Dear Colleague,
 
Please consider joining Dr. Peter Moyle, Dr. John McCosker and other leading
scientists in the field of fish conservation biology, by signing on to a
scientist’s letter calling for strong science-based protections for Marin
County’s salmon-bearing watersheds, including the Bay Area’s largest
wild-run of coho salmon, located in the Lagunitas Creek Watershed. 
 
Please email me back ASAP at [email protected], as time is short.  Our aim is to
present this letter to the Board of Supervisors before May 1st 2013. The
letter is pasted in below for your review.
 
The Salmon Protection and Watershed Network (www.SpawnUSA.org), a
Marin-based non-profit, has worked in the Lagunitas Watershed over the past
decade to protect and restore West Marin's coho-bearing watersheds.  We are
facing a very stiff battle from developers and local County officials over
the future of the San Geronimo Valley, the undammed headwaters of the
Lagunitas Watershed. 

In 2007, with the support of scientists such as you, we secured a 2-yr
moratorium on new development and habitat loss along critical riparian areas
and coho streams while the County of Marin commissioned an independent
review of existing habitat conditions and began a salmon "enhancement"
planning process for lands under their jurisdiction in important headwater
reaches. In 2010, again with the support of the scientific community, we
convinced the County of Marin to enact a Native Tree Protection Ordinance.

We are asking for your help once more, in the hopes of improving a new DRAFT
Stream Conservation Area ordinance that would allow continued destruction of
riparian habitat and massive encroachments into the established 100-foot
conservation setback buffer in West Marin.

The ordinance reads well, if you don't read the fine print.  However, the
exceptions allow continued habitat destruction in the spawning grounds of
endangered coho. For example, continued development is allowed without any
mitigation if the area is already disturbed (i.e., lawns).  Unfortunately,
that is the current state of the 100-foot buffer area on almost every
parcel.  If the draft ordinance is not improved, we have no chance of
encouraging a long-term "managed retreat" from this area, as the federal
Coho Recovery Plan calls for.

By signing this open letter from scientists, you will give us an important
tool as we advocate for science-based policies to protect coho and their
critical habitat.  Please:
 
1.      Add your name to the Scientists’ Support Letter by responding to this
e-mail with your name, title and institution (for identification purposes
only); and
2.      Forward this to sympathetic colleagues.
 
TO ADD YOUR NAME TO THIS LETTER, PLEASE REPLY WITH YOUR:
 
Name:_____________________
 
Title:______________________
 
Institution:__________________*
 
*.  The letter will state that institutions are listed for identification
purposes only
 
 
Please don’t hesitate to contact us for more information.
 
 
Thank you in advance.
 
 
Sincerely,
 
 
Todd Steiner, M.S. Executive Director

&

Alex Hearn, Ph.D. Director of Conservation Science


Alex Hearn, PhD
Director of Conservation Science
Turtle Island Restoration Network
PO Box 370, Forest Knolls, CA 94933

Tel: (415) 663-8590
Fax: (415) 663-9534





SCIENTIST OPEN LETTER TO MARIN COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
April 2013

Wild coho salmon populations in California have undergone a ninety-percent
decline since the 1940s. The causes of this decline, such as urbanization,
dams, and logging operations are well known and documented. Central
California Coast (CCC) coho salmon were listed by the US government as
Threatened in 1997 and uplisted to Endangered status in 2005 The State of
California listed the population north of San Francisco as endangered in
2002.  In short, coho salmon are in danger of extinction throughout coastal
California.  Because of this, the Lagunitas Creek watershed is exceptionally
important for its survival; it is one of the few watersheds that still
supports a self-sustaining population of this iconic fish.

The Lagunitas Creek Watershed is listed as “critical habitat” for coho under
the Endangered Species Act.  As scientists concerned with the health and
recovery of salmonid populations throughout California, we support increased
habitat protections for coho in the Lagunitas Creek Watershed, which makes
up approximately 10-20% of the total current population of CCC coho salmon. 

Lands in the lower reaches of the Lagunitas Creek watershed are relatively
well protected (and include State Parks, National Parks and Recreation
Areas, and County and Water District property) and maintain habitat values
important to coho and other native species. But, 30-50 percent of spawning
in the Lagunitas Creek Watershed occurs in the undammed headwaters of the
tiny (10 square mile) San Geronimo Valley. Out-migration research has
documented that as much of 1/3 of Lagunitas Creek coho rear in these
headwater reaches annually.

Marin County’s San Geronimo Valley Existing Conditions Report (2009),
prepared by Stillwater Sciences[1] as part of a Salmon Enhancement Plan,
documented the percentage of impervious surface for seven reaches of
Geronimo Creek at 7.3-20.8 per percent, with four of the reaches exceeding
15 percent.  Furthermore, this study conducted detailed analysis on 17
parcels and demonstrated the limited amount of riparian habitat currently
extant in this watershed:  ten parcels had no intact riparian habitat, four
had a width of less than 22 feet, and the remaining three had a width of 30,
36 and 92 feet (summarized in Table A2.2 of the report).  This data
demonstrates the relatively high level of urbanization that already
threatens the survival of coho here.

The San Geronimo Valley continues to urbanize with new housing development
trending toward larger houses, and development on existing parcels expanding
with building additions and additional loss of riparian habitat. This
affects coho salmon survival because the juveniles need cold clear streams
with lots of riparian trees and in-stream woody debris for cover and minimal
disturbance.  Loss of current and potential riparian habitat and floodplains
to development poses significant additional threats to the survival of coho
here.

We appreciate that Marin County Supervisors are now considering a new Stream
Conservation Ordinance.  While the Marin County General Plan calls for no
net loss of habitat, the current draft ordinance fails to come close to
meeting this goal.

WE THE UNDERSIGNED, CALL ON MARIN COUNTY SUPERVISORS TO ENACT A STRONG
ORDINANCE THAT INCLUDES THE FOLLOWING PROVISIONS THAT WILL HELP TO RESTORE
COHO POPULATIONS:

1.      Any development within 100-foot setback from creeks should be strongly
discouraged.  New development in this buffer that is allowed should require
mitigation if new structures or activities reduce the potential for
rehabilitation of riparian habitat, even if it is currently disturbed by
lawns, patios, etc.  A 2:1 or higher mitigation ratio is recommended to
improve on current conditions that already include a significant loss of
riparian habitat.

2.      Ephemeral Tributaries to Salmon Streams should be protected with a
100-foot setback.            Presently, the draft ordinance only provides
for the 100-foot setback if 100 feet of “continuous” riparian vegetation is
present, basically exempting a large percentage of important habitat, thus
decreasing stream habitat for juvenile coho.  We see no scientific basis for
limiting protection only to ephemeral streams with  “100 feet of continuous
riparian vegetation.” A functioning network of ephemeral streams mitigates
flooding and forms the headwaters without which mainstems could not support
salmon. 


We realize that these requested ordinances will inconvenience landowners,
but without them, development in the Geronimo Valley will likely lead to
extirpation of coho salmon from the watershed, making the recovery of coho
salmon in the Lagunitas Creek watershed increasingly problematical.  The
result will be further decline of coho salmon in California.  The recovery
of coho salmon as a viable species in California will only happen as the
result of many small positive actions on many streams, especially by
landowners who have chosen to live in coho watersheds. The proposed
ordinances will provide significant help to one of the most important coho
populations left.  We would like to see Marin County be a leader in coho
salmon conservation, rather than just one more example of local government
failing to protect local resources. 

Sincerely yours,

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