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Chuck Kaucic of MatSu Borough

Sound Investment

Restoring streams and forests in the Tongass National Forest for fish and wildlife creates jobs in local communities.

Restoring Streams

View this fresh new video.

Rob Bosworth

Salmon Restoration Science

The Conservancy's Rob Bosworth discusses why restoring salmon streams pays dividends for the Prince of Wales Island watersheds.


TNC


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Restoration Fact Sheets

Tongass National Forest
Matanuska-Susitna Basin

Colter Creek - Bad Culvert

 

Stream Restoration work

Throughout the historic distribution of wild salmon in the North Pacific, only Alaska and Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula claim vast undeveloped watersheds that support healthy wild salmon populations. Alaska’s annual runs of wild salmon average more than 180 million. These fish sustain healthy wildlife, families and rural economies.

Yet Alaska is not immune to the development pressures that have strained salmon populations elsewhere in the North Pacific. With help from a range of private and public partners, the Conservancy is restoring salmon streams in the Tongass National Forest and in the Matanuska-Susitna Basin.

Living with Salmon in the Matanuska-Susitna Basin

Every year, the streams of the Matanuska-Susitna Basin fill with hundreds of thousands of wild salmon. Ocean-bright chinook, coho, sockeye, pink and chum pour into the rivers, feeding everything from world-class rainbow trout, char and grayling to bald eagles, brown bears and people.

Though the headwaters of the basin include some of the wildest lands in the entire country, the lower watersheds of the basin comprise one of the fastest growing areas in Alaska. This growth can harm salmon-bearing waters.

Colter Creek

The Conservancy and its partners are restoring once-lost habitat for wild salmon in Colter Creek, a tributary to the Little Susitna River. Colter Creek offers habitat for young coho and chinook salmon.

In 2008, the Conservancy:

  • restored access to more than four miles of healthy salmon habitat by replacing four poorly-designed road crossings;
  • replanted the streamside with native willow, grasses and wildflowers;
  • used the restoration site as an outdoor living classroom for student groups.

Tongass Forest is a Salmon Forest

POW restorationLush and verdant Prince of Wales Island is the nation’s third-largest island and its forests are a giant nursery for wild salmon. Its coastal rainforest, salmon streams and estuaries provide for a rich a subsistence tradition among Native Tlingit and Haida people. More than 100 inches of yearly precipitation recharge the waters where five species of salmon spawn.

Salmon provide the foundation for the entire system, but fifty years of large-scale logging and roadbuilding has left its mark on Prince of Wales Island. Salmon habitat restoration projects are allowing wild salmon to return to spawn and grow in streams where the quality of habitat had declined.

Harris River

In the Harris River watershed, the Conservancy has worked with the U.S. Forest Service to restore significant portions of these salmon-bearing waters. In this highly productive four-square mile watershed, crews have rebuilt a river and its tributaries. This has included:

  • Carefully placing more than 350 whole trees and logs at 11 sites in the river channel to help create the natural logjams that allow the hydraulic force of the river to create deep pools. “Salmon need deep pools. They’re not going to over winter in a stream that freezes to the bottom,” says Rob Bosworth, who directs restoration projects for the Cosnervancy in the Tongass;
  • Rebuilt 2,400 feet of the river, allowing the river to return to its native streambed;
  • Decommissioned 1.2 miles of road and pulled out old culverts to improve fish passage on salmon waters.

Sal Creek

A series of landslides and other effects of erosion prompted the 2006-2007 restoration of Sal Creek, a coastal watershed on Prince of Wales Island. In this watershed, restoration crews:

  • Restored fish passage by removing six deteriorated log culverts;
  • Reconnected 27 streams blocked by 1.5 miles of abandoned logging road;
  • Recreated a natural diversity of salmon habitats by strategically placing 385 whole trees in a four mile section of Sal Creek;
  • Encouraged the regeneration of native conifer forest by thinning 100 acres of the red alder that grew in after timber was logged along Sal Creek.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): © Bridget Besaw/TNC (Prince of Wales Island); © Bridget Besaw/TNC (Colter Creek); © TNC (Rob Bosworth); © TNC (poorly placed culvert); © Bridget Besaw/TNC (Rob Bosworth).