Science Inventory

AN INTEGRATED, SCIENCE-BASED APPROACH TO MANAGING AND RESTORING UPLAND RIPARIAN MEADOWS IN THE GREAT BASIN OF CENTRAL NEVADA

Citation:

JEWETT, D. G., J. C. CHAMBERS, J. R. MILLER, M. L. LORD, D. GERMANOSKI, AND G. S. BAKER. AN INTEGRATED, SCIENCE-BASED APPROACH TO MANAGING AND RESTORING UPLAND RIPARIAN MEADOWS IN THE GREAT BASIN OF CENTRAL NEVADA. Presented at Geological Society of America 2005 National Meeting, Salt Lake City, UT, October 16 - 19, 2005.

Impact/Purpose:

To inform the public.

Description:

Riparian corridor and meadow ecosystems in upland watersheds are of local and regional importance in the Great Basin. Covering only 1-3% of the total land area, these ecosystems contain a disproportionally large percentage of the region's biodiversity. Stream incision is a major threat to these sensitive ecosystems. Rapid downcutting due to natural and anthropogenic disturbances lowers local water tables. Riparian vegetation requiring saturated soils or shallow water tables is then eliminated in favor of drier vegetation communities and valuable habitat is lost. Many of these upland watersheds are located in the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest and understanding the structure and function of riparian meadows and the impact of stream incision on these ecosystems has been a concern of the USDA Forest Service. Recently the Forest Service partnered with the U.S. EPA's Ecosystem Restoration and Risk Management Research Program. The objective of this EPA program is to conduct ecological protection and restoration research in order to provide scientifically defensible methods for resource managers to manage, rehabilitate, or restore ecosystems of local, regional, and national importance. A multidisciplinary research team of scientists from government and academia has been working to better understand the geologic and geomorphic settings, surface and subsurface hydrologic regimes, and vegetation patterns of upland riparian meadow systems in central Nevada. Additional investigations to date include mapping riparian corridor/meadow distribution, determining basin sensitivity to stream incision, characterizing levels of stream entrenchment and meadow degradation, prioritizing ecosystem degradation and restoration potential to better direct available resources, and evaluating the success of restoration alternatives. Results from this research will provide resource managers with information needed to successfully manage and restore threatened riparian ecosystems throughout upland watersheds in the Great Basin.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ ABSTRACT)
Product Published Date:10/16/2005
Record Last Revised:05/22/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 136944