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KRIS Web Background Pages: Riparian Areas
The KRIS Ten Mile project contains two useful indicators of riparian health. The KRIS database has canopy cover information from habitat typing surveys and the KRIS Ten Mile Map project provides USFS vegetation data and a seamless 1999 aerial photo of the Ten Mile basin prepared by Matthews (2000). These tools are meant to be used only for reconnaissance at the watershed scale to characterize riparian conditions.
The KRIS Ten Mile database contains canopy cover information from habitat typing surveys provided by the Hawthorne Timber Company (HTC), which acquired Mendocino County timberlands formerly owned by Georgia Pacific Corporation. This information can be used to gauge stream health (see Habitat Typing background page.)Canopy is measured with a densiometer. One problem with canopy information is that is does not indicate riparian over-story conditions, which effect microclimate and large wood recruitment potential.
The KRIS Ten Mile Map project contains forest stand data from the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region Remote Sensing Lab (see Vegetation Information in KRIS ) and U.S. Geologic Survey (USGS) digital orthophotos, which both can be used to assess riparian health. The USFS vegetation is shown only in a buffer of 90 meters (297 feet) immediately adjacent to both sides of the stream and shows tree size at the one hectare scale. The 90 meter area was chosen to represent a zone of influence that contributes large wood and helps control microclimate over the stream. The KRIS Ten Mile Map project also assimilated data from ArcView projects provided by Matthews (2000), including a detailed aerial photo image of the entire Ten Mile basin. The latter is useful in riparian analyses.
The image at left shows the same aerial photo image of the North Fork Redwood Creek as the one above but this one has a "change scene detection" overlay. This layer, derived by comparing 1994 and 1998 Landsat images from the California Department of Forestry (Fisher, 2001), shows substantial changes in riparian conditions since 1994 associated with timber harvest. See Vegetation Types for more information on change scene detection. |
References
Georgia-Pacific
Co. 1996. Habitat typing inventory reports: Ten Mile River Watershed. Surveys
conducted during 1994/95. Unpublished file memo. Fort Bragg, CA. 103 pp.
Keithley, C. 1999. Evaluating Stream and Watershed Conditions in Northern California. Prepared for the California Department of Forestry, Fire and Resource Assessment Program. Sacramento, CA. 17 pp.
Schwind, B. 1999. USFS Thematic Mapper Landsat Vegetation Coverage Background Information. USDA Forest Service. Pacific Southwest Region Remote Sensing Lab. Sacramento, CA.
Warbington, R., B. Schwind, C. Curlis and S. Daniel. 1998. Creating a Consistent and Standardized Vegetation Database for Northwest Forest Plan Monitoring in California. USDA Forest Service. Pacific Southwest Region Remote Sensing Lab. Sacramento, CA.
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