Creating Rearing Opportunities

Too much or too little debris in the river can alter migration patterns for fish in a negative way. In some areas, less debris makes its way into the river because of dams and development of cities along the banks – which means there are fewer trees, rocks and other natural shelters for fish to stop under during their migration journeys. Conversely, there are times when too much sediment has built-up in a side channel and rearing opportunities dwindle. This leads to fish migrating downstream sooner than they historically left the upper areas of the river, where the water is colder.  

These projects outline opportunities to reintroduce needed structures and side channels to offer habitat fish have historically relied on.

Winter 2023

Salmon Refugia Project – “Rockwads”

Chances of survival may improve for young salmon and trout thanks to an innovative effort to place 20 structures – ‘rockwads’ – made of almond and manzanita trees and large boulders into the Sacramento River to create critical rearing habitat. The ‘rockwad’ structures are intended to help provide juvenile salmon and trout refuge against larger predators, while enticing them to stay in colder waters longer, thus increasing their odds of healthy maturation for their journey to the Pacific Ocean.

Summer 2022

Gravel Bar Project

SRSC member, GCID, is coordinating with the Department of Fish and Wildlife, National Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to remove a mid-channel gravel bar on the Sacramento River downstream of the gradient facility. The project is a component of the gradient facility repair that was part of a settlement with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Work concluded in October 2022.

North Cypress Bridge

To address all stages of the fish life cycle on the Sacramento River, Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District collaborated with local, state and federal agencies on a project to restore side channel rearing habitat in the Sacramento River. The project created about 1 ½ acres of new aquatic habitat immediately upstream of the Cypress Avenue Bridge on the east side of the river, in Redding.

South Cypress Island Side Channel

The South Cypress Island Side Channel Restoration Project provided 4.8 acres of new and improved spawning and rearing habitat for Chinook salmon and steelhead in the Sacramento River, including the endangered winter-run Chinook salmon, by connecting existing ponds and low-lying areas within Henderson Open Space to create a continuously flowing cold-water side channel. The work occurred along the Sacramento River immediately downstream of the Cypress Street Bridge in Redding. 

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Spawning Gravel Habitat

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Reconnecting the Floodplains