Santa Clara River (California) Explained

Santa Clara River
Name Other:Rio de Santa Clara[1]
Map:Santa_clara_river_map.png
Map Size:260
Pushpin Map:USA California
Pushpin Map Size:260
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of the mouth of the Santa Clara River in California
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:California
Subdivision Type3:Counties
Subdivision Name3:Los Angeles, Ventura
Subdivision Type4:Cities
Subdivision Name4:Oxnard, Ventura, Santa Paula, Fillmore, Santa Clarita
Length:83miles
Discharge1 Location:Ventura[2]
Discharge1 Min:0cuft/s[3]
Discharge1 Avg:176cuft/s[4]
Discharge1 Max:165000cuft/s[5]
Source1:San Gabriel Mountains
Source1 Location:Aliso Canyon, Angeles National Forest, Los Angeles County
Source1 Coordinates:34.4336°N -118.3642°W
Source1 Elevation:5800feet
Mouth:Pacific Ocean
Mouth Location:Between Ventura and Oxnard, Ventura County
Mouth Coordinates:34.2353°N -119.2636°W
Mouth Elevation:0feet
Basin Size:1600sqmi
Tributaries Right:San Francisquito Creek, Castaic Creek, Piru Creek, Sespe Creek

The Santa Clara River (Spanish; Castilian: Río Santa Clara) is an 83miles long[6] river in Ventura and Los Angeles counties in Southern California. It drains parts of four ranges in the Transverse Ranges System north and northwest of Los Angeles, then flows west onto the Oxnard Plain and into the Santa Barbara Channel of the Pacific Ocean.

The watershed has provided habitat for a wide array of native plants and animals and has historically supplied humans with water, fish, and fertile farmland. The northern portion of the watershed was home to the Tataviam people while the southern portion was occupied by the Chumash people. Much of the Santa Clara River Valley is used for agriculture which has limited the use of structural levees to separate the natural floodplain from the river. Although it is one of the least altered rivers in Southern California, some levees exist where the river flows through areas of significant urban development.

History

The Santa Clara River was originally named the Río de Santa Clara on August 9, 1769, by the Portolá expedition on the march north from San Diego to found a mission at Monterey, to honor Saint Clare of Assisi who died on August 11, 1253.[1] The Santa Clara River Valley was then known as the Cañada de Santa Clara.

The Santa Clara-Mojave River Ranger District of the Angeles National Forest is named after the Santa Clara River.

Floods

The failure and near complete collapse of the St. Francis Dam took place in the middle of the night on March 12, 1928. The dam was holding a full reservoir of 12400000000gal of water that surged down San Francisquito Canyon and emptied into the river.

Course

The Santa Clara River's headwaters take drainage from the northern slopes of the San Gabriel Mountains near the Angeles Forest Highway, inside the western part of the Angeles National Forest. Its largest fork, Aliso Canyon, is about 7miles long and forms the primary headstream. These branches combine into the broad wash of the main stem near the town of Acton which flows west through Soledad Canyon, crossing under California State Route 14 near the town of Canyon Country. The Sierra Pelona Mountains on the north provide additional watershed and seasonal tributaries. The river receives Bouquet Creek, Placerita Creek, and San Francisquito Creek within the City of Santa Clarita. The riverbed surface remains dry most of the year here, except on extreme occasions of heavier than average rainfall. The river then crosses west under Interstate 5 and receives Castaic Creek from the right.

After the Castaic Creek confluence, the river starts to flow primarily southwest through the Santa Clarita Valley. Near the county line between Los Angeles County and Ventura County, the river enters the Santa Clara River Valley flowing past Buckhorn and Fillmore, incorporating additional flow from Piru Creek and Sespe Creek, both from the right, and Santa Paula Creek at the town of Santa Paula, where it passes the large South Mountain Oil Field on the south bank. The Santa Clara River then bends southwest, passing the Saticoy Oil Field on the north bank where South Mountain marks its entrance onto the broad Oxnard Plain. The river ends at the Pacific Ocean after flowing across the north side of this plain made fertile with the silt deposited by the river. A sand bar usually stands across the mouth at the Santa Clara Estuary Natural Preserve that lies within McGrath State Beach in Oxnard and bounded on the north by the city of Ventura wastewater treatment plant.

