Tub Run Riparian & Wetland Prairie Restoration Project is located 8 miles south of Brownsville within the Calapooia Watershed Council’s service area. 

background

Once an abundant ecosystem within the Willamette Valley, native wetland prairies have declined dramatically in extent since the mid-1800s due to a variety of factors including agricultural conversion, urbanization, drainage, and colonization by invasive and woody vegetation.

Native riparian plant communities have also been impacted by introduced species colonization. In particular, pasture grasses, reed canary grass, and aquatic weeds such as water primrose have shifted historic food web productivity for prey resources important to juvenile salmonids (i.e. invertebrates). The Council has worked with a regional expert in managing water primrose.

Today, wetland prairie habitat is regarded as one of the most imperiled in the Willamette Valley ecoregion, with less than 2% of its historic range remaining.
(Johannessen et al. 1971, Towle 1982)