Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program
SOW Report
Contract 87504: 2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (PA-26) PHASE II-B FUNCTION & COMPLEXITY
Project Number:
Title:
Tucannon River Programmatic Habitat Project
BPA PM:
Stage:
Implementation
Area:
Province Subbasin %
Columbia Plateau Tucannon 100.00%
Contract Number:
87504
Contract Title:
2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (PA-26) PHASE II-B FUNCTION & COMPLEXITY
Contract Continuation:
Previous: Next:
n/a
  • 91598: 2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (PA-26) PHASE 3-4: FLOODPLAIN COMPLEXITY
Contract Status:
Closed
Contract Description:
Background: The Tucannon River in Southeast Washington flows north out of the Blue Mountains into the Snake River, and is the ancestral boundary between the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation and the Nez Perce Tribe. The Tucannon watershed supports the only remaining population of spring Chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in the lower Snake River. Early fish estimates show the Tucannon once produced thousands of salmon annually, but now only produces a few hundred adult spring Chinook each year. In 1992, spring Chinook were listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) as runs declined to less than 200 adult fish. The basin also supports summer steelhead and fall Chinook also protected under ESA.  Because of the Tucannon River’s importance to the Snake River Basin, BPA provides funding for a Programmatic Habitat Project in the Tucannon River.

The Tucannon Programmatic Project is managed by the Snake River Salmon Recovery Board (SRSRB) through a parent contract for operational support, organizational management, implementation assistance, and annual reporting. The goal of the Tucannon River programmatic is to restore natural channel processes in the spring Chinook priority restoration reaches of the Tucannon River, leading to improved population productivity and abundance. The Columbia Conservation District (CCD) collaborates in the Programmatic Project, as a project implementer in support of programmatic goals, consistent with the Salmon Recovery Plan for SE Washington and the Tucannon Conceptual Restoration Plan (Anchor QEA 2020).  The Restoration Plan’s focus is developing a riverine system that is shaped and maintained by natural physical and ecological processes. The restoration actions proposed for implementation in the prioritized river segments promote and enhance the interconnected nature of hydrology, geomorphology, connectivity, riparian community, and native fish and wildlife.  

Major limiting factors influencing naturally functioning conditions throughout the project reaches proposed for treatment in the watershed, include:  
•    Past land use and management practices including logging, grazing, agriculture, channel modification, stream bank armoring, the placement of infrastructure and construction of the Tucannon Lakes in the floodplain, in addition to recent large forest fires in the headwaters, have created conditions in the Tucannon River that have over-simplified the stream channel and drastically reduced the productivity, abundance and sustainability of the spring Chinook population.  
•    Channel simplification caused by channel confinement (levees, lakes, roads) and straightening (pushing the channel to the valley wall) has led to a loss of floodplain connectivity (channel incision), increased stream velocities, and loss of pool habitat. These factors have combined to decrease quality habitat for adult and juvenile Spring and Fall Chinook salmon, steelhead, and Bull Trout, leaving these unique populations at risk.

Overview: After several years of opportunistic restoration in the Tucannon Basin, as a Model Watershed (1997-2008), the Columbia Conservation District (CCD) brought all parties to the table to work on a new restoration planning document. The Tucannon River Geomorphic Assessment & Habitat Restoration Study (Anchor QEA, April 2011) identified and prioritized stream reaches and restoration actions which would best improve habitat for salmonids. Refocusing on the high priority areas for spring Chinook, the CCD coordinated the development of a habitat restoration plan that prioritized work from RM-20 upstream to RM-50. After 10 years of implementing the first plan, it became obvious that program managers needed to move further down the watershed and start working in the lower Tucannon River. In 2018, through the Tucannon River Programmatic Habitat project, the CCD initiated an update of the Tucannon Restoration Plan to help refocus restoration efforts and include the rest of the Tucannon River from RM-20 downstream to the confluence of the Snake River.