Watershed

Although located just north of the heavily populated Los Angeles Basin, the 1600adj=onNaNadj=on Santa Clara River watershed remains one of the most natural on the South Coast.[7] It is separated from the Los Angeles Basin by the low Santa Susana Mountains, along the north side of which the Santa Clara River runs. On the east are the San Gabriel Mountains, and on the north are the Santa Ynez Mountains, Sespe Mountains, San Cayetano Mountains, and Tehachapi Mountains. Piru, Castaic and Sespe Creeks, each over 50miles long, are the primary tributaries of the Santa Clara River. While Piru and Castaic Creeks form reservoirs for the California State Water Project (Pyramid Lake and Lake Piru on Piru Creek, and Elderberry Forebay and Castaic Lake on Castaic Creek), Sespe Creek is designated a National Wild and Scenic River, unique among Southern California streams. There are 57 archaeological sites and 12 historical landmarks in the watershed.[8]

The Santa Clara River watershed borders on the Ventura River/Matilija Creek watershed on the west. On the northwest lies the Santa Ynez River watershed. On the north is the interior drainage basin of Tulare Lake in the Central Valley. To the east is the Mojave River and to the south is the Los Angeles River. The Santa Clara River is the second largest river in Southern California; the larger one is the Santa Ana River.

Estuary

The estuary has been modified by human activities at least since 1855. By the late 1920s roads and agricultural fields had become established. In the late 1950s the former delta area was occupied by the Ventura Water Reclamation Facility and agricultural fields with levees constraining the river from these areas and directing the flow to the Harbor Boulevard bridge.[9] McGrath State Beach was established in 1948.[10] The estuary has been designated a Natural Preserve within McGrath State Beach on the south bank of the river mouth.[11]

From the north bank of the river, the city of Ventura releases some 9000000gal of treated effluent daily that flows into the Santa Clara Estuary Natural Preserve from their water reclamation facility (VWRF).[12] A sand berm separates the river from the ocean most of the year. In years with adequate rainfall, the river breaks the berm which is then slowly rebuilt by ocean action through the rest of the year. When the river watershed has an exceptionally dry year, the berm acts as a dam, allowing the water level to rise with the discharge. In August 2014, with the frequent flooding of the access road and many of the campsites in the state park, a report found that the park had only been open five of the past eighteen months because of repeated flooding.[13] When the berm is broken when it is not raining, fish can become stranded in the sudden draining of the estuary waters.[14]

The estuary was identified on the 1998, 2002 and 2006 Clean Water Act 303(d) lists of impaired water bodies.[9] In 2012, the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board required the Counties of Ventura and Los Angeles together with cities along the river to limit the total maximum daily load of bacteria potentially harmful to human health that discharges from stormwater outfalls into the Santa Clara River, primarily during the dry season. Sources of bacteria of concern in urban runoff from the county, City of Fillmore, City of Oxnard, City of Santa Clarita, City of Santa Paula, and City of Ventura include pet and animal wastes, sanitary sewer overflows, and organic debris such as leaves and grass. Examples of ways they will improve water quality include increased frequencies of street sweeping and stormwater catch basin cleaning; field surveys to locate and eliminate both dry season street runoff and leaks from the sanitary sewer systems; and enhanced public education.[15]

Ecology

The river is habitat for threatened species such as the unarmored three-spined stickleback, steelhead, southwestern pond turtle, and least Bell's vireo. The endemic, endangered Santa Ana sucker (Catostomus santaanae) lives in parts of the Santa Clara River system.[16]

Historic documentation of an important recreational steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) fishery occurs for the Santa Clara River into the mid 1900s.[17] The steelhead trout run on the Santa Clara river prior to 1940 is estimated to have had thousands of fish and to have been one of the largest steelhead runs in southern California.[18] Construction of the Vern Freeman Diversion Dam and other migration barriers on the mainstem, Santa Paula Creek, Sespe Creek, Piru Creek, and other tributaries during the mid 1900s appear to be correlated with the demise of the steelhead run as habitat availability decreased and surface flows decreased.[17] [18] Adult steelhead still try to migrate up the river with an adult trapped at the Vern Freeman Dam in 2001. A wild rainbow trout population still exists in the headwaters of the Santa Paula, Sespe, Hopper, and Piru Creek tributaries and is producing out-migrating steelhead smolts bound for the Pacific.[17] However, challenges to outgoing smolt migration include low to no stream flows downstream of the dam or predation in the coastal estuary.[19] Lampreys, a parasite, also impact the steelhead.[20] Invasive species such as Arundo donax also create changes that are not favorable to spawning trout.[21] Genetic analysis of the steelhead in the Santa Clara River watershed has shown them to be of native and not hatchery stocks.[22]

