Tour group hikes through Jackson Demonstration State Forest in Northern California. Credit: Photo by Hilary Clark, U.S. Forest Service
Water trickles in a stream and redwoods tower overhead in Jackson Demonstration State Forest near Fort Bragg in Northern California. Joe Wagenbrenner, a research hydrologist with the U. S. Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Research Station, shares the story behind the scenery.
“Our scientific findings here help inform the regulation of the timber industry within state and private lands in California,” Wagenbrenner states.
Over 30 of us listen intently. A diverse group from the U.S. Forest Service, CAL FIRE, Northern Arizona University, Cal Poly Humboldt, and other organizations, we’ve gathered to learn about, or in some cases, speak about research occurring here.
Standing next to a fiberglass structure, Wagenbrenner explains how this flume controls the flow of the stream, so scientists can more accurately measure streamflow. Caspar Creek, he adds, has a South and North Fork, each divided into smaller sub-watersheds, allowing researchers to do paired watershed studies. In these studies, researchers treat some areas and not others, so they can compare the results. In their latest experiment, they monitored several watersheds where logging up to 75% of trees occurred in the smaller parts of the South Fork.
“We’re still analyzing the results of the current study. In addition to streamflow and sediment movement, we’re looking at soil moisture changes, how much water trees are using, groundwater conditions, light availability, and understory regeneration across the range of harvest conditions,” Wagenbrenner states.
Research at the site dates back to 1961 when CAL FIRE joined forces with the Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Research Station to collaboratively manage the Caspar Creek Experimental Watersheds. Over 60 years later, that partnership is still going strong.
“When the state of California acquired Jackson Demonstration State Forest, they wanted to show it was still viable for timber production,” Liz Keppeler, hydrologist with the Pacific Southwest Research Station, adds.
In the 1970s, researchers removed trees from the South Fork for their first experiment. Removing the trees, especially those near watercourses, enhanced erosion and sent sediment into streams. Those findings informed California’s forest practice rules, which […]
Full article: www.eurekalert.org
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