Streams

Beaver Creek, Montezuma Castle National Monument
Beaver Creek, Montezuma Castle National Monument. NPS/A.W. Biel

Overview

Streams, and their associated riparian areas, are critical to ecological integrity. Riparian areas supply food, cover, and water, and serve as wildlife migration routes. They also help control water pollution, reduce erosion, mitigate floods, and increase groundwater recharge. Riparian systems perform numerous ecosystem functions important to humans, yet are one of the most endangered forest types in the United States.

Some of the Southwest’s major rivers and tributaries flow through Sonoran Desert Network parks. These streams, and the riparian systems they support, are vital parts of those parks. Yet they are affected by many influences upstream and well beyond park boundaries. Monitoring the ecology and hydrology of these rivers from multiple perspectives is key to understanding and managing them.

To gain a complete picture of stream health, the Sonoran Desert Network monitors the status and trends of six different parameters:

  • water quality (core water quality parameters, nutrients, metals, toxins, and other factors),
  • water quantity (flow volume, flooding magnitude and frequency),
  • channel morphology (shape and habitat of the stream channel),
  • riparian vegetation (type, abundance, and communities of river-related plants),
  • macroinvertebrates (small crustaceans, mollusks, worms, and aquatic insects), and
  • fish (native and non-native fish abundance and frequency).

Park managers can use this information to guide management actions. Monitoring results can also provide early warning of potential problems. Many issues are easier and cheaper to fix if they are caught earlier, rather than later.

Streams monitoring also sheds light on the overall condition of a watershed. This allows park managers to address broad-scale issues with other agencies and adjacent land owners. Finally, stream conditions provide insights into broader landscape conditions. The importance and influence of stream systems and the services they provide extends far beyond their relatively small land area.

For more information, contact Andy Hubbard.

Quick Reads

Showing results 1-4 of 4

    • Locations: Carlsbad Caverns National Park, Chiricahua National Monument, Coronado National Memorial, Fort Bowie National Historic Site, Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument,
    • Offices: Chihuahuan Desert Inventory & Monitoring Network, Sonoran Desert Inventory & Monitoring Network, Southern Plains Inventory & Monitoring Network
    One scientist crouching by water and another holding water sampling equipment on a long pole.

    The American bullfrog is a great threat to aquatic ecosystems in the Southwest. They are voracious predators of aquatic animals and carry diseases that kill native species. We will implement three main actions in this project funded by the Inflation Reduction Act, Invasive Species Grant: bullfrog control, native species recovery and reintroduction, and development of early detection/rapid response protocols for bullfrogs.

  • Variations in precipitation could have major impacts on groundwater recharge.

    The National Park Service's Sonoran Desert Network Inventory and Monitoring Program is monitoring several vital signs that will likely show the effects of climate change. This article offers a summary of the network’s local-scale findings to date, as well as some examples of how monitoring will detect future change.

  • Tumacácori National Historical Park

    The Vanishing Santa Cruz River

    • Locations: Tumacácori National Historical Park
    Santa Cruz River

    Since 1951, the Santa Cruz River at Tumacácori National Historical Park has been bolstered by a steady flow of treated effluent from the Nogales International Wastewater Treatment Plant. As a result, the river supports a rare southwest cottonwood–willow riparian environment, one of the most endangered ecosystems in the U.S., as it flows through the park. But recent changes to the effluent inputs have reduced its flow, putting stress on riparian trees and plants.

    • Locations: Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site, Chickasaw National Recreation Area, Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument, Lyndon B Johnson National Historical Park, Montezuma Castle National Monument,
    Monitoring water quality from a boat

    Because of their importance, streams were chosen as a focus for monitoring in the National Park Service (NPS) Sonoran Desert and Southern Plains inventory and monitoring networks. Portions of several major river systems (or their tributaries) are found within many parks of both networks.

Source: Data Store Saved Search 2570. To search for additional information, visit the Data Store.

Legacy briefs for climate and water monitoring are also available.

Last updated: June 20, 2023