Mattole Estuary

The Mattole Estuary

Estuaries are partially enclosed bodies of water where rivers and ocean meet.  The combination of salty ocean water and freshwater combine to create one of the most productive ecosystems in the world, and the 250-acre Mattole estuary is no exception.  More than 13 species of fish, 26 species of mammals, and 194 species of birds live in the Mattole estuary alone. Included in this list are the Mattole's 3 federally listed salmonids: coho and Chinook salmon and steelhead.  The estuary is the gateway through which all of salmonids must pass to gain entry into the Mattole River system, and therefore the health of the estuary is critical to the health of our entire salmonid population. 

Check this page for frequent updates on estuary projects, information, and ways to get involved!



The Mattole estuary in winter 2005.  Photo: Amanda Malachesky


This project is funded in part by a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency's West Coast Estuary Initiative



Estuary Lecture and Workshop Series

The Mattole Restoration Council is excited to offer a lecture series and workshops about restoration efforts, methods, and results. These events are brought to you through the support of the U.S. EPA's Targeted Watershed Grants Program: West Coast Estuary Initiative for the California Coast.

Upcoming Workshops and Lectures:

April 10
, time TBA: Bird identification workshop in Mattole Estuary. Led by a Redwood Audubon Chapter affiliate, this workshop will focus on fish-eating birds and birds of special concern that may use the Mattole River estuary as habitat.
Stay tuned for more events, to be announced! For more info, call Flora at (707) 629-3514.

Past Workshops:  These will soon be available for video checkout!

March 1, Noon: Brad Job, Civil Engineer with the Bureau of Land Management in Arcata will present Water Scarcity and Groundwater Resources in the Mattole.

March 4, 10 AM: TMDL implementation workshop with Joel Monschke, MRC’s Good Roads, Clear Creeks (GRCC) Program Director. TMDL stands for Total Maximum Daily Load and refers to sediment and temperature, the two main water quality impairments affecting the Mattole River and its estuary. This workshop will discuss options for landowners and how sediment reduction work impacts the ecological productivity of the Mattole River estuary. Visits to recent project sites.

March 15, 1:30 PM: Juvenile salmonid habitat utilization in the Redwood Creek Estuary. David Anderson, Fisheries Biologist with Redwood National and State Parks, has coordinated the Parks' juvenile salmonid monitoring in the Redwood Creek Estuary since 1989. He will present info on this long term monitoring project, which we will relate to juvenile salmonid habitat utilization issues in our own Mattole River estuary/lagoon.

March 25, 9:45 AM:  Join Randy Klein, Hydrologist at Redwood National Park for a presentation on Estuary Physical Processes at the Mattole Valley Community Center. His lecture will focus on Redwood Creek Estuary, drawing comparisons to the Mattole Estuary.  The presentation will include a series of Mattole Estuary photos over the decades to visually depict processes that he will be discussing and how they are taking place in our home estuary.

The Last Zone to Heal: Investigations in the Mattole Estuary

By C. Moss, Mattole Ecological Education Coordinator
It's a beautiful day in September and Honeydew  School students are at the estuary, monitoring water quality parameters, taking photo points, inventorying aquatic macroinvertebrates, and collecting estuary plants to press and identify. The river's mouth is still closed.

Fast forward to late October. This time the day is gray and foggy and the estuary has a stark, monochromatic beauty. The mouth is now open, thanks to some fall rain, and the shrill cries of seagulls are a counterpoint to the muted atmosphere the fog brings. Triple Junction High School students are spread out along the shore, monitoring water quality and taking photo points. Dissolved oxygen levels have dropped over the past month, as have temperature and water clarity. A Triple Junction High School student monitors water quality in the Mattole estuary

Jump to November. David Simpson, Mattole Salmon Group board member and lifelong restorationist, is engaged in a Q & A session with Honeydew School students. Most of their questions are focused on the estuary. What are the major changes you've seen in the estuary since you started doing restoration work? What are the estuary's main problems? How can we help heal the estuary? Why is 'Rockzilla'-the big rock and wood structure in the estuary-there? Why don't you guys dredge out the estuary to remove sediment?

All good questions, says David, and complicated to answer.....Over the next hour, he gives the students a great synopsis of the historical antecedents to the problems in the estuary and watershed. He approaches the subject from a systems perspective, helping the students understand how a number of interconnected factors contribute to the degradation of a river, an estuary, a watershed, as well as to the healing process.

