46
1 Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries Enhancement and Restoration MACC Annual Environmental Conference 2017 March 3, 2017 Tim Dexter, MassDOT Highway Division Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot

Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    5

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

1

Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries Enhancement

and Restoration

MACC Annual Environmental Conference 2017

March 3, 2017

Tim Dexter, MassDOT Highway Division

Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot

Page 2: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Presentation Overview

• Fluvial Geomorphology

• Bioengineering

• Coarse woody debris

• Stream Crossings

• Slope stabilization

• Example projects

Page 3: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

• Fluvial Geomorphology (“FGM”) – The science of understanding river and stream‐channel responses to both human‐induced and natural disturbances.

• Predict stream channel responses to alterations in a watershed, and in turn how these changes will impact human infrastructure and aquatic habitat.

• Multidisciplinary – engineering, biology, geology, earth science, hydrology, hydraulics.

• Soil Bioengineering (“Bioengineering”) – The use of plant material, living or dead, to alleviate environmental problems such as shallow, rapid landslides and eroding slopes and stream banks.

• Multidisciplinary – soil science, botany, hydrology, engineering, geology. 

Page 4: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

FGM & Bioengineering Considerations

• Consider the system and it’s dynamics• Position in the watershed, sediment size, stream slope, stream flow, stream crossing and floodplain restrictions, surrounding infrastructure, etc.

• Reassess conventional techniques (i.e. Rip Rap, Concrete, Gabion Baskets)• Feasible to mimic natural channel, bank, floodplain features? • Risk assessment: public safety, adjacent properties, infrastructure.

Think holistically about the problem – What is happening at site, reach and watershed levels that may be influencing the problem?

Page 5: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Bioengineering BMPs

• Coir fascines / logs• Brush mattresses & revetments• Unanchored and Anchored Rootwad

revetments• Brush layer benches• Geotextile “vegetated reinforced soil slopes” 

using, to the greatest extent feasible, biodegradable materials that are un‐welded/unknotted

• Loam & seeding, and interstitial planting of rock embankments

• Submerged shelters (whole trees/tree tops/boles/brush piles)

• Boulder clusters/“In‐stream Boulder Dissipaters”

• Boulder deflectors• Random boulder placements that are mobile 

& deformable 

*Resources handout

Page 6: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Physical• Habitat restoration• Bank stabilization• Diffuse energy• Trap & Manage sediment load• Shift thalweg away from infrastructure• Reduced maintenance and repair• Reduced cumulative impact • Increased resiliency to climate change

Project• Streamline permitting 

(MESA/WPA/401/404)• Funding / partnering opportunities• Win–Wins (ex: resilient roads – flood protection – habitat)

FGM & Bioengineering Benefits

Page 7: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Coarse Woody Debris

- Example of Historic Land Clearing

Page 8: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Coarse Woody Debris

• Fish habitat• Biological diversity• Stream channel & bank stability

Page 9: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Coarse Woody Debris for Stream Channel Stabilization

Page 10: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

“Chop and Drop”

Page 11: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Alternatives to Rockfill Slopes

Page 12: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Reinforced Vegetated Slopes

Page 13: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Vegetated Rockfill Slopes

Page 14: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Stream Crossings: Design for Fish/Wildlife and Severe Storm Resilience

Page 15: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Stream Crossings: Design for Fish/Wildlife and Severe Storm Resilience

Page 16: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Beckett – McNerney Road over Shaker Mill Brook

Page 17: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Beckett – McNerney Road over Shaker Mill Brook

Page 18: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Beckett – McNerney Road over Shaker Mill Brook

Page 19: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Beckett – McNerney Road over Shaker Mill Brook

Page 20: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Beckett – McNerney Road over Shaker Mill Brook

Page 21: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

• Eroding stream bank

• Salt facility ~36’ from bank

• Pavement undercut

• Asphalt from parking area falling into river

Stream Bank Stabilization ProjectWestfield Maintenance Depot – Little River

Page 22: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Stream Bank Stabilization ProjectWestfield Maintenance Depot – Little River

Page 23: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Increased floodplain

Bioengineered bank

Stream Bank Stabilization ProjectWestfield Maintenance Depot – Little River

Page 24: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

J‐Hooks to redirect flow away from bank

J‐Hooks to redirect flow away from bank

Stream Bank Stabilization ProjectWestfield Maintenance Depot – Little River

Page 25: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

25

Stream Bank Stabilization Project Westfield Maintenance Depot @ theLittle River

Page 26: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

3/28/2017 | Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot 26

Pre‐existing top of slope

Page 27: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

3/28/2017 | Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot 27

New embankment with 

increased floodplain

Page 28: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries
Page 29: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

29

• Extensive Scouring

• Deteriorated retaining walls

• Threatens integrity of Route 116

• Cold water fishery

Retaining Wall Project: Ashfield –Route 116 along South River

Page 30: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

| Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot

• Brook Trout, Atlantic Salmon, Longnose Sucker • Invertebrates (Fish Food) live within natural streambed material

Retaining Wall Project: Ashfield –Route 116 along South River

Page 31: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

| Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot

Original Design

Proposed Riprap

•Riprap = poor aquatic habitat

Retaining Wall Project: Ashfield –Route 116 along South River

Page 32: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

| Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot

Proposed Design

• Consultation with MA Division Fisheries & Wildlife

• Geomorphologic Assessment

Holistic approach

Grout bags to permanently fill scour voids

Repair existing retaining wall

Retaining Wall Project: Ashfield –Route 116 along South River

Page 33: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

| Leading the Nation in Transportation Excellence | www.mass.gov/massdot

Proposed Design

Install large boulders 

(deflectors)

Install rootwads

Placement of natural streambed 

material

• Thalweg relocation

• Scour protection

• Streambed restoration

• Maintain high quality aquatic habitat

Retaining Wall Project: Ashfield –Route 116 along South River

Page 34: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Retaining Wall Project: Ashfield –Route 116 along South River

Page 35: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

• Eroding stream bank

• Salt facility ~36’ from bank

• Pavement undercut

• Asphalt from parking area falling into river

Retaining Wall Project: Conway –Route 116 along South River

Page 36: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Retaining Wall Project: Conway –Route 116 along South River

Page 37: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries
Page 38: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries
Page 39: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Retaining Wall Project: Conway –Route 116 along South River

Page 40: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries
Page 41: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Retaining Wall Project: Conway –Route 116 along South River

Page 42: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Retaining Wall Project: Conway –Route 116 along South River

Page 43: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Retaining Wall Project: Conway –Route 116 along South River

Page 44: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Relationships

- Early Coordination / Collaboration- Develop proactive programs; foster local, regional & state-wide partnerships

Page 45: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

11/12/09

12/16/09 12/23/09

12/14/09

Oxbow Brook, Rowley, MA (photos courtesy of the MA Division of Ecological Restoration)

Dam Removal “Low Hanging Fruit”

Page 46: Best Management Practices for Coldwater Fisheries

Contact:

Tim DexterFish & Wildlife Program CoordinatorEnvironmental ServicesMassDOT Highway Division(857) [email protected]