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15 records
Text search
Management theme
Delta As Place
Environmental Conditions
Flood Risk And Land Use Management
Governance
Habitat Management
Invasive / Non-native Species Management
Native Species Management
Water Quality
Water Supply Management
Science theme
Amphibians And Reptiles
Aquatic Vegetation
Biological Resource Use
Channelized Habitats
Environmental Conditions
Fish
Floodplain
Food Webs
Habitat Changes
Hydrologic Changes
Hydrology And Hydrodynamics
Invasive / Non-native Species
Invertebrates
Land Use And Human Activities
Landform And Natural Disturbance
Mammals
Nutrients, Energy And Food Web
Riparian Habitats
Sediment
Social Science
Species
Terrestrial Habitats
Tidal Wetlands
Traditional Knowledge
Water Quality
Weather And Climate
Type
Core Monitoring
Status And Trend Monitoring
Synthesis
Targeted Foundational Research
Targeted Immediate Research
Unsure
Delta region
Cache Slough Complex
East Delta
Entire Delta
North Delta
South Delta
Suisun Marsh
Twitchell And Sherman Complex
West Delta
Yolo Bypass
Yolo Bypass And Cache Slough Complex
Status
Awarded / Initiating
Complete
In Progress / Ongoing
Advanced
Science function
Data Application / Analytics
Data Application – Data Analysis
Data Application – Information Management
Data Application – Modeling
Data Application – Science Communication / Knowledge Synthesis
Monitoring – Effectiveness
Monitoring – Implementation
Monitoring – Status And Trends
Planning And Guidance
Research
Management actions
Agricultural Production
Carbon Markets
Climate Change Mitigation
Creation Of Favorable Habitat Conditions For Native Species
Flood Control
Ghg Emissions
Groundwater Protection & Management
Habitat Protection / Enhancement / Restoration
Improving Methods And/or Infrastructure For Science And Monitoring
Invasive Species Control And Management
Land Use Designation
Methylmercury Tmdl
Natural Environmental Flows
Pathways Of Introduction Of Invasives
Pollution Control
Population Enhancement Of Listed Species
Predation
Salinity Gate Management
Sea-level Rise Accommodation
Subsidence Reversal
Wastewater Management
Water Conveyance / Infrastructure
Water Demand
Water Operations
Water Storage
Wetland Resilience
Wetlands
Science topics
Above-highwater Refugia
Agriculture
Air Temperature
Algae
Ammonia
Amphibians And Reptiles
Aquatic Vegetation
Arsenic
Atmosphere
Backwater
Bedload
Benthic
Benthos
Bioaccumulation
Biosentinels
Birds
Bivalve
Brazilian Waterweed
Cadmium
California Tiger Salamander
Carbon
Carbon Storage
Chemistry
Chinook Salmon
Chlorophyll A / B
Climate Change
Conductivity
Constituent Of Emerging Concern Cec
Copper
Corbicula/potamocorbula
Crustaceans
Cyanobacteria
Delta Islands
Delta Smelt
Deposition
Detritus
Direction
Dissolved Oxygen
Docks And Ports
Dredging
Drought
Emergent Macrophytes
Endangered Species
Endocrine Disruptors
Energy And Mines
Environmental Drivers
Epiphytic Algae
Erosion
Estuaries
Evaporation / Evapotranspiration
Extreme Heat
Extreme Storms
Fecal Coliform / E. Coli
Fish
Fishing
Flame Retardants
Floating Aquatic Vegetation
Flood
Flows
Flushing Rates
Food Webs
Forest Harvesting
Forests
Fungicides
Giant Garter Snake
Giant Reed
Green Sturgeon
Greenhouse Gas Ghg
Groundwater
Gulls
Habitat
Habitat Restoration
Harmful Algal Blooms Hab
Herbicides
Hg And Methyl Mercury
Historical Ecology
Hunting
Hydrocarbons / Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Pah
Insecticides
Insects
Intertidal / Transition Zones
Invasive / Non Native Species
Invertebrates
Jellyfish
Land Elevation
Landscape Change
Landscape Metrics
Lead
Levees
Light
Longfin Smelt
Main Channels
Mammals
Managed Ponds
Marsh Wildlife
Methylmercury
Microplastics
Mollusks
Mudflats
Mysis
Nitrogen
Nitrogen / Ammonia
Non-forested Vegetation
Non-resident / Overwintering Birds
Nutria
Nutrients
Open Water
Other Discharge Contaminants
Other Species
Other Zooplankton
Outflow
Pacific Flyway
Pelagic Fish
Pesticides
Ph
Phosphorous
Phragmites
Phytoplankton
Polychlorinated Biphenyl Pcb
Precipitation
Predation
Primary Production
Rail Lines
Recreation & Tourism