There were beaver (Castor canadensis) historically in the Santa Clara River until Europeans arrived, according to oral Ventureño history taken by ethnolinguist John Peabody Harrington in the early twentieth century. The full reference is: "The beaver comes and gnaws the tree on the side towards which it leans, and at last falls over. The tree is leaning towards our house. I am beginning to fear that it will fall on us. The beaver builds its house in the river or the cienegas in the time of our ancestors. There were beavers at Ventura and also at Saticoy."[23] This historical observer record is consistent with a beaver skull collected in 1906 in the Sespe Creek tributary by Dr. John Hornung, a zoologist at the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History.[24] [25]

Pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana) used to roam along the Santa Clara River, as Father Pedro Font, describe in his diary on the de Anza Expedition February 1776, "We saw in the plain a very large drove of antelopes which, as soon as they saw us, fled like the wind, looking like a cloud skimming along the earth."[26] There is a Ventureño word for antelope, q'aq, which is different from their separate words for deer and elk.

In 2002, eight Southwest willow flycatchers hatched in the Hedrick Ranch Nature Area (HRNA), a 220acres preserve just east of Santa Paula managed by the Friends of Santa Clara River. The first SWFs to hatch on the river in recent times was at the Fillmore Fish Hatchery in 2000.[27]

Quagga mussels were discovered in Lake Piru in 2013. They are an invasive species found in rivers and lakes in the U.S.[28]

River modifications

In Ventura County

The Harbor Boulevard bridge, the most westerly crossing, marks the upstream boundary of McGrath State Beach and the Ventura Water Reclamation Facility while the estuary continues a little farther upstream. In 1969 the river breached the north bank, flowed through an area that had historical been part of the estuary, flooded a new golf course and Harbor Boulevard, and deposited silt and debris into recently completed Ventura Harbor just upcoast from the reclamation facility.[29] [30]

Over the years, many communities have used the river banks as dumps to create levees that would keep the river from flooding adjacent lands during occasional years with heavy winter rains. Three dump sites about 2miles upstream from the mouth came under the control of the Ventura Regional Sanitation District by 1988. The district used the landfill gases to produce electricity until 2001. As the landfill aged and its contents decomposed, the release of gas became intermittent and the gases from the recovery system are burned off in a flare. The defunct power plant was built just upstream of the Victoria Avenue bridge, the second crossing upstream from the ocean.[31]

The riverbed was mined extensively for sand and gravel throughout the post–World War II building boom for the construction of homes and highways. Mining the riverbed for sand and gravel impacts the riparian zones by destroying habitat and changes sediment flow regimes. The mining decreased significantly in the 1990s due to increased costs needed to satisfy environmental concerns and concerns that the removal of material increased scouring and undermining of bridge foundations and pipelines that crossed the river.[32] there were still 3 active gravel operations in the upstream area.

There are also water diversions, most notably the Freeman Diversion Dam, located approximately 10.7miles from the ocean[9] [33] The United Water Conservation District, formed in 1950, battles groundwater overdraft through a combination of aquifer recharge and providing alternative surface water supplies. The District owns Lake Piru and key facilities along the Santa Clara River that are used to manage groundwater supplies.[34] The district provides wholesale water delivery through three pipelines to various portions of the Oxnard Plain.

The Vern Freeman Diversion Dam, built by United Water in 1991 on the Santa Clara river, channels water to shallow basins designed to replenish the aquifer. For decades before the structure was built, earthen dams were constructed in the river to divert water to farmers and replenished the aquifer. The berms would have to be rebuilt whenever winter rains created a flow that breached the berms.[35] Southern California Steelhead were declared endangered in 1997 and the fish ladder on the structure was deemed insufficient. The National Marine Fisheries Service determined in 2015 that fixing this was a high priority since it is the first structure the steelhead encounter when attempting to migrate from the ocean.[36] A judge determined in 2018 that the federal Endangered Species Act had been violated by United Water by failing to ensure that the structure provided an adequate water supply and migratory passageway for steelhead.[37]

Treated Wastewater

In Los Angeles County

The main channel of the Santa Clara River through the city of Santa Clarita remains largely natural, a variety of modifications have been made to the river and its major tributaries. The South Fork of the Santa Clara River features a system of 14 weirs that regulate the flow of the river through Newhall, Valencia, and Saugus. Bouquet Creek is channelized at the confluence of every minor creek that flows into it, most notably along a stretch of its riverbed near its confluence with the Santa Clara River.

