Upper Truckee River Explained

Upper Truckee River
Name Other:Lake Stream, Lake Valley Creek, Little Truckee River[1]
Name Etymology:Named after the Paiute chief Truckee
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:California
Subdivision Type5:Cities
Subdivision Name5:Meyers, California, South Lake Tahoe, California
Source1:Red Lake Peak
Source1 Location:Sierra Nevada, Alpine County, California
Source1 Coordinates:38.7183°N -119.9892°W
Source1 Elevation:9480feet
Mouth:Lake Tahoe
Mouth Location:El Dorado County, California
Mouth Coordinates:38.9422°N -119.9961°W
Mouth Elevation:6224feet
Tributaries Left:Echo Creek, Angora Creek
Tributaries Right:Grass Lake Creek, Trout Creek (Lake Tahoe) (historically)

The Upper Truckee River is a stream that flows northward from the western slope of Red Lake Peak in Alpine County, California to Lake Tahoe via the Truckee Marsh in South Lake Tahoe, California. The river flows northeasterly and is 23miles long.[2] It is Lake Tahoe's largest tributary.[3]

History

At the very top of the Upper Truckee River watershed, Grass Lake and Grass Lake Creek were named by civil engineer and land surveyor, George H. Goddard, who in 1859 crossed Luther Pass from Hope Valley in the West Fork Carson River watershed over the pass and found "a swampy valley...with a pond filled with rank grass that (we) called Grass Lake...".[1]

Watershed

This watershed is the largest in the Lake Tahoe Basin and occupies 56.5sqmi, which is 18 percent of the total land area tributary to Lake Tahoe (314sqmi). Tributaries include Angora, Echo, Grass Lake, and Big Meadow Creeks, and Upper and Lower Echo, Round, and Dardanelles Lakes. Major lakes include and smaller lakes include Dardanelles, Round, Showers, Elbert, Tamarack, Ralston, and Angora Lakes.

The stretch between Meyers and South Lake Tahoe is known as Lake Valley.

Historically, Trout Creek was tributary to Upper Truckee River in the Truckee Marsh area near the lake (fig. 2). But with development of the Tahoe Keys, the Upper Truckee River was channeled to the lake and currently the streamflow of the two tributaries combine only during high runoff.[4]

Ecology and restoration

Woody vegetation in the Upper Truckee River watershed is primarily coniferous forest with lodgepole pine, ponderosa pine, Jeffrey pine, white fir, red fir, western white pine, mountain hemlock, and sugar pine. Alders, aspen, and willows are common along the stream zone.[4] Major wetlands include Grass Lake, Osgood Swamp, Truckee Marsh, Benwood Meadow, and Big Meadow. Two large sphagnum bogs, Grass Lake and Osgood Swamp are located in the watershed and both are considered to be Significant Natural Areas by the California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG). Grass Lake has been designated a U.S. Forest Service Research Natural Area. The headwaters are in Desolation Wilderness and in roadless areas managed for quasi-wilderness uses by the U.S. Forest Service. Both areas receive heavy recreational use. The reach of the Upper Truckee above Christmas Valley is under study for inclusion in the federal Wild and Scenic Rivers system. Threatened native Lahontan cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki henshawi) have been reintroduced into the river in the Meiss Meadows area, and the endangered shorezone plant Lake Tahoe yellowcress (Rorippa subumbellata) is found near the mouth of the river on the shores of Lake Tahoe.

Much of the vast Truckee Marsh was filled to create the Tahoe Keys subdivision. Further hydrologic modification occurred (reaches of the river were channelized) for construction of the South Lake Tahoe airport. Spills of treated wastewater from the South Tahoe Public Utility District's export facilities in this watershed are an ongoing concern.[5]

The straight boulder-lined man-made channel by the airport was converted back to a more natural, meandering course as of November, 2011.[6]

California State Parks acquired two properties to protect wet meadows and floodplain habitat along the Upper Truckee River in the mid 1980s: Washoe Meadows State Park (WMSP) and Lake Valley State Recreation Area (LVSRA).[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tahoe Place Names: The Origin and History of Names in the Lake Tahoe Basin . Barbara Lekisch . 1988 . 144–145 . 2012-12-28 . Great West Books . 9780944220016 .
  2. Web site: U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map. December 28, 2012.
  3. Web site: Tahoe: State of the Lake Report 2016. UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center. 17.
  4. WRIR . 2012-12-28 .
  5. Lake Tahoe Basin Watershed Management Initiative Section 2.2 Upper Truckee River Watershed . January 2005. Lahontan Regional Water Quality Review Board . 2012-12-29 .
  6. News: Riffles by the River . Dylan Silver . 2012-04-28 . Tahoe Daily Tribune . 2012-12-29 .
  7. Tribune . California Tahoe Conservancy . November 14, 2022 . Tahoe’s largest wetland restoration wraps up construction after 3 years . 2022-11-14 . Tahoe Daily Tribune . en-US.