Residence Time
Resilience
Restoration
Restoration Planning
Riparian Wildlife
Roads And Bridges
Rodenticides
Sacramento Splittail
Salinity
Salmon Migration
Salmon Rearing
Salt Marsh Harvest Mouse
Saltwater / Freshwater Marshes
Sav/fav
Sea Level Rise
Seasonally Flooded
Sediments
Seismicity
Selenium
Shorebirds
Sloughs
Snowpack / Snow Water Equivalent Swe
Socio-economic Drivers
Soil
Solar Irradiance
Spongeplant
Stage
Steelhead Trout
Stormwater Runoff / Drainage
Striped Bass
Sturgeon
Submerged Aquatic Vegetation
Subsidence
Surface Water / Flow
Suspended Sediment
Temperature
Terrestrial Wildlife
Tidal Wetlands
Tides
Toxicity
Turbidity
Urban Development
Velocity
Vessels And Shipping Channels
Wastewater Discharge
Water
Water Conveyance / Infrastructure
Water Hyacinth
Water Intakes, Fish Screens & Passage
Water Management
Water Operations / Exports
Water Storage
Water Temperature
Water Use / Demand
Waterfowl
Waves
Wetland Mapping
Wetlands
White Sturgeon
Wildfire
Wind
Yellow Star Thistle
Zinc
Zooplankton
Science action area
N/a (project Initiated Prior To 2017)
Saa Action Area 1 (2017-2021): Invest In Assessing The Human Dimensions Of Natural Resource Management Decisions
Saa Action Area 2 (2017-2021): Capitalize On Existing Data Through Increasing Science Synthesis
Saa Action Area 3 (2017-2021): Develop Tools And Methods To Support And Evaluate Habitat Restoration
Saa Action Area 4 (2017-2021): Improve Understanding Of Interactions Between Stressors And Managed Species And Their Communities
Saa Action Area 5 (2017-2021): Modernize Monitoring, Data Management, And Modeling
Saa Need 1 (2022-2026): Improve Coordination And Integration Of Large-scale Experiments, Data Collection, And Evaluation Across Scales And Institutions
Saa Need 2 (2022-2026): Enhance Monitoring And Model Interoperability, Integration, And Forecasting.
Saa Need 3 (2022-2026): Expand Multi-benefit Approaches To Managing The Delta As A Social-ecological System
Saa Need 4 (2022-2026): Build And Integrate Knowledge On Social Processes And Human Behavior To Support Effective And Equitable Management
Saa Need 5 (2022-2026): Acquire New Knowledge And Synthesize Existing Knowledge Of Interacting Stressors To Support Species Recovery
Saa Need 6 (2022-2026): Assess And Anticipate Climate Change Impacts To Support Successful Adaptation Strategies
Unspecified
Start year
End year
Organizations and funding programs
Lead implementing organization
Audubon Canyon Ranch
California Department of Conservation [DOC]
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection [CALFIRE]
California Department of Parks and Recreation [PARKS]
California Department of Pesticide Regulation [DPR]
California Department of Transportation [Caltrans]
California Department of Water Resource [DWR]
California Energy Commission [CEC]
California Rice Commission
California Sea Grant
California State Coastal Conservancy
California State University - East Bay
California State University Long Beach
California State University Maritime Academy
California State University [CSU]
California State Water Resources Control Board [SWRCB]
California Water Board - Central Valley Region
Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board [Central Valley RWQCB]
Contra Costa Water District [CCWD]
Cornell University - Lab of Ornithology
Cramer Fish Sciences
Delta Regional Monitoring Program [RMP]
Delta Stewardship Council
Delta Stewardship Council - Delta Science Program
DigitalGlobe
East Bay Municipal Utilities District
European Space Agency
Goddard Space Flight Center
Land IQ
MarineTraffic
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
Michigan State University
National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NASA]
National Agricultural Statistics Service [NASS]
National Audubon Society
National Marine Fisheries Service [NMFS]
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NOAA]
Oregon State University
Pacific Flyway Council
Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission [PSMFC]
Point Blue Conservation Science
Port of Stockton Board of Commissioners
R2 Resource Consultants Inc.
