2. What is a Riparian Area?
Riparian areas are the
area that is between
the streams or rivers
edge and the dry
upland area.
3. Why do we need Riparian Areas?
Riparian areas help to
maintain water quality and
quantity by performing key
ecological functions like
trapping sediment, reducing
erosion, storing nutrients,
filtering contaminants and
recharging aquifers.
4. How does Livestock Affect Riparian Areas?
Livestock seek out water, succulent
forage, and shade in riparian areas,
leading to trampling and overgrazing of
streambanks, soil erosion, loss of
streambank stability, declining water
quality, and drier, hotter conditions.
These changes have reduced habitat for
riparian plant species, cold-water fish,
and wildlife, thereby causing many
native species to decline in number or
go locally extinct.
5. How are Farmers Protecting Riparian
Areas?
In some places farmers
are actually paid to keep
the riparian areas clean.
Riparian areas are the transition zones between the water's edge and the upland environments. They can be seen as green zones along lakes, wetlands, creeks, rivers and areas of increased moisture Although riparian zones represent only a small percentage of the landscape, they are considered among the most productive ecosystems in the world, and are vitally important because of the diversity of plants and animals they support.
Riparian areas help to maintain water quality and quantity by performing key ecological functions like trapping sediment, reducing erosion, storing nutrients, filtering contaminants and recharging aquifers.
Livestock seek out water, succulent forage, and shade in riparian areas, leading to trampling and overgrazing of streambanks, soil erosion, loss of streambank stability, declining water quality, and drier, hotter conditions. These changes have reduced habitat for riparian plant species, cold-water fish, and wildlife, thereby causing many native species to decline in number or go locally extinct.
Yes this is true farmers are actually being paid to fence off the ripaaian areas and actually pump the water away from the river or stream bank they do this in this happens in Fraser valley bc and
Since 2000, the program has launched 359 projects, resulting in 265 kilometres of riparian area, averaging 36 metres in width across 950 hectares of farmland. More than one-million seedlings have been planted. Landowners signing a 10- or 15-year contract to preserve major riparian areas receive an average annual payment of about $900 a hectare and an average signing bonus of $660.