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Restore – California Watersheds

North Coast Coho Project

Culvert before restoration Culvert after restoration Redwood Creek
 Photo Credits (all photos): Rob Dickerson.

Our North Coast Coho Project (NCCP) is a partnership of unprecedented scale and scope.  Trout Unlimited, timber, gravel and wine industry leaders, other private landowners, and state and federal agencies are working cooperatively to restore coho salmon runs in northern California. The NCCP assesses watershed conditions, develops and implements projects to reduce sediment input to streams, install large woody debris and rocks to diversify instream habitat, and improve fish passage.  TU and our partners also conduct fish population monitoring to quantify steelhead, chinook and coho populations.  Since 1998, the Project has raised and invested about $8 million for restoration.

Mad River Mad River

  • TU and our partners have assessed and/or restored thousands of acres in the Mad, Hollow Tree Creek (South Fork Eel), Cottoneva, Ten Mile, Pudding, Noyo, Big, Navarro, Garcia, Gualala, and Russian River watersheds.

  • The NCCP started with Mendocino Redwood Company (MRC) in the Garcia River watershed. TU worked on the South Fork of the Garcia with MRC, government agencies and others to develop and fund the project for the benefit of coho. The partners prevented 70% of the predicted road-related future sediment load from reaching the river, which is an amount equivalent to 3,000 dump trucks worth of dirt.

  • Hawthorne Timber/Campbell Timberland Group is engaging in a similar effort on several streams in California. These projects include road upgrades and sediment removal on Pudding Creek and Ten Mile Rivers, some of the most important coho streams. 

  • MRC and Campbell are the dominant landowners in at least a dozen key coho watersheds or subwatersheds.  Together with TU, the two companies and other private landowners are changing the face of several hundred thousand acres of forest land in Northern California.   The NCCP cooperative approach serves as a model for restoration work on California’s North Coast and elsewhere.

  • To date, TU and its partners have improved or eliminated 410 miles of logging roads, removed three major fish migration barriers, reconnected 11.1 miles of stream habitat, and installed 195 instream structures to improve coho salmon and steelhead habitat.

  • Read more about the North Coast Coho Project.

Golden Trout Project

The Golden Trout Project is a collaborative effort between Trout Unlimited, California Trout, the Federation of Flyfishers, the California Department of Fish and Game and the U.S. Forest Service to protect and restore the California Golden Trout, our state fish.  The Project partners coordinate opportunities for volunteers to participate in restoration and monitoring in and around the Golden Trout Wilderness in Inyo and Sequoia National Forests and Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Parks in the southern Sierra. This is a nationally recognized restoration project to protect the state fish on public lands.

For more information:

Chuck Bonham
California Director
1808B 5th Street
Berkeley, CA 94710
(510) 528-4164

Contact the California Staff