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Conservancy
San Diego State University
San Francisco Estuary Institute [SFEI]
San Francisco State University [SFSU]
San Francisco State University, Estuary & Ocean Science Center
San Joaquin County and Delta Water Quality Coalition [SJCDWQC]
Santa Clara University
Southern California Stormwater Monitoring Coalition [SMC]
Stanford University
State Water Contractors [SWC]
Suisun Resource Conservation District
The Institute for Bird Populations
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers [USACE]
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
U.S. Department of Agriculture [USDA]
U.S. Department of Energy - Office of Biological and Environmental Research [DOE-BER]
U.S. Department of Transportation [DoT]
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA]
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
U.S. Geological Survey [USGS]
UNAVCO
University of California
University of California - Berkeley [UC Berkeley]
University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
University of California - Los Angeles [UCLA]
University of California - Merced [UC Merced]
University of California - Riverside [UC Riverside]
University of California - San Diego [UCSD]
University of California - Santa Barbara [UCSB]
University of California - Santa Cruz [UCSC]
University of Maryland - Center for Environmental Science
University of Vermont, USGS Vermont Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
University of Washington [UW]
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Westside San Joaquin River Watershed Coalition
Woodland-Davis Clean Water Agency
Partner implementing organizations
Agricultural Coalitions: Landowners membership fees
Anchor QEA
Bachand and Associates
Bureau of Transportation Statistics [BTS]
California Cooperative Anadromous Fish and Habitat Data Program [CalFish]
California Department of Conservation [DOC]
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
California Department of Food and Agriculture [CDFA]
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection [CALFIRE]
California Department of Parks and Recreation [PARKS]
California Department of Pesticide Regulation [DPR]
California Department of Public Health [CDPH]
California Department of Water Resource [DWR]
California Environmental Protection Agency [CalEPA]
California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory
California Institute of Technology [Caltech]
California Landscape Conservation Cooperative [CALCC]
California Natural Resources Agency [CNRA]
California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment [OEHHA]
California State Board of Equalization
California State Coastal Conservancy
California State Lands Commission [CSLC]
California State University [CSU]
California State Water Resources Control Board [SWRCB]
Central Valley Flood Protection Board [CVFPB]
Central Valley Joint Venture
Central Washington University [CWU]
Chapman University
Collaborative Adaptive Management Team [CAMT]
Conservation Farms and Ranches
Cramer Fish Sciences
Delta Conservancy
Delta Stewardship Council
Delta Stewardship Council - Delta Science Program
Department of Fish and Game [DFG]
Desert Research Institute [DRI]
Ducks Unlimited
East Bay Municipal Utilities District
EcoMetric Consulting
Fishery Foundation of California
FloodSAFE Environmental Stewardship and Statewide Resources Office [FESSRO]
Hydrofocus Inc.
ICF International Inc.
Interstate Council on Water Policy [ICWP]
Land IQ
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [LBNL]
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Manomet Inc.
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories [MLML]
National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NASA]
National Agricultural Statistics Service [NASS]
National Agriculture Imagery Program [NAIP]
National Audubon Society
National Marine Fisheries Service [NMFS]
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NOAA]
National Science Foundation [NSF]
National Wetlands Inventory - Many Supporting Organizations
NatureServe
Northwest Alliance for Computational Science and Engineering - PRISM Climate Group
Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission [PSMFC]
Point Blue Conservation Science
Purdue University
Resource Management Associates [RMA]
Sacramento Regional County Sanitation District [Regional San]
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Conservancy
San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory
San Francisco Bay Conservation & Development Commission [BCDC]
San Francisco Estuary Institute [SFEI]
San Francisco State University [SFSU]
San Joaquin County Resource Conservation District
San Joaquin Valley Drainage Authority
Santa Clara University
Solano Land Trust
Southern California Coastal Water Research Project [SCCWRP]
Southern California Stormwater Monitoring Coalition [SMC]
Southwest Climate Adaptation Science Center
State Water Contractors [SWC]
Suisun Resource Conservation District
Texas A&M
The Nature Conservancy
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers [USACE]
U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs [BIA]
U.S. Bureau of Land Management [BLM]
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Agriculture [USDA]
U.S. Department of Defense [DoD]
U.S. Department of Energy [DOE]
U.S. Energy Information Administration [EIA]
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA]
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
U.S. Forestry Service [USFS]
U.S. Geological Survey [USGS]
U.S. National Park Service [NPS]
University of British Columbia [UBC]
University of California - Berkeley [UC Berkeley]
University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
University of California - Irvine [UCI]
University of California - Merced [UC Merced]
University of California - San Diego [UCSD]
University of California - Santa Barbara [UCSB]
University of California - Santa Cruz [UCSC]
University of Kansas
University of South Carolina
University of Washington [UW]
Utah State University
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Western Ecosystems Technology Inc.