The unincorporated community of Valencia is an under-construction, large scale master-planned community in Los Angeles County along the river in the easterly portion of the Santa Clarita Valley adjacent to Ventura County.[38] The required permits for the project describe how the work will fill in and alter more than 82acres of flood plain and tributaries. These include threatened and endangered fauna and flora, including the California condor, the California gnatcatcher, the southwestern willow flycatcher, the least Bell's vireo, the arroyo toad, the San Fernando Valley spineflower, and the threespine stickleback.[39] The area is included in Los Angeles County's Strategic Ecological Areas program, which designates areas of "irreplaceable biological resources".[40] The water reclamation plant serving the development will be near the boundary with Ventura County. The plant will treat an estimated 6800000USgal of water every day before releasing it into the river as it flows towards the ocean and into Ventura County.[41]

During the decades the project on the Newhall Ranch has been in planning, it has faced legal actions and environmental concerns. The downstream impact and other effects also drew Ventura County officials and citizens into opposition to the project.[42] The landmark California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) used to challenge the development, may have led to a better-designed project while saving crucial habitat.[43] In 2014, the California 2nd District Court of Appeal overturned a Los Angeles County Superior Court ruling and found that the environmental impact report adequately analyzed the project's potential impact on endangered fauna and flora and Native American cultural artifacts. The ruling also supported the agency's determination that storm-drain runoff from the project's 2587acres into the Santa Clara River would not harm juvenile steelhead trout downstream in Ventura County.[44] [45] Subsequently, the California Supreme Court agreed to review a petition that stated the appellate court opinion exempting developers from protections for the unarmored threespine stickleback would apply to other protected species such as the California Condor.[46] [47] the state Supreme Court directed lower courts to toss out the EIRs mentioned above for two phases of construction. After the EIRs had been toss out by the state Supreme Court in May 2016, changes were made to address the concerns. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife certified the environmental impact report in 2017.[48] In July 2017, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors certified a revised environmental analysis and re-approved land-use permits for the Mission Village and Landmark Village communities.[49]

Restoration

There has been significant interest in protecting and restoring the river habit.[50] The riparian natural areas that remain along the river are of interest to several conservancy organizations. Easements are obtained that allow historical farming to continue and permanently protect the land from development.[51] The river's natural processes in the floodplain can continue with natural flooding of open space and agricultural fields.[52] This avoids building levees that increase the risk of flooding downstream.[53] The giant reed, or arundo, is a thirsty, invasive plant that lacks food value for native animals and impairs the growth of native plants.[54]

The city of Santa Clarita protects significant portions of the natural ecology of the river within the Santa Clara River Open Space preserve, which includes portions of San Francisquito Creek and the South Fork of the Santa Clara River north of Lyons Avenue in Newhall.