In one of the most compelling points of his discussion, David tells the students how 30+ years ago and new to the watershed, he was reading a book called Topsoil and Civilization. This book talked about how many of the great civilizations of the past unraveled as their watersheds and rich estuarine deltas degraded due to erosion stemming from overgrazing and overlogging. As David looked through his windows at the estuary spread out below, he had one of those proverbial 'Eureka!' moments. The Mattole's estuarine delta, once a rich and fertile zone, was a shallow, gravelly mess due to many of the same processes that have repeated themselves over the millennia. As George Santayana once said, "Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it."

Estuaries are incredibly rich ecological realms, and as transitional zones-for salmon and many other species-they function as nurseries, filter systems for pollutants and terrestrial runoff, and crucial habitats for many aquatic species. Humans have been drawn to rich estuarine locations for thousands of years. In our own time, 22 of the world's 32 largest cities are located along estuaries.

Estuaries are getting a lot of attention lately because so many of them are under threat, largely due to negative impacts from human presence. Throw in the wild card of global climate change impacting ocean levels and tidal action, and the world's estuaries-large and small-are under siege.

Thanks to a recent EPA-Estuary grant awarded to the Mattole Salmon Group, with subcontract funding for various MRC programs-including MEEP-Mattole watershed students are now getting more familiar with their own estuary and its challenges.

In addition to the water quality and habitat monitoring mentioned above, this past fall Mattole students visited a restoration site just above the estuary, where a semi-permanent gravel bar that had formed over the years was causing constriction of the river's flow, particularly during the rainy season's high-flow times. David Simpson described how, in an effort to broaden the river's channel and lessen the erosive effects caused by the constricting gravel bar, thousands of cubic yards of gravel and cobbles were excavated and wing deflectors were put in at the base of the eroding bank to redirect the flow of water. It'll take the rainy season to see how successful this project is. Meantime, though, the landowner's bank was recontoured, mulched, and seeded. Mattole School students set up revegetation-monitoring plot grids, inventoried newly emerging grass shoots, took photo points, and will return over time to continue their monitoring and see how the site heals.

These same students will also plant trees in the estuary, later in November. Some day, hopefully, they'll be able to look down on the delta-much as David Simpson did, years ago-and rather than degradation, see an alluvial plain in the process of healing itself, thanks to their efforts and the efforts of countless other folks in the watershed's restoration community.

The Mattole Estuary in Photos

November 2009

Rain has finally returned to the Mattole after a long dry season. The lack of rain during the summer causes the estuary to form a lagoon, closing off ocean access to the river system. This year, the mouth opened on Oct. 14th. The season of the Mattole River mouth opening is celebrated by locals as adult salmon make their way back into the river to spawn.

Photo: Flora Brain
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November 2009
Estuary riparian forest, November 2009

The Mattole River estuary from a lower vantage point than the above photo, revealing an extensive riparian forest.  The predominantly willow and alder forest that surrounds the south side of the estuary provides habitat for a variety of mammals and birds and contains remnant stream channels of the Lower Mattole River.  While these remnant channels have not contained the main flow of the river for some years, they sometimes still become flooded during winter flows, providing a complex ecosystem for all that reside in the estuary.
Photo: Flora Brain
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October 1972October 1972

The riparian forest shown in the above photo is not present in 1972. Instead, a wider channel exists and small patches of willow, alder, and coyote brush are beginning to take hold in the lower right corner. With winter rains, the river's sediment load increases, making the river a murky brown color, as seen here.  The mouth of the Mattole has opened with the rain and once again meets the ocean.
Photo: Kenneth and Gabriel Adelman
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June 1987
June 1987

The riparian forest present today in the Mattole      estuary has fully developed, providing more complex habitat and hiding the remnant stream channels present in the 1972 photos.  Taken in June, this photo shows a much clearer river than the above photo, indicating that winter rains have not yet begun.  The river's mouth is still closed here and the estuary is temporarily transformed into a lagoon.
Photo: Kenneth and Gabriel Adelman
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February 2008

A young male sperm whale washes up on the beach a few hundred feet south of the river mouth.  Weighing in at 13 tons and measuring 32 feet in length, it was the second of its kind to wash up on the North Coast in a span of 3 weeks.  Researchers from Humboldt State University's Vertebrae Museum were unable to determine the cause of death.  The whale gradually decomposed, providing a massive food source for estuarine birds and mammals.

Photo: Flora Brain

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If you have estuary photos that you'd like to add to our collection, please contact us!