Western States Water Council [WSWC]
Yuba River Management Team
Primary funding organizations
CALFED Bay-Delta Program
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
California Department of Water Resource [DWR]
Delta Regional Monitoring Program [RMP]
Delta Stewardship Council
Delta Stewardship Council - Delta Science Program
Interagency Ecological Program [IEP]
State Water Contractors [SWC]
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA]
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
U.S. Geological Survey [USGS]
Funding programs
California Department of Fish and Wildlife CDFW - Prop 1
Delta Regional Monitoring Program RMP
Delta Science Program - Delta Science Solicitations
Delta Science Program - Operation Baseline
Delta Science Program and California Sea Grant - Delta Science Fellows Program
Interagency Ecological Program IEP
Funding Sources
CalFED Bay Delta Fund CBDF
California Department of Fish and Wildlife CDFW - General Fund
California Department of Fish and Wildlife CDFW - Prop 1
Delta Stewardship Council - General Fund
Proposition 50
Proposition 84
Wetland Program Development Grant
Submit
Records
Currently, sorted by last updated
Last updated
Title
Title
Benthic Organism Study
Lead
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
Description
This program operates under the Interagency Ecological Program's (IEP) Environmental Monitoring Program (EMP). "The Benthic Organism monitoring effort was started in 1975 and currently monitors 10 sites across the estuary's salinity gradient, from Suisun Bay upstream to Clifton Court Forebay and Stockton, on a monthly basis. Benthic invertebrates are collected with a PONAR grab, preserved, identified, and enumerated. In addition to mandated monthly monitoring of benthic invertebrates, we also conducted special studies of benthic invertebrates using spatial intensive sampling schemes. These special studies complement the long-running mandated monitoring and provide a more comprehensive picture of the benthic community of the Upper San Francisco Estuary." Changes in benthic fauna presence, abundance and distribution associates physical factors are measured in the estuary to evaluate the impacts of water project operations. 426 species in 10 phyla have been collected to date. Data is also used to detect introduced species. Sediment composition data also collected to document general trends at sites where benthic organisms are collected. https://emp.baydeltalive.com/projects/12727/page
Science topics
Suspended sediment
,
Bedload
,
Deposition
,
Erosion
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
California Natural Diversity Database [CNDDB]
Lead
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Description
The California Natural Diversity Database (CNDDB) is an inventory of the status and locations of rare plants and animals in California. CNDDB staff work with partners to maintain current lists of rare species, as well as to maintain an ever-growing database of GIS-mapped locations for these species. The CNDDB is a "natural heritage program" and is part of a nationwide network of similar programs overseen by NatureServe (formerly part of The Nature Conservancy). All natural heritage programs provide location and natural history information on special status plants, animals, and natural communities to the public, other agencies, and conservation organizations. The data help drive conservation decisions, aid in the environmental review of projects and land use changes, and provide baseline data helpful in recovering endangered species and for research projects.
Science topics
Mudflats
,
Intertidal / transition zones
,
Above-highwater refugia
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Backwater
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Floating aquatic vegetation
,
Seasonally flooded
,
Open water
,
Managed ponds
,
Riparian wildlife
,
Forests
,
Non-forested vegetation
,
Delta islands
,
Pacific flyway
,
Chinook Salmon
,
Steelhead Trout
,
Green sturgeon
,
White Sturgeon
,
Delta Smelt
,
Longfin Smelt
,
Sacramento Splittail
,
Pelagic fish
,
Benthos
,
Salt marsh harvest mouse
,
Waterfowl
,
Shorebirds
,
Gulls
,
Giant garter snake
,
California tiger salamander
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Striped bass
,
Corbicula/Potamocorbula
,
Nutria
,
Water hyacinth
,
Brazilian waterweed
,
Spongeplant
,
Giant reed
,
Yellow star thistle
,
Saltwater / freshwater marshes
,
Habitat
,
Other species
,
Fish
,
Mammals
,
Birds
,
Amphibians and reptiles
,
Invertebrates
,
Invasive / non native species
,
Non-resident / overwintering birds
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
San Francisco Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve
Lead
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NOAA]
Description
The National Estuarine Research Reserve System is a network of 29 coastal sites designated to protect and study estuarine systems. Established through the Coastal Zone Management Act, the reserves represent a partnership program between NOAA and the coastal states. NOAA provides funding and national guidance, and each site is managed on a daily basis by a lead state agency or university with input from local partners.
