
River ecologist Mark Hill propels himself down the Lower Owens River aboard a 16-foot inflatable kayak. (Don Kelsen / LAT)
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, July 8, 2007.
The long-dry Owens now teems with birds and fish.Louis Sahagun
Independence, Calif. — Healing ailing rivers is Mark Hill's specialty. So when the tall and lean ecologist visits one of his works in progress, he's prepared to paddle a long and sinuous route to assess the health of his watery patient.
![]() River ecologist Mark Hill propels himself down the Lower Owens River aboard a 16-foot inflatable kayak. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
In this case, his charge is the Lower Owens River, a
62-mile-long stretch left essentially dry in 1913 after its flows of Sierra
snowmelt were diverted into the Los Angeles Aqueduct. After decades of political
bickering, water was directed back into the riverbed in December, launching the
largest river restoration effort ever attempted in the West.
Ecologists
knew the Lower Owens would come back to life. But how fast would it rebuild
itself? Which wildlife would appear first? Which plants?
Scientists have
been surprised by some of the early answers, and to flesh out the details Hill
recently took his first survey by kayak of the river. Hill, the lead scientist
in the Lower Owens River Project, stepped into a blue inflatable 16-foot kayak,
said "Let's go," and was soon scooting through the channel that cuts across the
Owens Valley.
![]() Carp have returned to a riverbed that for decades, Hill says, “had more cow poop than water in it.” (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
Hill's daylong journey, which included visitors in a
separate kayak, was marked by striking displays of birds, fish and insects
already setting up shop during the restored river's first summer. The water ran
cold and, in this part of the channel, about knee deep. But the water was so
clear that it seemed as though the kayaks were moving barely above the gravel
bottom.
Locals call this vast, arid region, about 200 miles
north of Los Angeles, "The Big Quiet." It's easy to see why. The only sounds
were the slosh of waves along the hulls, the dip of paddle blades and the
occasional melodic konk-la-ree of red-winged blackbirds nesting in
bulrushes.
"Wow! Look at that," Hill said, nodding toward a cloud of baby
largemouth bass — evidence of the species' first spawn in the revived river
system — wafting through a tangle of water lilies. Nearby, carp and Owens River
suckers, some of them more than a foot long, grazed amid submerged pastures of
moss that, in turn, fed on nutrients in the channel that for decades "had more
cow poop than water in it," Hill said.
![]() Just north of the town of Independence and looking north toward Bishop, the Lower Owens River has burst to life in the months since the L.A. Department of Water and Power began allowing water back into the channel. Among the flora aided by the river restoration effort are sagebrush and willow trees. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
Great blue herons and kingfishers
plucked fish from myriad shallow inlets created by the new flows. At dusk, bank
swallows caught flying insects after emerging from small caves they had chipped
out of steep riverbank cliffs.
The water, which comes from the Upper
Owens River, began its journey high in the Sierra Nevada. Most water from the
Upper Owens continues to pour into the Los Angeles Aqueduct, but some now heads
into the Lower Owens and travels 62 miles to Owens Lake, which was left dry
after the aqueduct opened in 1913.
The original river channel here was
formed about 25,000 to 50,000 years ago, during the Pleistocene Epoch, and the
water flowed in torrents as fast as 3,000 cubic feet per second. The water now
courses at a carefully controlled rate of about 40 cubic feet per
second.
![]() Restoration experts have been surprised by the clarity of the water in the restored river. Bulrush plants like these are thriving again. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
That rate is about the pace of a leisurely stroll, and when the
diversion project began Dec. 6, it took about 19 days for the water to arrive at
the northern end of Owens Lake. When the water reaches the lake, it is pumped
back into the aqueduct to head for Los Angeles. (It appeared that no water was
taken from the river to fight fires that started Friday in the Inyo National
Forest.)
The Lower Owens River can't be called pristine. For nearly a
century, the riverbed was trampled by cattle, overgrown with invasive plants and
trees and mostly dry, save for a few spring-fed ponds. Paradoxically, these
conditions provide benefits that will help in the channel's recovery.
The
manure-fed moss provides food for unexpectedly vigorous populations of fish,
which have begun venturing out beyond the spring-fed ponds. Gravel in the
riverbed provides an ideal habitat for diatoms, beautiful microscopic algae and
early links in the food chain.
