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Help protect a premier southwestern river: The San Pedro
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More than 100 volunteers, conservationists and agency staff spent Saturday morning, June 20, 2009, walking in groups that covered around 150 of the 170 miles of the San Pedro River, plus many of the river's key tributaries.
The goal? To map where the river is flowing and where it is not, and to provide insights into the health of this premier southwestern river system.
The mapping, done annually since 1998, is a massive collaborative effort involving The Nature Conservancy, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, Community Watershed Alliance of Benson, Friends of the San Pedro River and many citizen volunteers.
This year the effort involved three Mexican partners that mapped more than 30 miles of the river south of the border. They included two non-governmental organizations — Naturalia and BIDA — and the Mexican park service known as CONANP.
"This is participatory science at its best. It connects people to this river in a real way," said Holly Richter, the Conservancy's Upper San Pedro River program director. "Many people do this year after year because they love this river."
The Data: This effort gathers important data about the amount of surface water in the river from year to year. (See last year's maps. This year's maps, when available, will be posted at this site.) Last year, data gathered gathered by the mappers showed that water was present in 39 percent of the 120 river miles mapped.
Mapping this river over time will provide insight into what might be the causes in fluctuation of flows — climate change, drought, groundwater or surface water withdrawals. The effort will also assess the habitat for beaver, fish and other aquatic organisms.
What's New: This year the mapping included several higher-elevation tributaries to the river as well as 30 miles in Mexico.
The Wildlife: Volunteers who walk or ride the river encounter a diverse array of wildlife species. This year's sitings included:
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