Science topics
Stage
,
Air temperature
,
Precipitation
,
Wind
,
Solar irradiance
,
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Phosphorous
,
Chlorophyll A / B
,
Salinity
,
Water temperature
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
pH
,
Turbidity
,
Intertidal / transition zones
,
Above-highwater refugia
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Backwater
,
Mollusks
,
Saltwater / freshwater marshes
,
Other species
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Perennial Streams Survey
Lead
Southern California Stormwater Monitoring Coalition [SMC]
Description
The Perennial Streams Assessment (PSA) is an ongoing, long-term statewide survey of the ecological condition of wadeable perennial streams and rivers throughout California. The PSA collects samples for biological indicators (BMIs and algae) and chemical constituents (nutrients, major ions, etc.), and also conducts habitat assessments for both in-stream and riparian corridor conditions.
Science topics
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Chlorophyll A / B
,
Harmful algal blooms HAB
,
Main channels
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Benthos
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Conductivity
,
Habitat
,
Invertebrates
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Aquatic Invasive Species [AIS] Program
Lead
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
Description
The overarching AIS goal is that "Risks of aquatic invasive species invasions are substantially reduced, and their economic, ecological, and human health impacts are minimized.†This goal is addressed through a series of performance and workload measures. The AIS Program provides funding for Aquatic Invasive Species Coordinators for each Region within the Service and their respective aquatic nuisance species activities. These coordinators work closely with the public and private sector to develop and implement invasive species projects. One of the primary initiatives of the program is the prevention of invasive species via boats through the "100th Meridian Initiative" (overseen by individual AIS regional coordinators). This initiative aims to prevent the spread of aquatic invasive species by boats personal watercraft and other pathways. Through boat inspections and boaters assessments along the 100th meridian, partners can learn how to prevent the spread of zebra mussels and other AIS via transport of boats and personal watercraft.
Science topics
Mudflats
,
Intertidal / transition zones
,
Above-highwater refugia
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Backwater
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Floating aquatic vegetation
,
Seasonally flooded
,
Open water
,
Managed ponds
,
Riparian wildlife
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Striped bass
,
Corbicula/Potamocorbula
,
Nutria
,
Water hyacinth
,
Brazilian waterweed
,
Spongeplant
,
Giant reed
,
Yellow star thistle
,
Saltwater / freshwater marshes
,
Fish
,
Mammals
,
Amphibians and reptiles
,
Invasive / non native species
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Aquatic Invasive Species Program [CDFW]
Lead
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Description
The mission of the Invasive Species Program is to reduce the negative effects of non-native invasive species on the wildlands and waterways of California. We are involved in efforts to prevent the introduction of these species into the state, detect and respond to introductions when they occur, and prevent the spread of invasive species that have become established. Our projects address problems with introduced animals and plants, both terrestrial and aquatic. More fundamentally, we try to identify and address the ways by which the species are introduced, typically inadvertently, by human activities. Studies show that preventing introductions is the most effective and cost-efficient way to manage invasive species. We conduct our work in coordination with other government agencies and non-governmental organizations.
Science topics
Habitat
,
Invasive / non native species
,
Main channels
,
Managed ponds
,
Mollusks
,
Other species
,
Recreation & tourism
,
Saltwater / freshwater marshes
,
Sloughs
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Vessels and shipping channels
Updated
July 31, 2024
Title
Water Quality in the Nation's Stream and Rivers
Lead
U.S. Geological Survey [USGS]
Description
In 1991, Congress established the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Project to address where, when, why, and how the Nation's water quality has changed, or is likely to change in the future, in response to human activities and natural factors. A prominent feature of NAWQA is the development of long-term consistent and comparable information on streams, rivers, ground water, and aquatic systems. The NAWQA Project is designed to answer these questions: 1. What is the current condition of our Nation's streams, rivers, and groundwater? 2. How are these conditions changing over time? 3. How do natural features and human activities affect these conditions, and where are those effects most pronounced? Under the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) project, there are several surface water and ecology studies, including the Regional Stream Quality Assessment (RQSA) (a baseline assessment of streams), and current conditions and long-term trends monitoring.
