Growing Greener Grant Used To Successfully Restore Lehigh County Creek

Staff from the Lehigh County Conservation District, in partnership with Fish & Boat Commission, and volunteers from the Perkiomen Watershed Conservancy, and Perkiomen Valley Trout Unlimited, worked for three days this week to restore a 415 linear foot section of the Hosensack Creek in the Perkiomen Creek Watershed in Lower Milford Township.

The volunteers installed fish habitat structures, removed six existing man-made dams, and stabilized a wide section of streambanks to allow a smoother flow of water and aquatic life to move freely throughout the creek.  The group also installed a fish habitat section using rocks to form a semi-circle near the edge of the stream so fish can co-habitate and multiply.

The Growing Greener Grant implemented by DEP’s Northeast Regional Waterways and Wetlands program helped fund $18,000 of the $25,000 project.

Restoration efforts such as this will enhance fish, aquatic, and wildlife habitat, while expanding wild trout populations in the watershed. Sediment and non-point source pollutants entering this section of the creek will be reduced, therefore improving the overall water quality in the Perkiomen Creek watershed.

NewsClips:

Outdoors Notebook: State Included In Chesapeake Bay Rehab

Hosensack Creek Project Gives Trout Proper Habitat

Eddy Creek Restoration Will Begin In 2015

Intersex Fish Found In 3 PA River Basins

Stormwater Runoff Issues Worse In Hempfield Twp

Harvey’s Lake Residents Offered Water Testing

Invisible River On The Schuylkill

(Reprinted from the July 10 DEP NewsClick Here to sign up for your own copy.)


7/14/2014

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