Riparian Buffers
The word "riparian" refers
to the bank adjacent to a body of water. Riparian buffers or riparian corridors
are strips of land alongside waterways that intercept surface runoff and
subsurface groundwater discharge to help improve water quality. Riparian
buffers are an important "Best Management Practice" (BMP) which apply
to all land bordering a waterway, whether or not it is used for agricultural
purposes. The idea is for plants to trap sediments and consume nutrients that
would otherwise enter the water. The National Research Council, an arm of the
National Academy of Sciences, recently identified restoring riparian areas to
be a desirable national goal (www.nas.edu).
As an example of the "worst
possible case," consider an agricultural field tilled up to the waters
edge. Following a heavy rain, soil from the field can wash directly into the
waterway. The sediment causes the creek to shoal-up, and smothers
bottom-dwelling organisms like oysters and submerged aquatic vegetation. The
runoff carries dissolved substances like nitrate and phosphate from fertilizer
into the water, along with chemicals that may have been applied to the field to
control weeds or pests. The nitrate and phosphate fertilize the growth of tiny
suspended algae in the water. The algae increase the turbidity of the water,
limiting light penetration and the ability of submerged aquatic vegetation to
grow. When the tiny algae die, bacteria decompose them and consume dissolved
oxygen, which is necessary for animals like fish and crabs. A "bloom"
of algae after a rainfall event can actually result in a "fish kill"
if dissolved oxygen levels are seriously depleted. This is especially true
during summer when the water is warm and already contains less dissolved oxygen
than is true of cold, winter water.
A simple way to prevent these problems is to isolate the tilled field
from the water by a permanently vegetated strip of land. The width of the strip
is ideally between 50 and 100 feet, and it functions most efficiently if it
contains deep-rooted trees as well as grass. It is important that no bare
ground is present, which would permit surface runoff to carry sediment directly
into the water. The reason for the deep-rooted trees is to intercept the
subsurface groundwater flow. Surface runoff is an easily observed process,
whereas the movement of water beneath the land surface is not obvious. But just
as surface water flows "downhill" over the land, shallow groundwater
flows "downhill" toward the waterway, beneath the land surface. In
our soils, the rate of shallow groundwater flow is probably between about 30
and 300 feet per year. The water flows fastest in sandy soils, and in very
muddy soils flow rates can be very low.
The plants in the riparian buffer
act as physical filters of surface runoff, but more importantly as consumers of
nutrients from the groundwater. For the farmer, there are several negative
aspects of riparian buffers. Land is obviously lost to production when a buffer
is established, but compensation may be available, especially under the new
Farm Bill. The habitat provided by the forested buffer zone may also harbor
vermin and pests that might cause crop losses.
For the homeowner, these negative
aspects of riparian buffers are not important. In the case of homeowners, the
"worst possible case" is a chemically maintained open lawn adjacent
to the water. The shallow roots of grasses do not consume nutrients discharged
to the groundwater by the septic system, and excess fertilization and chemicals
easily contaminate the groundwater and the waterway. Many people object to trees
blocking their view of the water. But large deep-rooted trees, pruned to remove
low branches, “frame” the view of the water and, if properly placed, can also
provide shade during the summer which can translate into a decreased need for
air-conditioning.
This fall we will solicit people to
help collect acorns and black walnuts. The forest service will use them to grow
seedlings, which will be planted to establish riparian buffers and new stands
of trees. If you have an oak, walnut or ash tree in your yard, please plan to
help us in this effort, which will be publicized as fall approaches. It is a
lot easier to collect acorns and nuts from people’s yards than it is to collect
them in the woods, where they are hard to spot, and where deer and squirrels
usually get them first.
. Recent articles on forest buffers
and the Farm Bill were published in the June 2002 issue of the Bay Journal
(www.bayjournal.com).