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Post-Project Appraisal of Crocker Creek Dam Removal Project, Sonoma Co., California
Maureen Downing-Kunz, University of California, Berkeley
Colin Dudley, University of California, Berkeley
Alicia Gilbreath, University of California, Berkeley

LA 227, Restoration of Rivers and Streams, Fall 2005.

Download the Paper (1.4 MB, PDF file) - December 13, 2005

Related Files:
Crocker_Data.xls (98 kB)
Appendices -- Crocker Creek data

PPA_AppendixA_FeatureMap.pdf (3584 kB)
Appendix -- Crocker Creek site map

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ABSTRACT:

Crocker Creek drains 3.3 mi2, flowing into the Russian River near Cloverdale, California. A 30-foot high dam built in the early 1900s had filled with sediment, and then experienced two structural failures in 1995 and 1997. In 2002, the Sonoma County Water Agency (SCWA) undertook a restoration project; the main objectives of the project were to restore anadromous salmonid (specifically steelhead trout) passage and stabilize adjacent stream banks. Activities performed by the SCWA include: removal of remaining parts of dam; regrading of steep banks to shallower slopes; revegetation of riparian corridor; and placement of geotextiles, rip-rap, and log structures along areas of the stream bank.

In 2005, we conducted a post-project appraisal involving visual observations, vegetation measurements, channel surveys, and interviews with the project engineer; our objective was to determine whether the project goals were achieved. We determined a pre-project longitudinal profile from construction documents; no longitudinal profile was surveyed after project completion. We measured post-project channel configuration through field surveys, including five channel cross-sections and a 1300-ft longitudinal profile. To evaluate the fish passage objective, we compared the pre-project channel profile to our post-project longitudinal profile and considered our visual observations; our analysis indicates this objective was successfully met. To evaluate the bank stabilization objective, we quantified the success rate of riparian revegetation effort and relied on visual observations. The revegetation effort was partially successful; our visual observations include areas of bank erosion and areas stabilized by rip-rap. We found this objective difficult to assess due to the lack of baseline data.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Maureen Downing-Kunz, Colin Dudley, and Alicia Gilbreath, "Post-Project Appraisal of Crocker Creek Dam Removal Project, Sonoma Co., California" (December 13, 2005). Water Resources Center Archives. Restoration of Rivers and Streams. Paper downing.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/wrca/restoration/downing

 
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