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Vernal Pools
What Are Vernal
Pools and How Do They Help Clean Water
American Rivers
April showers bring May flowers – and vernal pools, if you live in California or Southern Oregon.
Vernal pools are seasonal depressional
wetlands that fill up with rainwater during winter and spring, but may be dry
for part of the year.
They are typically found on the West Coast,
especially in California and Southern Oregon, but can also be found in parts of
the Northeast and Midwest.
Western vernal pools often occur within
“vernal pool landscapes” where swales connect vernal pools to each other and to
seasonal streams.
Vernal pools vary in size from 1 square
meter to more than 2 acres.
Why
Care About Western Vernal Pools?
Western vernal pools can connect to other
pools and streams that flow seasonally or only after rain.
Multiple studies [PDF] show that California
vernal pools fill with water and flow into these channels [PDF], sending water
downstream during many days of the year.
These connections can impact the base flow
of downstream waters, altering their physical characteristics.
Western vernal pools are also hot spots of
biodiversity, with native plant and animal species some of which can only be
found in vernal pool habitats.
In a study of vernal pools, 17 out of 67
species [PDF] were only found in one of the surveyed ponds.
In turn, these plants and animals provide
food and habitat for shorebirds and waterfowl.
Vernal pools, like other depressional
wetlands, can also help to store and slow floodwaters.
Are They Protected Under The Clean Water Act?
Right now, it’s unlikely that vernal pools
would currently be protected under the Clean Water Act.
The proposed Clean Water Rule acknowledges
these connections and sets up a process where similar “other waters” that lie
outside of the floodplain can be protected under the Clean Water Act.
These waters collectively with other similar waters must demonstrate a significant connection to downstream waters, meaning that those waters have a more than speculative impact on the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of downstream protected waters.
Although playa lakes aren’t categorically protected right now under the draft rule, the EPA and the Army Corps are looking for input about whether they should be.
Life
needs rivers.
It’s
not just that rivers make our lives better. We can’t survive without them.
American
Rivers works to create a future of clean water and healthy rivers everywhere,
for everyone.
American Rivers believes a future
of clean water and healthy rivers everywhere, for everyone is essential. Since
1973, we have protected wild rivers, restored damaged rivers and conserved
clean water for people and nature. With headquarters in Washington, D.C. and
300,000 supporters, members and volunteers across the country, we are the most
trusted and influential river conservation organization in the United States,
delivering solutions for a better future.
https://www.americanrivers.org/rivers/discover-your-river/vernal-pools/
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