Contract Description:
Project Goal:
The Duck Valley Indian Reservation's Habitat Enhancement program is an ongoing project designed to enhance and protect critical riparian areas, natural springs, the Owyhee River and its tributaries, Bruneau River tributaries, and native fish and wildlife habitat on the Reservation. The project commenced in 1997 and addresses the Northwest Power Planning Council's measures 10.8C.2, 10.8C.3, and 10.8C.5 of the 1994 Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program.
Background:
The Habitat Enhancement and Protection Program (HEPP) was developed and implemented in 1997 in response to concerns about the impacts of land use practices on fish and wildlife habitat. The project is designed to mitigate these impacts by enhancing and protecting critical riparian areas. These areas are enhanced by improving adjacent backcountry roads to reduce non-point source pollution, fencing and trough placement at natural springs and headwaters areas, restoring and protecting the Owyhee River, its tributaries, and wetland areas, and overall protection of native fish and wildlife habitat on the Duck Valley Indian Reservation (DVIR). Critical protection areas are determined in coordination with the Sage Grouse Habitat Restoration Program, Duck Valley Fisheries Program (199501500) and the Tribal Environmental Protection Program (TEPP).
The majority of springs on the DVIR are located on grazing lands. Consequently, livestock searching for water tend to find the springs and trample the sensitive riparian areas around the springs. This trampling can cause a shift in ground topography or composition and alter the spring flow, water quality, and water temperatures. The cold, clean water from these springs entering creeks provides a refuge for cold-water fish species, such as native redband trout (Oncorhyncus mykiss gairdneri), especially in the late summer months. The goals of protecting the springs are enhancing productivity and water quality of springs that flow into native fish habitat, preventing damage, and allowing damaged springs to recover. These goals are met by using exclosure fencing and off-site stock watering through the use of either solar-pumped or gravity-fed water troughs, installing culverts in roads where spring water pools or runs, and planting native vegetation where necessary.
Another portion of the project involves protecting streams and the East Fork of the Owyhee River, prioritizing the protection of native fish populations. This is accomplished with exclosure fencing, off-site livestock watering, protection of springs that flow into the river, and native vegetation planting to reduce erosion, to provide shade and cooler water temperatures, and to provide habitat, cover, and forage. Suspended solids and fine particles can be abrasive to fish gills, and fines can also interrupt spawning habitat by entombing fertilized eggs or by blocking off oxygenated water, which results in high mortality rates for eggs and sac-fry. Reduction in these fines will increase fish survival rates within these waters.
The Tribes actively engage in enhancing unimproved backcountry roads, as these roads and associated vehicles can contribute significant amounts of sediments and hydrocarbon pollution to the streams and spring water. Unimproved backcountry dirt roads on the DVIR provide access to more than 2/3 of the Reservation's acreage. The eastern third of the Reservation rises to a high plateau 3,000 feet above the valley floor, and several of the roads follow creeks as they rise to the plateau, resulting in undeveloped stream crossings, and roads constructed in or adjacent to the stream's floodplain, causing erosion, high sediment loads, and hydrocarbon pollution in the streams. Two of these streams, Skull Creek and the North Fork of Skull Creek support pure populations of native redband trout. Erosion channels travel down the roads forming six to twelve-inch ruts, forming small gullies, contributing an unnatural sediment load in the creeks. The creeks undercut the roads in other places, also causing unnatural sediment loads. The Tribes utilize engineering and bioengineering techniques to mitigate these problems, including installation of culverts, native vegetation, geoweb, geo-jute, drainage dips, and bankfull dams as well as redirecting stream flows or relocating road crossings.
The Tribes are actively working to protect the East Fork of the Owyhee River with protection of springs that flow into the river, developing springs near the river (but without flows into the river) using troughs to attract livestock away from EF Owyhee River, and with bank stabilization techniques to increase riparian vegetation, lower water temperatures, and improve fish habitat, and to reduce sediment contributions caused by unstable geomorphic conditions. In cooperation with the Tribal Environmental Protection Program (TEPP) ,an assessment of a 3.5 mile stretch of the EF Owyhee River was undertaken by Confluence Consulting, and they drafted a range of alternatives for restoration and protection activities specific to fish conservation and water quality.
Through HEPP, our department has fostered a relationship with TEPP based on a sharing of common goals. Programmatic liaisons like these garner more support for project goals from the surrounding ranching community, and the collaborative efforts ensure a considerable cost savings while delivering a much larger impact with more data and more technical expertise. Our projects uncover information useful for TEPP in prioritization of the TEPP non-point source water pollution project locations, such as determination of priority stream crossings and priority sites for water contamination/ quality testing. TEPP assists this program by providing significant technical and bioengineering expertise and help us determine priority areas according to their water quality sampling plan.
The program will develop with BPA a habitat monitoring and evaluation strategy that complies with the new RM&E guidelines, metrics and procedures for terrestrial, riparian, and aquatic data collection ,evaluation and reporting.
Project Location:
The projects associated with the Duck Valley Habitat Enhancement and Protection program are implemented on tribally owned and/or managed lands. The Duck Valley Indian Reservation encompasses approximately 289,820 tribally owned acres on the Idaho/Nevada border. The Reservation is home to approximately 1,800 enrolled Tribal members. The Reservation is located in the Middle Snake Province within the Bruneau and Owyhee subbasins and is both remote and isolated; the closest town centers are Elko, Nevada and Mountain Home, Idaho (approximately 100 miles from the Reservation's small town of Owyhee). These are also the closest areas to buy supplies for projects.
The predominant habitat types on the Reservation are sagebrush steppe, riparian, and wetland (emergent marsh). Current uses of these habitats are ranching, flood-irrigated agriculture (major crop is hay), and recreation. Water resources on the Reservation include three reservoirs stocked with rainbow trout, approximately 5,440 acres of wetlands in the central valley, over 640 acres of wetlands in the eastern highlands, over 200 natural springs, and numerous small reservoirs/stock ponds of 5 to 20 acres each. The Blue Creek wetlands are part of an important wetland complex designated as a" Priority Conservation Site" by The Nature Conservancy. Over 350 miles of waterways exist on the Reservation; these waterways are major tributaries to the Bruneau River and the South and East Forks of the Owyhee River. The East Fork of the Owyhee River is the major drainage of the Reservation; this river is also the major source of water for ranching and recharge of the wetlands and aquifer.
Although the Duck Valley Indian Reservation has relatively good habitat compared to adjacent lands, habitat fragmentation, degradation and loss are problematic due to grazing, irrigation, fire, loss of herbaceous understory in sagebrush steppe habitat and encroaching exotics, destruction of biological crusts, and historic mining. The goal of this project is to enhance, create, and/or restore fish and wildlife habitat and protect them from impacts and to monitor and evaluate the effects of these projects.