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Caddo Lake Watershed

And

Environmental Flows

Red River Valley Association Meeting

June 1, 2016

Richard Lowerre

Caddo Lake Institute

Focus on Talk

Why and How of

Restoring and Protecting

Instream Flows

For Environmental Purposes

Caddo Lake Watershed

Natural History of Caddo Lake

The Great Raft on the Red River

About 100 Miles Long, Moving 1 Mile/Year

CADDO LAKE INSTITUTE

Founded in 1992 by Don Henley

A nonprofit corporation for scientific and educational purposes

To assist the communities of Caddo Lake to protect the Lake, wetlands and watershed.

Ramsar designation

Caddo Lake National Wildlife Refuge

Protection of Instream or Environmental Flows

www.caddolake.us

What We Try to Do

Assist the local communities with protection

of Caddo Lake and thus, its watershed.

Obtain Ramsar designation.

Convert the Army ammunition plant to a wildlife

refuge.

Protect the water quality

Address the problems of invasive species

Assure adequate flows - amount and timing - to Caddo

The Ramsar Convention

on Wetlands

Signed in Ramsar, Iran in 1971

Over 160 Countries Have Joined

Over 2000 wetland designated “Wetlands of International Importance,” with

160 million hectares

Caddo Lake designated in 1993

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, International Affairs

1. Izembek National Wildlife

Refuge(NWR)

2. Forsythe NWR

3. Okefenokee NWR

4. Ash Meadows NWR

5. Everglades National Park

6. Chesapeake Bay Estuarine Complex

7. Cheyenne Bottoms

8. Cache-Lower White Rivers

9. Horicon Marsh

10. Catahoula Lake

11. Delaware Bay Estuary

12. Pelican Island NWR

13. Caddo Lake

14. Connecticut River Estuary

15. Cache River-Cypress Creek Wetlands

16. Sand Lake NWR

17. Bolinas Lagoon

18. Quivira NWR

19. Tomales Bay

20. Tijuana River National Estuarine

Research Reserve

21. Grassland Ecological Area

22. Kawainui and Hamakua Marsh

Complex

From 22 sites – 1.3 million hectares of wetlands

What Ramsar Does/Does Not Do

Ramsar Does:

Encourage nations to promote wetlands conservation and designate wetlands of international importance.

Provide guidelines, educational materials, & proposals for protection of wetlands.

Ramsar Does Not:

Impose restrictions on nations and landowners

Affect sovereignty rights – site listing is voluntary

Act as a regulating entity or a UN convention

Daily Average Streamflow in Big Cypress Creek at USGS Gage 07346000

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02

Dis

ch

arg

e (

cfs

)

Environmental Flow Project

Started in 2004 with the U.S. Army Corps of

Engineers, the Nature Conservancy and

others

To bring scientist and stakeholders together

to discuss what might be needed and

possible to restore some of the historic

functions of Big Cypress (and protect those

functions for other rivers in the watershed.)

Sustainable Rivers Project

Goals of Instream Flows Project

for the Caddo Lake Watershed in 2004

1. A consensus recommendation for instream flow

regimes for the basin – not just below Lake O’ the

Pines;

2. New Operating Plan for releases from Lake O' the

Pines to provide more natural flows in Big Cypress

Bayou;

3. Official recognition of the flow regimes in Texas

programs; and

4. A Long-term Adaptive Management Process

2007 Senate Bill 3

TCEQ shall adopt appropriate environmental

flow standards for most river basin … that are

adequate to support a sound ecological

environment, to the maximum extent reasonable

considering other public interests and other

relevant factors.

The standards shall be recommended by scientist

and stakeholders for each river basin, based on

environmental flow regime

Process to Develop

The RecommendationsDecember 2004

April 2005

2005, 2006. 2008. 2011, 2016

Major Participating Organizations

(Over 100 participating organizations since 2004)

Federal Agencies

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

USGS Texas Water Center

USGS Nat. Wetland Resource

Center Lafayette, LA

State Agencies

LA Dept.. of Environmental Quality

LA Dept.. of Wildlife & Fisheries

TX Comm. on Environmental Quality

TX Parks & Wildlife Dept..

Universities

East Texas Baptist University

LSU Shreveport

Stephen F. Austin University

TX A&M University

Other Organizations

American Electric Power

Ducks Unlimited

TX Greater Caddo Lake Association

Nature Conservancy

Red River Valley Association

TXU/Luminant

Time Table for Major Activities

2004: Orientation Meeting (~60 scientists and stakeholders).

2005: Texas A&M Report - Summarizing the past research.

2005: First Project Workshop (~90 scientists and stakeholders).

2005 Began new research & field work to filling data gaps.

2006: Science Planning Meetings - to guide research.

2006: Second Project Workshop (~80 scientists and stakeholders).

2007: Science Planning Meetings – to guide research.

2008: Third Project Workshop (~ 75 scientist and stakeholders).

2009-11: Science Planning Meetings - to guide research.

2011: Fourth Project Workshop – (~ 75 scientist and stakeholders

2012-15: Science Planning Meetings –to guide research.

2014-16: Experimental reintroduction of paddlefish with transmitters

2016: Fifth Project Workshop Scheduled for December.

Current Status

Reach Consensus Recommendations: Reached

in December 2011 Flows Workshop.

Change in LOP Operating Plan: Five year

experiment set up in 2011. Permanent change

2017?

State Recognition of Flow Regimes: Included in

the 2017 State Water Plan.

Adaptive Management: Ongoing

www.caddolakeinstitute.us/paddlefish_project.html

Summary

• 12 years of work for an on going experiment,

• $5,000,000 in research, experiments, and the

process,

• 100 organizations, 200 participants working and

learning together

• Corps of Engineers fully cooperating

• Potentially avoiding future fights over

endangered species.

www.caddolake.us

www.caddolakedata.us

Caddo Lake Institute

www.caddolake.us

www.caddolakedata.us

rl@caddolake.us

Caddo Lake

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