The Updated Tucannon Conceptual Restoration Plan (Anchor QEA, In Process) will prioritize projects into three Tiers (1-3) based on these prioritization goals; (1) increased complexity at low-winter flows, (2) increased complexity during spring and winter peak flows, (3) re-connection of disconnected and abandoned floodplains, (4) improved quantity and quality of pools, and (4) increased retention and storage of in-channel bedload sediments. With these new prioritization goals, the Tucannon program implementers will select project areas in the Tucannon that focus on increasing habitat condition for adult and juvenile Snake River spring Chinook, steelhead and Bull Trout. The refocusing of prioritization goals will ensure Tucannon Implementer are selecting project areas for future restoration actions that are large enough to make a meaningful difference, be cost-effective relative to those benefits, and remain feasible to construct.

Project Area Summary: The Project Area (PA) 26 proposal is a large woody debris project, located on private property with the goal of increasing river channel roughness and floodplain connectivity within a 2.9 mile long reach of the Tucannon River, in Columbia County (RM 24 - 26.9). Geomorphic processes, floodplain connectivity, and accompanying habitat for spring Chinook and summer steelhead within the PA-26 reach have been influenced by historic land use practices, tree harvest/clearing, and excavation and other bulk earthwork activities at various locations within the 100-year floodplain. These activities have led to limited instream and floodplain habitat complexity, degraded floodplain connectivity, riparian condition, elevated summer water temperatures, low channel complexity, are all key habitat limiting factors for Chinook and steelhead (Anchor QEA 2011a). This project aims to address many of these factors through stream restoration and habitat enhancement which would lead to natural functioning conditions.  

Background: The overall project area (2.9 mile reach) has been broken out into a number of implementation work-windows based on available funding, landowner participation and adaptive management considerations. In 2011, river levees and gravel berms were removed and breached throughout the entire reach as part of the 2.9 mile long PA 26 (Phase I project).  The goal of Phase I was to restore properly functioning geomorphic condition by reducing river channel and floodplain confinement.  In 2011, levee removal was a new and innovative restoration technique for SE Washington State, and it was determined that a conservative approach would be implemented where the levee would be removed and set back and channel modifications would be delayed to make observations on how the channel would recover naturally (letting the river do the work).  

Based on observations made by 2013, five log jams were placed within the upper 0.8 mile reach to provide fish cover while observations continued.  Monitoring surveys conducted by CHaMP and the Tucannon Habitat Programmatic between 2012 and 2017 indicated limited change in channel complexity or floodplain connectivity.  Gravel storage within the reach although improved remain highly mobile, and the ~124 ac of floodplain liberated by the 2011 levee removal project had experienced very limited flood inundation.  The CHaMP program recommended addition LWD structure placement to sort and retain gravel bars to encourage lateral channel migration and increased floodplain inundation frequency and duration. The Phase III proposed work (CR-343235) is located on the upper ~0.1 mile of the project reach on which restoration actions were performed in 2011 & 2013 Phase I and is the first significant log jam project to be proposed for implementation in this overall 2.9 mile reach, following the  2011 levee removal and setback project.  

Status (FY20): Phase III initially proposed in 2020 is targeting the upriver most 0.8 river mile of the 2.9 mile long PA26; the work was subsequently deferred to the following implementation period (Summer 2021).  LWD is to be placed in channel at locations and in orientations to increase floodplain connectivity in areas where previous levee removals and modifications were implemented in 2011, as part of a previous project (identified as Phase I), and implemented under the Districts stand-alone project #1984-018-06 (see contract #50146). The primary goal of the restoration actions proposed in Phase III is to restore to the nearest possible extent a healthy naturally functioning river channel and re-engaged floodplain. This goal is set within the context of adjoining active agricultural production fields and infrastructure supporting those activities.

Phase II Objectives:
•    Place up to 37 instream LWD structures to increase channel complexity and increase floodplain connectivity
•    Place 15 Floodplain Roughness LWD structures to increase floodplain complexity and aid in the recruitment of fine sediments.
•    Increase flood frequency and duration to about 14 acres of floodplain.