Science topics
Wastewater discharge
,
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Phosphorous
,
Carbon
,
Chlorophyll A / B
,
Harmful algal blooms HAB
,
Suspended sediment
,
Chemistry
,
Toxicity
,
Salinity
,
Water temperature
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
pH
,
Turbidity
,
Hg and methyl mercury
,
Polychlorinated biphenyl PCB
,
Hydrocarbons / polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons PAH
,
Flame retardants
,
Endocrine disruptors
,
Lead
,
Cadmium
,
Copper
,
Zinc
,
Arsenic
,
Selenium
,
Constituent of emerging concern CEC
,
Insecticides
,
Rodenticides
,
Herbicides
,
Fungicides
,
Microplastics
,
Other discharge contaminants
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Backwater
,
Benthos
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Fish
,
Invertebrates
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
National Wetland Condition Assessment [NWCA]
Lead
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA]
Description
The National Wetland Condition Assessment (NWCA) is a statistical survey that begins to address some of the gaps in our understanding of wetland health by providing information on the ecological condition of the nation’s wetlands and stressors most commonly associated with poor condition. The NWCA is designed to answer basic questions about the extent to which our nation’s wetlands support healthy ecological conditions and the prevalence of key stressors at the national and regional scale. It is intended to complement and build upon the achievements of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Wetland Status and Trends Program, which characterizes changes in wetland acreage across the conterminous United States. Paired together, these two efforts provide government agencies, wetland scientists, and the public with comparable, scientifically-defensible information documenting the current status and, ultimately, trends in both wetland quantity (i.e., area) and quality (i.e., ecological condition).
Science topics
Fishing
,
Surface water / flow
,
Groundwater
,
Tides
,
Flood
,
Drought
,
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Phosphorous
,
Chlorophyll A / B
,
Harmful algal blooms HAB
,
Phytoplankton
,
Other zooplankton
,
Suspended sediment
,
Chemistry
,
Toxicity
,
Salinity
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
pH
,
Turbidity
,
Hg and methyl mercury
,
Other discharge contaminants
,
Mudflats
,
Intertidal / transition zones
,
Above-highwater refugia
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Floating aquatic vegetation
,
Seasonally flooded
,
Open water
,
Managed ponds
,
Riparian wildlife
,
Forests
,
Pelagic fish
,
Benthos
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Conductivity
,
Saltwater / freshwater marshes
,
Habitat
,
Other species
,
Fish
,
Invertebrates
,
Fecal coliform / E. coli
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Sacramento Watershed Coordinated Monitoring Program [SWCMP]
Lead
Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board [Central Valley RWQCB]
Description
SWCMP is a coordinated monitoring effort between DWR and Central Valley RWQCB. This program monitors ambient water quality at locations in the Sacramento River starting upstream of Lake Shasta and going south to Verona, and at the lower end of all large streams tributary to the Sacramento River. It is funded jointly by DWR Northern District Water Quality Section and the Central Valley RWQCB SWAMP. The SWCMP is designed to meet the monitoring needs of the Regional Board’s Surface Water Ambient Monitoring Program (SWAMP) and the DWR Northern District’s Water Quality and Biology section. Coordination allows both agencies to maximize the use of their limited resources.
