General Background: The Northern California office is involved in coastal and riverine projects. Areas of expertise include water rights, fish passage, habitat restoration, geographic information systems and computer network technology.
Team Mission Statements: Northern California Coastal and Estuarine
Contact Us: Habitat Conservation Division Santa Rosa Office Telephone Numbers: |
Ongoing Projects:
Fish Friendly FarmingĀ® Program The Fish Friendly FarmingĀ® Program seeks to improve habitat conditions for salmonids and other native aquatic species by educating land managers in environmentally beneficial practices and carrying out restoration and erosion control projects. >> read more For more Science and Technology projects click here Northern California Coastal and Estuarine NMFS Habitat Conservation Division staff participate in the Suisun Marsh Charter Group, an interagency group formed to develop a management plan for Suisun Marsh. The Suisun Marsh is located in central California between the freshwater of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and the saline waters of San Francisco Bay. The Suisun Marsh represents the largest brackish wetland in the Western United States and provides important habitat to a variety of native fish species, including out migrating salmonids. >> read more For more Northern California Coastal & Estuarine projects click here NMFS-Southwest Regions Habitat Conservation Division plays an important role in Californias fish screening program through its leadership and oversight; as well as by conducting field research, performance assessments, and diving inspections. >> read more Hydropower Relicensing Program Relicensing Hydroelectric Projects: HCD Staff are integral participants in the relicensing of non-federal hydropower projects, including dams, which may block passage for migratory fish. These projects, numbering in the thousands in the Pacific Northwest, come up for relicensing only every 30-50 years and present an enormous opportunity for habitat restoration. The National Marine Fisheries Service has a unique authority and responsibility under the Federal Power Act to restore access to blocked habitat, if warranted. NMFS Southwest Regional staffs are engaged in projects from the Oregon border to Sacramento, and from the mountains to the oceans. >> read more Yuba River Fish Passage Feasibility Study Southwest Region, Habitat Conservation Division gave a presentation at the semi-annual Interagency Partnering Meeting between U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, NOAAs National Marine Fisheries Service, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and CA. Department of Fish and Game on efforts to restore Spring-run Chinook Salmon and steelhead in the Yuba River. >> read more |
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Past Projects: Report on the Subtidal Habitats and Associated Biological Taxa in San Francisco Bay The Habitat Conservation Division staff led the development of the Report on the Subtidal Habitats and Associated Biological Taxa in San Francisco Bay, issued in August 2007. >> read more GIS Re-Designation of Critical Habitat The most noteworthy project for the Geographic Information Systems (GIS) program was the re-designation of critical habitat for the seven California steelhead and Chinook Evolutionarily Significant Units (ESU). >> read more Fish Passage at Stream Crossings Program California has a vast network of roads, many of which cross over the states waterways. The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS)-Southwest Region has identified fish passage problems with many of these stream crossings (i.e.-culverts and bridges) in that they often block the passage of migrating fish, including several threatened and endangered species of Pacific salmon. >> read more Sediment and Temperature TMDLs Consultations and Technical Assistance The Habitat Conservation Division worked with EPA and the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board (NCRWQCB) to bring their various TMDL plans into alignment, if not agreement, with one another since they were being written for similar watersheds, geology and land uses in a manner protective of listed salmon, steelhead and their habitats. >> read more 02/25/09 |
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