Current (FY21): Ongoing habitat restoration work within the project area is now to be included in additional future project actions (Future Phases) based on the newly updated habitat assessment and restoration strategy, and the need to manage adaptively based on new information.  Anticipated work in future phases may include the placement of log jams within the active river channel and on the floodplain for the purpose of improving river and flood plain function in support of ESA listed salmonid habitat limiting factors.  It may also include improvements to stream crossing, removal of additional floodplain confining features, reconnecting disconnected channels, the placement of additional or modification to log jams, planting riparian trees and treating invasive or non-native plant species. Adaptive management evaluations for this project reach will target maintaining the project restoration goals of improving channel complexity and floodplain connectivity.  Observations of improperly functioning or unintended geomorphic outcomes made during site visits by the CCD either as scheduled or requested by the landowner, will be reviewed by the CCD and the Tucannon Habitat Programmatic (2010-077-00).  Based on the site specific outcomes, management actions would be designed and implemented to realign conditions to the project goals.
Account Type(s):
Expense
Contract Start Date:
04/01/2021
Contract End Date:
09/30/2022
Current Contract Value:
$227,735
Expenditures:
$227,735

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 31-Mar-2024.

BPA CO:
Env. Compliance Lead:
Work Order Task(s):
Contract Type:
Coop
Pricing Method:
Cost Reimbursement (CNF)
Click the map to see this Contract’s location details.

No photos have been uploaded yet for this Contract.

Viewing of Work Statement Elements

Deliverable Title WSE Sort Letter, Number, Title Start End Complete
Effective implementation management and timely contract administration A: 119. Habitat project implementation management and contract administration 09/30/2022 09/30/2022
Environmental and Cultural Resource compliance assistance and clearance documentation B: 165. Compliance Documentation and Clearance: habitat restoration and enhancement project (PA-26) Phase II-B 09/30/2022 09/30/2022
Upload design products (attach) in Pisces: Final Design C: 175. Confirm Final Design Specifications and Engineering (Completion & Adjustments): PA-26 (Phase II-B) 07/02/2021 06/18/2021
Provide pre-construction project management activities; supervise the design build-out D: 100. Site Preparation, Materials Management, Field Engineering, Quality Assurance, Construction Oversight: PA-26 09/30/2022 09/30/2022
Reduce channel confinement, create habitat complexity, and reestablish floodplain connectivity E: 29. Install structures and place wood to promote side-channel development, habitat complexity & floodplain connection: PA-26 (Phase II-B) 09/30/2022 08/25/2021
(Re)establish streambank, riparian zone and floodplain plant communities F: 47. Plant trees, shrubs and grasses to support restoration design and remediation of site impacts 07/01/2022 06/30/2022

Viewing of Implementation Metrics
Viewing of Environmental Metrics Customize

Primary Focal Species Work Statement Elements
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Snake River Spring/Summer ESU (Threatened)
  • 1 instance of WE 29 Increase Aquatic and/or Floodplain Complexity
  • 1 instance of WE 47 Plant Vegetation
  • 1 instance of WE 175 Produce Design
  • 1 instance of WE 100 Construction Management
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Snake River DPS (Threatened)
  • 1 instance of WE 29 Increase Aquatic and/or Floodplain Complexity
  • 1 instance of WE 47 Plant Vegetation
  • 1 instance of WE 175 Produce Design
  • 1 instance of WE 100 Construction Management

Sort WE ID WE Title NEPA NOAA USFWS NHPA Has Provisions Inadvertent Discovery Completed
A 119 Habitat project implementation management and contract administration
B 165 Compliance Documentation and Clearance: habitat restoration and enhancement project (PA-26) Phase II-B
C 175 Confirm Final Design Specifications and Engineering (Completion & Adjustments): PA-26 (Phase II-B)
D 100 Site Preparation, Materials Management, Field Engineering, Quality Assurance, Construction Oversight: PA-26
E 29 Install structures and place wood to promote side-channel development, habitat complexity & floodplain connection: PA-26 (Phase II-B) 02/12/2021
F 47 Plant trees, shrubs and grasses to support restoration design and remediation of site impacts 02/12/2021
G 185 Periodic Status Reports for BPA
H 132 [No Annual Report Required]: Report encompassed in yearly Programmatic Habitat reporting for the Tucannon (#2010-077-00)