Tree stumps, eyesores when the channel was
dry, now offer shelter for young fish or redirect currents, which sometimes
gouge the riverbed. Mathematical simulations predicted the water would run about
2 to 4 feet deep, depending on the width of the channel. But the redirected
currents are digging out sections 6 to 10 feet deep in
places.
"We didn't expect to see this much velocity in the
river," Hill said. "We didn't expect to see this much clarity in the river. We
didn't expect to see this many deep holes in the river."
![]() Tall bulrush grows in the riverbank. In the distance are the Inyo Mountains. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
Groundwater has
recharged and risen faster than anticipated and oxygen levels remain high,
creating hundreds of channels and ponds that will soon become ideal habitat for
waterfowl and fish. "All good signs the river is coming on strong," Hill
said.
Later this year, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
plans to release pulses of water at rates of 200 cubic feet per second to mimic
annual flood cycles and distribute willow seeds. If all goes according to plan,
within a decade, willows will cloak the banks, creating shady canopies over
pools that Hill predicted would be "prime bass and catfish real
estate."
But the arrival of some species means the departure of others.
When willows and cottonwoods finally shade parts of the river, sun-hungry moss
will disappear from those areas. Some desert shrubs, such as salt brush, rabbit
brush and bitter weed, are already dying because they don't like the high water
table.
![]() The Lower Owens River was essentially left dry when water diversions into the Los Angeles Aqueduct began in 1913, but now the 62-mile channel is returning to life. This view looks north, with the Inyo Mountains in the background. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
"We're witnessing the start of a recovery that will occur in
stages in what has become an enormous outdoor laboratory for river restoration,"
Hill said.
The project was long in coming and, like most issues
involving water between Los Angeles and the Owens Valley, a source of
irritation. In a place where residents like to say "Los Angeles stole our water
fair and square," tensions between the DWP and environmentalists and local
communities continue to flare.
Earlier this year, a judge said the DWP
had not done all that was required in the Lower Owens River Project. As a
result, Inyo County Superior Court Judge Lee E. Cooper denied a request by the
city to lift fines of $5,000 a day that the judge imposed Sept. 5, 2005, for
failing to restore the river in a timely manner.
![]() The canopy formed by these willows just north of Lone Pine is a model for what's expected elsewhere along the river. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
These days, the river's
flow and nature's rapid response are instilling a new sense of pride at the DWP,
long viewed as a hostile landlord and responsible for environmental devastation.
For locals, the project is a remarkable gift of conservation and potential boon
for the tourist stops along U.S. 395 just east of the snaggletoothed Sierra
range.
Francis Pedneau, a lifelong rockhound and bass fisherman in these
parts, described the improved relations with Los Angeles this way: "I have a big
bias against the DWP, but they've been so cooperative with us fishermen lately
that it makes us wonder what they've got up their sleeves."
During a
recent flight over the Lower Owens, pilot and local motel owner Martin Powell
banked his single-engine Cessna over glistening marshlands north of the
community of Lone Pine and said, "It's as green as I've ever seen it. There's a
lot of sand down there seeing water for the first time outside of a rainstorm.
Very nice. Very nice."
Back in the river channel, Hill maneuvered his
kayak among clumps of tumbleweeds, tree stumps, beaver dams and tule thickets,
which are a continuing problem because they obstruct ideal flow
patterns.
The DWP is considering using a special machine to remove tules,
Hill said.
![]() Hill pulls his inflatable kayak out of the water to take a closer look at the new growth that has sprouted in the area since water was redirected into the riverbed.. (Don Kelsen / LAT) |
But the project's biggest challenge, he said, will be keeping
the valley's cattle herds away from pioneer colonies of willows and cottonwoods
until they can grow to a height of at least 4 to 6 feet.
"We're putting
up more than 50 miles of barbed-wire fences along the river channel to manage
the cows," Hill said. "To cows, willow shoots are like candy."
Most of
the restoration work, then, falls to Mother Nature. There are no plans to stock
the stream with fish or new plants. In about five to seven years the larger
species in the food chain, such as elk, deer and mountain lion, will establish
themselves along the river system.
For now, that system continues to
awaken. The kayaks slipped past willows spewing seeds into the flow. Brambles
buzzed with dragonflies that were dropping eggs into the water, which will
produce larvae to feed fish. A green tree frog climbed aboard a patch of bunch
grass.