further ranchland involvement and development of implementation projects on these properties.