A Walk in the Woods by Scarlett Philibosian

Photo by Steve Rafuse

A Walk in the Woods by Scarlett Philibosian

What is healthy riparian habitat along the McKenzie River?  Is it a lot of trees lining the banks of the river?  Do they have to be native tree species?  How far from the waterway does riparian habitat extend?  What about plants growing close to the ground?

My Community Planning Workshop (CPW) team is working with the Eugene Water and Electric Board (EWEB) and local organizations to find the answers to these types of questions.  Talking about what makes up a healthy riparian forest is part of our work in designing a project called the Voluntary Incentive Program (VIP).  Under this program, EWEB will reward landowners who maintain healthy riparian forest habitat on their land.  The program is designed to build positive community relationships, both among neighbors in the lower McKenzie River basin and between landowners, EWEB, and partners in the VIP such as the McKenzie Watershed Council.

Most people living in Eugene drink McKenzie River water, and the VIP will incentivize maintaining land next to the River in ways that translate to better water quality.  But what exactly constitutes habitat that will filter pollutants out of water?  To find out, my CPW team visited the Bergrenn Demonstration Farm, and walked around different types of riparian land.  Here are several pieces of information we learned from VIP partners about riparian forests along the McKenzie River:

  • While nonnative plant species do take up pollutants from the water, some provide less of a filtration service than native species.  For example, the invasive reed canary grass (top picture) has shallow roots, while native clumping grasses have deep root systems that anchor soil and pull pollutants from several feet beneath the surface.  Therefore, minimizing nonnative species on riparian land is important to maintaining good water quality.
  • The canopy of larger trees tend to take up more surface area than do smaller trees.  Canopy cover over the river banks helps slow down the speed at which rain falls on the ground, which reduces erosion and therefore reduces sedimentation, a type of pollution.
  • Leaf-fall and rotting logs results in a rich topsoil layer above the finer soils.  This layer provides habitat for burrowing creatures such as insects and salamanders, and burrowing makes soils more porous.
  • Lastly, different native plant species work in harmony to take up pollutants and protect the riparian land from severe flooding.  Therefore, maintaining many different plant species in the riparian zone is important to good water quality.

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Meet our Students: Scarlett Philibosian / Community and Regional Planning

Meet our Students: Scarlett Philibosian

Community and Regional Planning

 What city, region, state do you call home?

Pasadena, CA

In which graduate program are you enrolled?

Community and Regional Planning

What is your area of concentration?

My area of concentration is environmental planning, and I’m hoping to focus on ecosystem services. I would like to learn the ideologies and analyses behind valuing the services that healthy ecosystems provide to communities. I am interested in how planners can easily find or accurately calculate these values, and use the information to make good planning decisions.

What will you be doing for the Community Service Center (CSC)?

Through the CSC, my Community Planning Workshop(CPW) team is designing a local outreach and communication strategy that encourages private landowners to participate in a payment for ecosystem services program. This program will be headed by the Eugene Water & Electric Board(EWEB), who seeks to maintain water quality along the McKenzie River in the face of increasing development. This project, the Voluntary Incentive Program, would reward good stewardship of riparian land as payment for the ecosystem service of higher water quality provided by that piece of land. My team is also drafting the administration for this natural capital payment program, including outreach, monitoring, and funding. The program will be based in transparency, financial soundness, environmental quality, and efficiency.

How does your involvement with the Community Service Center relate to or inform your graduate studies?

All CPW projects help develop professional skills. I am lucky in that my CPW project is also related to my research interest, although the focus of this project is more on administration and outreach of a program than ecosystem valuation itself. This project has led me to lots of ideas and questions about ecosystem services and community planning in general.

What can you say about the value of your Community Service Center experience?

The CPW program within the CSC helps me build many skills that will be are applicable to a career after graduate school–presentation skills, professional writing development, practice in mediation and facilitating meetings, and experience in juggling many different responsibilities at the same time!

What outcome are you hoping for when your project ends?

Over the next several months, my team will help the Program take shape. Ultimately, my CPW team will deliver a final presentation and report to our client, EWEB. The report will include a partnership strategy among the different NGOs and government agencies that can assume part of the program’s administration. The CPW team is also meeting with an advisory council made up of landowners along the McKenzie. From my team’s facilitation of these meetings, EWEB will better understand the expectations of the community, such as who can participate in the Voluntary Incentive Program, and the minimum acceptable reward for good land stewardship. Our team’s hope is that the information we uncover about partner roles and community participation will reveal the program to be financially feasible and environmentally effective.

LinkedIn Profile Address: Scarlett Philibosian @ Linkedin

More about the Community Planning Workshop(CPW)