Oneonta Slough Tidal Linkage

Status Completed County San Diego
Project Type Compensatory mitigation Location 32.57379° N, -117.12621° W Map
Project Area (Acres) 1.84 Last Updated 12 April 2023
Project Abstract Not provided
Administrative Region San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board - Chad Loften, Eric Becker, SDRWQCB

Project Identification

IDType
87-069 SCC - Record Number

Habitat Plan

Site NamePhaseActivitySubActivitiesHabitatSubHabitatAcresActivity StatusWater Regime
Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve None Creation/Establishment Unspecified Estuarine Wetland Marsh 1.84 Construction completed

Related Habitat Impacts

Impact Project NameHabitatAcres LostType of Loss
Oneonta Slough Tidal Linkage-impact Estuarine Wetland < 0.1 Lost Permanent
Oneonta Slough Tidal Linkage-impact Estuarine Wetland 0.17 Lost Temporary

Sites

NameStatusAcres
Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve Construction completed 1.84

Events

DateTypeDescriptionSite Name
2008-06-01 Project entered Project entered into database
2002-04-01 Monitoring end Estimated date Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve
1997-04-08 Groundwork end Estimated date Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve
1997-04-01 Monitoring start Estimated date Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve
1996-12-01 Groundwork start Estimated date Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve

People

TypeNameOrganizationDepartment
Contact Chris Nordby Nordby Biological Consulting Not applicable/Unknown

Funding

PhaseActivityFunderAmount
No Data

Related CRAM Assessments

Visit DateVersionSite NameWetland TypeIndex Score
2008-01-31 5.0.1 Oneonta Slough estuarine perennial saline 59

Performance Criteria

StatusDetailsEvaluation Date
Original criteria See 1998 monitoring report. 2008-06-01
Name File Type Submitted On Submitted By
1997-1998 Monitoring Report Monitoring Report 2008-07-02 Christopher Solek, Southern California Coastal Water Research Project
1998 Quarterly Monitoring Report Monitoring Report 2008-07-02 Christopher Solek, Southern California Coastal Water Research Project
1999 Annual Monitoring Report Monitoring Report 2008-07-02 Christopher Solek, Southern California Coastal Water Research Project
Plan View Diagram Plan Or Permit 2008-07-02 Christopher Solek, Southern California Coastal Water Research Project

How to Use the Habitat Development Curve

Habitat Development Curves (HDCs) are used to determine the developmental status and trajectory of on-the-ground projects to create, restore, or enhance California wetland and stream habitats. Each HDC is based on assessments of habitat condition for different age areas of one habitat type that in aggregate represent the full spectrum of habitat development. The assessments of condition are provided by expert applications of the California Rapid Assessment Method (CRAM). Visit the CRAM website for more information about CRAM.

For each HDC, reference condition is represented by areas of a habitat that consistently get very high CRAM scores, have not been subject to disruptive management practices, and exist within landscapes that are protected and managed for their natural conditions. The horizontal lines intersecting the top of an HDC represent the mean CRAM score and standard deviation of scores for 25 qualifying reference areas.

The age of a project is estimated as the elapsed time in years between the groundwork end date for the project and the date of the CRAM assessment. To add or update a groundwork end date, use the Project Events form in Project Tracker (ptrack.ecoatlas.org). The minimum age in years of a non-project area, including any natural reference area, is estimated from all available local information, including historical maps and imagery, historical written accounts, and place-specific scientific studies of habitat development.

An HDC can be used to address the following questions:

  1. At what time in the future will the area of assessed habitat achieve the reference condition or other milestones in habitat development? The HDC can answer this question if the CRAM score for the assessed area is within the confidence interval of the HDC. The answer is the time in years along the HDC between the current age of the assessed area and the future date corresponding to the intersection of the HDC and the reference condition or other milestone.
  2. Is the area of assessed habitat likely to develop faster, slower, or at the same pace as most other areas of the same habitat type? The habitat area is likely to develop faster, slower, or at the same pace if the CRAM score for the area is above, below, or within the confidence interval of the HDC, respectively.
  3. What can be done to improve the condition of the habitat area or to increase its rate of development? HDCs by themselves cannot answer this question. Possible answers can be inferred by the following analysis that involves HDCs:
    1. Examine the HDC for each of the four CRAM Attributes;
    2. Identify the Attribute(s) scoring below the HDC;
    3. For any low-scoring Attribute, examine the component Metric Scores (note: the Metric Scores for any public CRAM assessment in the CRAM database can be obtained through EcoAtlas);
    4. Assume the low score of an Attribute is due to its low-scoring Metric(s);
    5. Consider modifying the design or management of the habitat area in ways that will sustainably increase its score(s) for the low-scoring Metric(s).

For more information about CRAM Attributes and Metrics, including their scientific rationale, see the CRAM Manual.

Display Habitat Development Curves For Wetland Type:

CRAM Site Scores