Two wildlife corridor protection ordinances adopted by the county of Ventura restrict activities that impede the movement of mountains lions and other wildlife between the Santa Monica Mountains and the Los Padres National Forest. The river is included within the corridor especially at the junctions with major tributaries that connect to the Los Padres National Forest.[55]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: California Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary . Gudde, Erwin G. . Berkeley, California . University of California Press . 1949 . 315 .
  2. Web site: USGS Gage #11114000 on the Santa Clara River at Montalvo, CA (Monthly Averages). U.S. Geological Survey. National Water Information System. 1928–2004. 2010-09-16.
  3. The river is heavily dependent on seasonal rains, so its flow is often zero.
  4. Web site: USGS Gage #11114000 on the Santa Clara River at Montalvo, CA (Monthly Averages). U.S. Geological Survey. National Water Information System. 1928–2004. 2010-09-16.
  5. Web site: USGS Gage #11114000 on the Santa Clara River at Montalvo, CA (Peak Streamflow). U.S. Geological Survey. National Water Information System. 1932–2004. 2010-09-16.
  6. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed March 16, 2011
  7. http://www.swrcb.ca.gov/rwqcb4/water_issues/programs/stormwater/municipal/AdminRecordOrderNoR4_2012_0175/Section%2010_References-Part%20I_COMPLETED.pdf "State of the Watershed – Report on Surface Water Quality: The Santa Clara River Watershed"
  8. http://www.calands.org/map?x=-118.9863&y=34.3163&z=12&base=map "California Protected Areas Data Portal"
  9. STAFF REPORT (August 2010) "TOTAL MAXIMUM DAILY LOAD FOR TOXAPHENE FOR THE SANTA CLARA RIVER ESTUARY" CALIFORNIA REGIONAL WATER QUALITY CONTROL BOARD - LOS ANGELES REGION
  10. Johnson, Brett (December 15, 2014) "McGrath State Beach campground, estuary issues under study" Ventura County Star
  11. http://ceres.ca.gov/wetlands/geo_info/so_cal/santa_clara_river_index.html "Santa Clara River Estuary: Profile"
  12. Clerici, Kevin (August 17, 2011) "Ventura reaches settlement, agrees to reuse millions of gallons of highly treated sewage water" Ventura County Star
  13. Carlson, Cheri (August 25, 2014) "Campground flooded, closes again" Ventura County Star
  14. Carlson, Cheri (February 11, 2014) "Sandy berm breached near McGrath State Beach campground" Ventura County Star
  15. Administrative Report (October 27, 2014) "Memorandum of Agreement to Improve Water Quality in the Santa Clara River" City of San Buenaventura City Council
  16. News: Environmentalists to sue San Bernardino and Colton over the killing of threatened fish . . Louis . Sahagun . 22 August 2016 . 23 August 2016.
  17. Santa Clara River Steelhead Trout: Assessment and Recovery Opportunities . Matt Stoecker . Elise Kelley . Dec 2005 . The Santa Clara River Trustee Council and The Nature Conservancy . June 7, 2010 .
  18. An Assessment of the Impacts of the Proposed Improvements to the Vern Freeman Diversion on Anadromous Fishes of the Santa Clara River System, Ventura County, California . Moore, Mark . 1980 . Ventura County Environmental Resources under contract 670 . June 7, 2010 . https://archive.today/20110721143346/http://www.santaclarariverparkway.org/wkb/scrbiblio/moore1980b . July 21, 2011 .
  19. Steelhead Trout Smolt Survival in the Santa Clara and Santa Ynez River Estuaries . Elise Kelley . California Department of Fish and Game Fisheries Restoration Grant Program . June 7, 2010 .
  20. News: Third-graders at Rio del Sol School banded together to help save an endangered fish. D'Angelo. Alexa. March 31, 2019. Ventura County Star. 2019-04-01.
  21. Kallas, Anne (February 8, 2012) "Pair working to restore Santa Clara River" Ventura County Star
  22. Population genetic structure and ancestry of Oncorhynchus mykiss populations above and below dams in south-central California . Anthony J. Clemento . Eric C. Anderson . David Boughton . Derek Girman . John Carlos Garza . Conservation Genetics . 2009 . 1321–1336 . 10.1007/s10592-008-9712-0 . 10. 5 . 32490944 .
  23. Book: Chumash Field Notes, John P. Harrington Papers Microfilm edition: Volume 3, Reel 85, Frame 0305 - 0307 . National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution . 2017-01-02 .
  24. Web site: MVZ Mammals 4918 Castor canadensis subauratus Sespe River . Museum of Vertebrate Zoology . Berkeley, California . January 2, 2017 .
  25. Book: The Status of the Beavers in Western America with a Consideration of the Factors in their Speciation, in University of California Publications in Zoology Vol. 12 . Walter P. Taylor . University of California . Berkeley, California . 1916 . 449 . January 2, 2017 .
