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Butte Creek Sources to Chico

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476 riparian species. 6 special status species. 35 potential fish species ... Riparian habitat. biostimulants, toxic inorganics. Recreation. depleted fisheries ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Butte Creek Sources to Chico


1
Butte CreekSources to Chico
  • T. E. Chapman
  • CE 296B
  • Assignment 4

2
Upper Butte Creek Watershed
  • Watershed Overview
  • Waterbodies Water Use
  • Land Use
  • Beneficial Uses
  • Nonpoint Source Pollution Sources
  • Management of Nonpoint Source Pollution

3
Watershed Overview
  • Upper Butte Creek
  • Western slope of Sierra Nevada range
  • 130,600 acres
  • Butte, Tehema, Plumas counties
  • Mountainous, sparsely developed region
  • Rugged terrain
  • 47 less than 7 slope
  • 30 between 7-15 slope
  • 23 over 15 slope

4
Watershed Overview (cont.)
  • Population
  • 35,000
  • Main Cities
  • Paradise, Magalia, Centerville, Butte Meadows
  • Average precipitation
  • 59.62 in/yr
  • Sources of water
  • drainage from western slope of Sierra Nevada

5
Waterbodies Water Use
  • Primary Streams
  • Butte Creek, Middle Butte Creek, Little Butte
    Creek
  • 296 linear miles of streams
  • avg. 275,200 acre-ft/yr surface water flow
  • 127,000 acre-ft/yr surface water withdrawl for
    agricultural use
  • Man-made waterbodies
  • Hydroelectric
  • 1 dam 2 canals

6
Waterbodies Water Use (cont.)
  • Man-made waterbodies (cont.)
  • Irrigation
  • 57 dams
  • Major Reservoirs
  • Paradise (irrigation) - 11,500 acre-ft
  • Magalia (irrigation) - 2,900 acre-ft
  • Butte Creek flow from watershed
  • 406 cfs average daily mean flow
  • 911 cfs daily mean wet weather flow
  • 81 cfs daily mean dry weather flow

7
Average Daily Mean Flow by Year
8
Land Use
  • 7,600 acres residential
  • urban, suburban, sprawling rural residential
  • 10,500 acres agricultural
  • grazing and animal husbandry
  • 111,900 acres undeveloped
  • forest
  • former mining areas
  • undeveloped lands

9
Land Use (cont.)
  • Mining
  • 13 inactive mines
  • mine tailings common feature of streams
  • Habitat
  • 476 riparian species
  • 6 special status species
  • 35 potential fish species
  • 11 native species throughout watershed

10
Beneficial Uses
  • Primary
  • Water supply
  • Agricultural
  • Paradise Irrigation District
  • Durham Mutual Irrigation District
  • Ranchers
  • Municipal
  • Habitat
  • Riparian
  • Aquatic
  • Secondary
  • Recreation
  • Contact
  • Rafting, boating
  • Non-contact
  • Fishing
  • Hiking
  • Hydroelectric power

11
Nonpoint Source Issues
  • Primary nonpoint sources of pollution
  • Animal waste
  • biostimulants, pathogens
  • Surface run-off
  • Developed areas
  • Historical human uses
  • Mining logging
  • Toxic inorganics, biostimulants, sediments
  • Septic tanks
  • biostimulants, pathogens

12
Nonpoint Source Issues (cont.)
  • Impaired Existing Beneficial Uses
  • Habitat
  • Aquatic habitat
  • biostimulants, sediments
  • Riparian habitat
  • biostimulants, toxic inorganics
  • Recreation
  • depleted fisheries

13
Primary Nonpoint Source Pollutant Problems
  • Little Butte Creek
  • Pollutants
  • Biostimulants
  • Suburban run-off
  • Animal waste
  • Septic systems
  • Sediments
  • Upstream erosion
  • Development
  • Dam operations
  • Other Streams
  • Pollutants
  • Biostimulants
  • Animal Waste
  • Septic systems
  • Sediments
  • Upstream erosion
  • Development
  • Dam power operations

14
Management of Nonpoint Source Pollution
  • Reducing Sedimentation
  • Maintain healthy groundcover on steep slopes
  • restrict further logging
  • buy back lands along creek for preservation
  • Implement BMPs for suburban and sprawling
    residential areas
  • small detention basins
  • construction livestock erosion control
  • limit further creek side development

15
Management of Nonpoint Source Pollution (cont.)
  • Reducing Sedimentation (cont.)
  • Remove dams and diversions in key spawning
    areas
  • probably not socioeconomically feasible
  • Require minimum flows along creeks
  • also needed for restoring fisheries

16
Management of Nonpoint Source Pollution (cont.)
  • Reducing biostimulants
  • implement BMPs for suburban and sprawling
    residential areas
  • improved septic systems or switch to sanitary
    sewers
  • probably not socioeconomically feasible
  • other BMPs
  • green waste
  • stormwater collection (towns)
  • BMPs for animal waste
  • difficult due to large number of small holding
    areas
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