Wallowa River - McDaniel Habitat Restoration Project - Lostine, Oregon
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Restored channel of the Wallowa River on the
McDaniel/Hammack property near Lostine
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Whitman College students plant native
vegetation along Wallowa River
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Property owners Doug McDaniel and Gail Hammack worked with a variety of public agencies and organizations to undertake the project in 1998 to restore a half-mile, channelized reach of the Wallowa River, and reestablish native vegetation in the area. The project was completed in August 2005.
The primary purpose of the project was to improve instream habitat diversity and water quality for adult and juvenile summer steelhead and spring Chinook salmon. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife biologists observed steelhead spawning in the restored channel in spring 2005, which will result in several thousand juvenile fish.
Project partners included the landowners, Wallowa Resources (project sponsors), Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (lead technical agency), USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation and the Grand Ronde Model Watershed Program. Funding for the project was provided by the Bonneville Power Administration and the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board.
Property owners and agency partners receive the 2005 Stream Project Award
at the April 11, 2006, State Land Board meeting in Salem.
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