Science topics
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Phosphorous
,
Carbon
,
Suspended sediment
,
Toxicity
,
Water temperature
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
pH
,
Turbidity
,
Lead
,
Cadmium
,
Copper
,
Zinc
,
Arsenic
,
Selenium
,
Other discharge contaminants
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Backwater
,
Benthos
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Conductivity
,
Invertebrates
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Bioassessment Program
Lead
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Description
Biological assessment (bioassessment) is an evaluation of the condition of a waterbody based on the organisms living within it. It involves surveying the types and numbers of organisms present in the water and comparing the results to established benchmarks of biological health. Scientists and managers around the world use this approach to directly and quantitatively measure the ecological health of a waterbody and to monitor the cumulative impacts of environmental stressors on surface waters. Benthic macroinvertebrates (BMIs) and benthic algae are the primary biota used for bioassessments in California. BMIs are a diverse group of small but visible animals that live at the bottom of rivers and streams. They are comprised mostly of aquatic insects but also include crustaceans, mollusks, and worms. BMI assemblages are found in most waterbodies and are reliable indicators of biological health because they are relatively stationary and respond predictably to a variety of environmental stressors. Benthic algae are also sensitive to environmental stressors and provide environmental condition information that is often complementary to that derived from BMI assemblages. Because of their short lifespans and rapid reproduction rate, algae can respond quickly to changing water conditions. They are also more directly responsive to nutrients (such as nitrogen and phosphorus) and are therefore suited for monitoring nutrient runoff, one of the major environmental stressors in California. SWAMP began conducting bioassessment in 2000. The program continues to work closely with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife's (CDFW) Aquatic Bioassessment Laboratory, which has been the primary producer of this technical work.
Science topics
Salinity
,
Water temperature
,
Main channels
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Conductivity
,
Other species
,
Invertebrates
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Environmental Monitoring Program [EMP]: Discrete Water Quality Monitoring
Lead
California Department of Water Resource [DWR]
Description
There are 24 fixed discrete stations within the San Francisco Estuary that are monitored at high water slack tide. The stations are primarily accessed by the Research Vessel Sentinel, or vehicle transport. Discrete sampling is completed once a month due to the intensity of collecting a wide collection of physical parameters (e.g. water temperature) and grab samples for laboratory analysis (e.g. nitrogen and phosphorous). The data from the discrete sampling is helpful to document long-term changes within the estuary.
Science topics
Algae
,
Ammonia
,
Benthic
,
Benthos
,
Bivalve
,
Carbon
,
Chemistry
,
Chlorophyll A / B
,
Climate change
,
Conductivity
,
Corbicula/Potamocorbula
,
Crustaceans
,
Cyanobacteria
,
Delta islands
,
Detritus
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
Docks and ports
,
Drought
,
Environmental drivers
,
Estuaries
,
Food webs
,
Harmful algal blooms HAB
,
Invasive / non native species
,
Invertebrates
,
Jellyfish
,
Main channels
,
Mollusks
,
Nitrogen
,
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Nutrients
,
Open water
,
Other species
,
Other zooplankton
,
pH
,
Phosphorous
,
Phytoplankton
,
Primary production
,
Salinity
,
Sediments
,
Sloughs
,
Surface water / flow
,
Suspended sediment
,
Temperature
,
Tidal wetlands
,
Tides
,
Turbidity
,
Water
,
Water conveyance / infrastructure
,
Water management
,
Water operations / exports
,
Water temperature
,
Zooplankton
Updated
August 28, 2024
Title
Suisun Marsh Fish Study
Lead
University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
Description
The University of California, Davis has been involved in fish and wildlife monitoring and research within Suisun Marsh for 35 years and has been instrumental in detecting important trends associated with naturally fluctuating environmental conditions as well as anthropogenic influences. Research has included a 35+ year time series on the fish and invertebrate communities of the slough networks, research on waterfowl nesting patterns and population biology, and research on the demography of salt marsh harvest mouse. The Suisun Marsh Fish Study anchors this effort as it is the longest established survey in Suisun marsh. It will continue the research of Professor Peter Moyle under the direction of John Durand, and will focus upon the detection of changes in the aquatic ecosystem in response to developing stressors in the San Francisco Estuary (SFE). This time series is designed to further our understanding of the ecology and function of the fish community residing within Suisun Marsh and the San Francisco Estuary (SFE), and acts as one of the key surveys with Interagency Ecological Program's monitoring effort.
Science topics
Stage
,
Tides
,
Salinity
,
Water temperature
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Chinook Salmon
,
Steelhead Trout
,
Green sturgeon
,
White Sturgeon
,
Delta Smelt
,
Longfin Smelt
,
Sacramento Splittail
,
Pelagic fish
,
Benthos
,
Salt marsh harvest mouse
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Striped bass
,
Corbicula/Potamocorbula
,
Conductivity
,
Environmental drivers
,
Other species
,
Fish
,
Invertebrates
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Invasive Species Program
Lead
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Description
The mission of the Invasive Species Program is to reduce the negative effects of non-native invasive species on the wildlands and waterways of California. We are involved in efforts to prevent the introduction of these species into the state, detect and respond to introductions when they occur, and prevent the spread of invasive species that have become established. The Quagga/Zebra program particularly relies heavily on water quality data, as the species will not establish in waters with low calcium. Therefore they rely substantially on water quality data collected and housed by others (primarily DWR). A large part of their effort is in training other state or private recreational agencies to recognize and report the species, and therefore also reported by others.
