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Friday November 10, 2023

Tule Red Restoration

In today’s Flashback Friday, revisit the story of Tule Red’s transformation from freshwater pond back to its rightful state as a marsh environment, and explore the ecosystem services this newly established brackish habitat can provide.

On October 15th, an excavator trundled out onto the narrow isthmus of land separating the freshwater Tule Red pond from Suisun Bay and began digging. As the salty water from Grizzly Bay began to pour through the breach, the 460-acre pond felt the push and pull of the tides for the first time in a century, beginning its transition back into marsh habitat. This reconnection represents the culmination of a three-year endeavor and is one of several ongoing efforts to restore tidal wetland ecosystems in the San Francisco Bay, which has lost an estimated 82.7% of its historic 190,135 acres of wetlands. The resurrection of this marsh will provide vitally important habitat for imperiled species like Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytsha), longfin smelt (Spirinchus thaleichthys), and Delta smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus).


The Tule Red Restoration Project was a joint effort between the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) and the State and Federal Contractors Water Agency (SFCWA) – a joint powers authority made up of public water agencies that obtain water from the State Water Project and the federal Central Valley Project. The wetland-turned-pond was partitioned from the brackish bay by dikes constructed in the early 1900s by duck-hunting enthusiasts seeking to create a waterfowl-friendly freshwater environment. The effort to remove these barriers was carried out to contribute to one of the requirements included in the 2008 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Opinion for the long-term operations of the Central Valley Project and the State Water Project, namely the restoration of 8,000 acres of tidal wetlands in the Delta and Suisun Marsh.

The effort broke ground in the fall of 2016, but restoring the wetland wasn’t as simple as knocking down a wall. The project partners worked with Westervelt Ecological Services and Great Lakes Environmental and Infrastructure to rework berms and create new channels and basins in order to convey the water moved by the tides and effectively restore a functioning tidal habitat. The team hoped that by increasing the retention of water in ponds, they could create a “Crockpot” of slow, warm water to stimulate phytoplankton growth and boost the production of the food web. Located along the Grizzly Island Wildlife Area, the restored Tule Red property will be turned over to the California Department of Fisheries and Wildlife for ongoing management and monitoring. This monitoring will help evaluate whether the restored marsh is meeting its objectives, which include enhancing food production to support delta smelt and longfin smelt, and provide rearing habitat for young salmonids.

The reopening of Tule Red was the fourth EcoRestore project implemented by DWR to count toward the 8,000-acre tidal wetland restoration requirement. Habitat restoration efforts like these represent a crucial spoke in the wheel of endangered species recovery, and function in concert with other management actions such as DWR’s recent pilot efforts to modify operations of the salinity control gates to increase freshwater outflow into Suisun Marsh. Recent studies indicate that about 85% of vegetated tidal wetlands on the West Coast have been lost, and their disappearance has had a significant impact on the fish species that are adapted to these dynamic, productive environments. Projects that restore wetlands will not only provide valuable ecosystem services and buffer against sea level rise, but they may also provide a vital toehold for critically endangered species like Delta smelt.


This post was featured in our weekly e-newsletter, the Fish Report. You can subscribe to the Fish Report here.

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