  26. Book: Expanded Diary of Pedro Font . Pedro Font . 2011-01-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110717201419/http://anza.uoregon.edu/Action.lasso?-database=fontex&-layout=standard&-op=eq&pg2=148&-response=format%2Ffontexpg2fmt.html&-maxRecords=1000&-noresultserror=%2Fsorry.html&-search . 2011-07-17.
  27. Web site: Eight Willow Flycatchers Fledge at Hedrick Ranch Nature Area . 2001-01-04 . Friends of Santa Clara River . 2013-04-09.
  28. Coyne, Alasdair (January 27, 2014) "Quagga mussels loose in Santa Clara watershed" Ventura County Star
  29. Meyers, Jeff (November 1, 1990) "An Era of Sail Lies Anchored in Two Harbors : Boating: Ventura County shoreline took on greater appeal with construction of marinas in Ventura and Oxnard." Los Angeles Times
  30. News: A Few Deadly Floods Stand Out in County. Joanna M. . Miller. March 20, 1994. 19 March 2017. Los Angeles Times.
  31. McGrath, Rachel (September 4, 2014) "Sanitation district to pay $466,000 penalty for landfill gas violations" Ventura County Star
  32. McCartney, Patrick (August 31, 1993) "Gravel Producer Drops Plans for Mining River : Environment: Granite Construction decides that regulations would make it too costly to extract rocks and sand from the Santa Clara." Los Angeles Times
  33. News: Fox Canyon agency added to complaint over water diversions. Herdt. Timm. April 2, 2015. .
  34. Wenner, Gretchen (December 31, 2011) "Brackish plant on Oxnard Plain could clean salty water" Ventura County Star
  35. Barlow, Zeke (May 26, 2011) "Little known Freeman Diversion shaped Ventura County" Ventura County Star
  36. Wenner, Gretchen (January 23, 2015) "$60 million cost for fish passage has district reeling" Ventura County Star
  37. Web site: Judge says steelhead need more help in Santa Clara River. Boyd-Barrett. Claudia. October 2, 2018. Ventura County Star. en. 21 March 2019.
  38. Hamilton, Denise (April 03, 1988) "Homes on the Range : Developers Pushing Ranchers Out" Los Angeles Times
  39. News: Louis. Sahagun. Newhall Ranch project faces new hurdles with environmentalists' suit. Los Angeles Times. March 6, 2014.
  40. Web site: SEA Program – Significant Ecological Areas Program. 2020-10-07. en-US. October 8, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201008145206/http://planning.lacounty.gov/site/sea/home/. live.
  41. Holt, Jim (August 17, 2010 - Updated: August 18, 2010) "High cost of compliance" The Santa Clarita Valley Signal Retrieved April 10, 2014.
  42. Barlow, Zeke (December 27, 2011)"Newhall's impact on Ventura County debated" Ventura County Star
  43. Khouri, Andrew (August 7, 2014) "San Pedro project illustrates a cause of limited housing affordability" Los Angeles Times
  44. News: Louis. Sahagun. Court clears way for Newhall Ranch project to proceed. Los Angeles Times. March 20, 2014. March 21, 2014.
  45. Coon, Arthur F. (April 4, 2014) "Second District Addresses Interesting CEQA and CESA Species Mitigation Issues in Lengthy Partially Published Opinion Upholding Resource Management and Conservation Approvals for Newhall Ranch Project, but "Hides its Work" on Significant Greenhouse Gas Issues in Unpublished Portion" CEQA Developments. Miller Starr Regalia Retrieved 14 July 2014
  46. News: Louis. Sahagun. California Supreme Court to review opinion in Newhall Ranch dispute. Los Angeles Times. July 11, 2014.
  47. Coon, Arthur F. (July 11, 2014) "Supreme Court's CEQA Docket Expands With Grant of Review in Newhall Ranch Case" CEQA Developments. Miller Starr Regalia Retrieved 14 July 2014
  48. News: State officials clear a roadblock to the controversial Newhall Ranch development. Los Angeles Times. Louis . Sahagun. June 15, 2017. 17 June 2017.
  49. News: Long-debated Newhall Ranch project gets key approvals from county. July 18, 2017. 25 October 2017. LA Times. Nina . Agrawal.
  50. News: The Santa Clara River may be one of the last of its kind in Southern California. Carlson. Cheri. May 25, 2019. Ventura County Star. en. 2019-05-28.
  51. Biasotti, Tony (September 9, 2011) "Conservation groups give update on Santa Clara River efforts" Ventura County Star
  52. Web site: Santa Clara River. 2022-01-20. The Nature Conservancy. en-US.
  53. Downing. Jim. Blumberg . Louis . Hallstein . Eric . 2014. Reducing Climate Risks with Natural Infrastructure . Case study 4: Santa Clara River Floodplain Protection Program . The Nature Conservancy. San Francisco. California Program. 16. http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/regions/northamerica/unitedstates/california/ca-green-vs-gray-report-2.pdf. 9 November 2014.
  54. News: The Coronavirus Is Halting Conservation Programs And The Impact Could Be Devastating. Graff. Stephen. 2020-05-08. HuffPost. en. 2020-05-09.
  55. News: Wilson. Kathleen. February 13, 2022. Judge upholds Ventura County law protecting wildlife corridors after 3-year-old court battle. Ventura County Star.