Science topics
Mudflats
,
Intertidal / transition zones
,
Main channels
,
Sloughs
,
Backwater
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Floating aquatic vegetation
,
Open water
,
Managed ponds
,
Waterfowl
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Corbicula/Potamocorbula
,
Nutria
,
Water hyacinth
,
Brazilian waterweed
,
Spongeplant
,
Giant reed
,
Yellow star thistle
,
Saltwater / freshwater marshes
,
Other species
,
Mammals
,
Amphibians and reptiles
,
Invasive / non native species
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Fish Restoration Program Monitoring
Lead
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Description
The Fish Restoration Program (FRP), an inter-agency agreement between the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) and the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), will restore at least 8,000 acres of tidal wetlands in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta) and Suisun Marsh pursuant to requirements in federal Biological Opinions and the California Incidental Take Permit for operation of the State Water Project and Central Valley Project. The rationale for restoration is that state or federally listed fish species, Delta Smelt Hypomesus transpacificus, spring-run and winter-run Central Valley Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, and Longfin Smelt Spirinchus thaleichthys will benefit from increased availability of habitat and food web resources. The CDFW FRP Monitoring Team is responsible for monitoring the biological effectiveness of individual FRP tidal wetland restoration projects. Fish catch, invertebrate catch, and water quality data have been collected as baseline monitoring data and to determine the most efficient methods for monitoring wetland restoration efforts.
Science topics
Nitrogen / ammonia
,
Phosphorous
,
Carbon
,
Chlorophyll A / B
,
Phytoplankton
,
Other zooplankton
,
Salinity
,
Water temperature
,
Dissolved oxygen
,
pH
,
Turbidity
,
Submerged aquatic vegetation
,
Chinook Salmon
,
Steelhead Trout
,
Green sturgeon
,
White Sturgeon
,
Delta Smelt
,
Longfin Smelt
,
Sacramento Splittail
,
Insects
,
Mollusks
,
Crustaceans
,
Invertebrates
Updated
April 29, 2022
Title
Non-Invasive Environmental DNA Monitoring to Support Tidal Wetland Restoration
Lead
University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
Description
In this project we use single-species and multi-species environmental DNA (eDNA) approaches to monitor tidal wetland restoration sites and paired reference sites (existing, unrestored tidal wetlands located near restoration sites) in the San Francisco Bay Delta (SFBD). We are working in coordination with the CDFW Fish Restoration Program (FRP) and other collaborators so our eDNA detections can be paired with physical detections of fishes from their trawling efforts. Ultra-sensitive DNA single species detection methods are being used to identify restoration site use by listed species (Delta Smelt, Longfin Smelt, winter- and spring-run Chinook Salmon) while the DNA metabarcoding approach will evaluate entire fish communities (groups of different fish species) at restored and reference sites. Aside from revealing restored habitat use by other fishes, metabarcoding will reveal potential ecological interactions between Endangered Species Act listed and non-listed species, through concurrent detection in time and space. Sampling throughout the year will allow us to identify seasonal trends in fish use of restored and reference sites. This project will demonstrate the utility of eDNA detection as a non-invasive (no take), cost-effective monitoring tool that can complement conventional surveys of restored tidal wetlands in the SFBD. Our results can be incorporated into an adaptive monitoring framework for tidal wetland restoration, to increase success of future restoration projects.
Science topics
Chinook Salmon
,
Delta Smelt
,
Endangered species
,
Estuaries
,
Fish
,
Green sturgeon
,
Habitat
,
Habitat restoration
,
Invasive / non native species
,
Invertebrates
,
Longfin Smelt
,
Mollusks
,
Pelagic fish
,
Restoration
,
Restoration planning
,
Sacramento Splittail
,
Salmon migration
,
Salmon rearing
,
Steelhead Trout
,
Striped bass
,
Sturgeon
,
Tidal wetlands
,
Wetlands
,
White Sturgeon
Updated
May 24, 2024