HomeMy WebLinkAbout3338; Agua Hedionda & Calavera Creek Dredging; Rancho Carlsbad Channel Maintenance Agua Hed.; 2002-08-12WETLAND DELINEATION REPORT
FOR THE
RANCHO CARLSBAD C-L MAXNTIENANa
PRUJXCT
Prepared for
CITY OF CARISBAD
1635 FARADAY AVENUE
CARLSBAD, CA 92008
--- GERALD A. scm
SENIOR BIOLOGIST
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Methods
Results
A. Vegetation, Soils, ad Hydrology
B . Jurisdictional Areas
Referents Cited
TABLE
1 : Jurisdictional Areas on Agua Hedionda Creek
FIGURES
1 : Regional Location
2: Project Location on USGS Map
3: Jurisdictional Wetlands and Waters
PHOTOGRAPHS
1 : Agua Hedionda Creek - Low Sandbar
2: Agua Hedionda Creek - High Sandbar
Introduction
A wetland and jurisdictional determination was conducted on Agua Hdionda Creek
within the Rancho Carlsbad community as part of a proposed maintenance project. The
study area is located within the City of Carlsbad east of El Carnino Real and north of
College Boulevard within the Rancho Carlsbad Mobile Home Park (Figures 1 and 2). The
proposed project is the removal of accumulated sediment from Agua Hedionda Creek.
Sediment removal will return the 100-year storm flood control capacity of the creek,
minimizing the flood prone area within the Rancho Carlsbad community.
Agua Hedionda Creek within the study area was converted from a naturaI creek to an
earthen trapezoidal flood control channel in the 1970's. Currently, during low flow
periods, the creek is comprised of a series of sandbars among the meandering active
channel (Photographs 1 and 2). Water temporarily covers the entire channel during flood
events: The distribution of sandbars and alignment of the low flow active channel is
dynamic, changing with each wet season. The elevation and size of the sandbars varies in
time, but typically the channel bed develops a series of lower sandbars (6 to 12 inches
above the active channel) and higher sandbars (1 8 to 20 inches above the active channel).
Vegetation development within the channel is also dynamic, depending on the intensity
and frequency of the flood events in any given wet season. In most years, only a limited
amount of herbaceous vegetation grows in the channel; woody vegetation is preventsd
from growing due to the scour of flood events.
Methods
The wetland delineation followed the guidelines set forth by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (US ACE 1987) to delineate wetlandi'jurisdictional areas. According to this
methodology, three criteria must be fulfilled in order to classify an area as a jurisdictional
wetland: (1) a predominance of hydrophytic vegetation, (2) the presence of wetland
hydrology, and (3) the presence of hydric soils. Areas meeting all three of these
parameters are designated as wetlands.
Hydrophytic Vegehtion Characterization. Areas identified as potential
wetlands were examined to determine he dominant plant species for each
vegetation sh-atum (i.e., tree, shrub, herb, and vine). Dominant species from each
stratum were recorded on a summary data sheet along with the associated wetland
indicator status of those species. The wedand indicator status of each dominant
species was determined using the California list of wetland plants developed by
the U.S. Department of the Interior (1 997).