Bear Creek 16.6 Restoration

The Freshwater Trust (TFT) is an Oregon-based non-profit organization with a mission to preserve and restore freshwater ecosystems. 

In 2018, TFT entered a contract with the City of Ashland to develop and implement a “water quality trading” (WQT) program for the City. This WQT program involves planting and maintaining native trees and shrubs in the Bear Creek watershed, with the goal of generating shade that the City will use to comply with its Clean Water Act wastewater permit.  

Establishing a native plant community and controlling invasive weeds will increase stream shade and will also reduce erosion, absorb sediment, nutrients and pollution before they reach the stream, and increase the wildlife habitat and connectivity along the creek corridor. In addition, clearing weeds and replacing them with long-lived native trees and shrubs reduces maintenance needs while beautifying and increasing the property’s value for the public. 

Restoration in Action

Pre-project conditions in fall 2022

Thick swaths of invasive blackberry plants cover the banks of the creek and force out native plants.

Planting site in spring 2023

New native trees and shrubs will grow to provide shade over the creek to help keep it cool for native fish.

Planted site in summer 2023

Native trees and shrubs get established and start to fill in a streamside forest.

Native plant

Mock Orange deciduous shrub

What restoration is happening at this site?

The Bear Creek 16.6 site is a streamside (or riparian) planting project on 3.6 acres along a public corridor of the Bear Creek Greenway in Jackson County, Oregon. It includes the removal and control of invasive species and weeds and the planting of 2,000 native trees and shrubs per acre on the south side of the creek. Temporary plant protection (Vexar cages) is installed for the first few years to help plants get established. Additionally, weeds such as Himalayan blackberry, vinca, and poison hemlock were cleared to prevent them from overtaking the project area.

What native species are at this site?

This area is home to an abundance of wildlife, including American black bear, river otters, herons, egrets, and eagles. While Bear Creek is southwest Oregon’s most urbanized waterbody, it continues to support Chinook and Coho salmon, steelhead, lamprey and other native fish species. In particular, fall run Chinook Salmon select this reach for the majority of the spawning locations on Bear Creek each year.

Trees planted here include big leaf maple, Oregon ash, black oak, black cottonwood, incense cedar, Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir, chokecherry, alder, and others. Shrubs planted here include mock orange, skunkbush, Pacific ninebark, Oregon grape, Douglas spirea, red flowering currant, and gooseberry.

Native trees provide shade, while native shrubs provide flowers for pollinators and berries that become food for wildlife. Certain species thrive by the water’s edge, while others are more drought-resistant and thrive in the upland. All these plants help to develop a dense, healthy, multi-story forest.

What is the long-term plan for this site?

The site was planted in 2023 and will be maintained and monitored for 20 years by The Freshwater Trust through the City of Ashland’s Water Quality Trading Program.

What is the City of Ashland’s Water Quality Trading Program?

The City of Ashland and The Freshwater Trust are partnering to use shade produced from restoring streamside forests to help the City comply with its wastewater permit under the Clean Water Act. This program finds local sites that would benefit from riparian plantings and reduce instream temperature. As the plants grow at each restored site, they block kilocalories of solar load (sunlight), which generates credits for the City and helps keep the stream cool for native fish.

How was this site selected?

The Freshwater Trust selects sites using its StreamBank® BasinScout® tool, which prioritizes many potential sites based on several values, including benefits to the environment. Sites throughout the Rogue River basin are identified using satellite imagery and modeled for future conditions of full forests. This allows the team to locate the most impactful planting sites and work with willing landowners to restore them. 

How do we know this site is succeeding?

Water quality trading sites are closely monitored to ensure that the plants are growing well and that invasive species have not returned. The Freshwater Trust staff and local contractors visit the sites regularly and decide which actions might be needed to keep the site healthy. Additionally, water quality trading sites have mandatory third-party verifiers who ensure that the site meets its performance targets and generates the credits needed to comply with the wastewater permit requirements.

What can I do to help?

There are multiple ways you can help keep this site working well. You can report dumping and illegal camping, pick up trash when you find it, and report wildlife sightings.

You can offer feedback on your experience at this project location to our project manager, Katelyn Detweiler, by emailing Katelyn@thefreshwatertrust.org.