The Pajaro River (pájaro is bird in Spanish language) is a U.S. river in the Central Coast region of California, forming part of the border between San Benito and Santa Clara Counties, the entire border between San Benito and Santa Cruz County, and the entire border between Santa Cruz and Monterey County. Flowing roughly east to west, the river empties into Monterey Bay, west of Watsonville, California.
The Pajaro River has had many names. Early Spanish maps had the name Rio de San Antonio and Rio del Pajaro. Alternate names included Pigeon River, Rio de La Senora La Santa Ana, Rio del Paxaro, Rio de Santa Ana, San Antonio River and Sanjon del Tequesquite.
In 1953 the State Water Resource Control Board determined that the Pajaro Valley Watershed suffered from saltwater intrusion due to groundwater overdraft. In the 1970s, the groundwater basin consistently fell below sea level, and was identified in 1980 as critically over-drafted. By the 21st century, 54 square miles of the Pajaro Watershed's groundwater supply was overdrawn and as a result, below sea level making the area susceptible to saltwater intrusion.
Following the 1995 floods, several lawsuits were issued against the different counties and cities by farmers and homeowners affected. Santa Cruz County, Monterey County, and the California Department of Transportation were all held responsible for failing to maintain the Pajaro River during floods and sued by about 250 people. Plaintiffs held the counties responsible because in 1944, both counties made promises to maintain the levees implemented by the Army Corps of Engineers.
Damage to 3,280 acres of agricultural crops along the Pajaro River were estimated at $67 million, and urban damages in Pajaro estimated at $28 million. Two persons drowned
The Pajaro River has a history of changing its course due to the San Andreas fault slippage between the Pacific plate and the North American Plate. At another time it flowed into the Elkhorn Slough in Moss Landing, California, then into the Pacific Ocean, but today it joins with Corralitos Creek to discharge into the Pacific at a slightly more north location.
The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in the Santa Cruz Mountains deformed the Pajaro levee system.
Other faults within the watershed are the Zayante fault, Sargent Fault, and Calaveras fault.
A. R. Wilson Granite Rock quarry is located by the Pajaro gap adjacent to the river in San Benito County.
Certain tributaries frequently run dry due to a lack of rainfall in the summer.
The Pajaro River's largest tributary is the San Benito River which is much longer than the Pajaro, flowing northwest from its source at an elevation of on San Benito Mountain on its course between the Diablo Range and the Gabilan Range, traveling for about before its confluence with the Pajaro River, about upstream from the ocean. The lowest tributary of the Pajaro River is Salsipuedes Creek which drains the Corralitos Creek and Salsipuedes Creek sub-basins.
A residential development, agricultural fields, and Zmudowski State Beach border the Pajaro River mouth and the connecting Watsonville Slough. The river mouth is often open to tidal action for extended periods, especially during the winter months. Should the mouth fill with sediment, it must be physically reopened to prevent nearby agricultural fields from flooding.
The main water source for agriculture and drinking water in the region comes from groundwater. The three primary aquifers in the Pajaro Watershed are the Alluvial, the Aromas, and the Purisma aquifers. All three suffer from seawater intrusion due to groundwater overdraft, the worst affected being the Aromas aquifer. The Alluvial aquifer is heavily polluted by agricultural runoff.
High toxicity levels in the river are a result from agriculture in the watershed. During low flows, organophosphate pesticides have been detected in the river, and organochlorine pesticides have been detected post-high surface runoff events. Toxaphene, DDT, and Diazinon have also been detected at concentrations unhealthy to local aquatic species.
There are six species listed as threatened or California species of special concern (SSC) under the CESA that regularly occur and/or breed near or in the Pajaro River. Western pond turtles ( Actinemys marmorata), pallid bat ( Antrozous pallidus), ( Athene cunicularia), dusky-footed woodrat ( Neotoma fuscipes), least Bell's vireo ( Vireo bellii pusillus), and the yellow-breasted chat ( Icteria virens). Four species are listed as threatened or endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) that are present or for which suitable habitat exists in or adjacent to the Pajaro River. Steelhead trout, the California red-legged frog ( Rana draytonii), the Northern tidewater goby ( Eucyclogobius newberryi,), and the snowy plover ( Charadrius nivosus), which nests at the Pajaro river mouth at Zumdowski State Beach at the Pacific Ocean.
Native California fish present in the lower Pajaro River are: three-spined stickleback ( Gasterosteus aculeatus microcephalus), Sacramento perch ( Archoplites interruptus), riffle sculpin ( Cottus gulosus), tule perch ( Hysterocarpus traskii traskii), steelhead trout ( Oncorhynchus mykiss), and thicktail chub ( Siphatales crassicauda).
The Pajaro River serves as a migration pathway for adult steelhead trout migrating to spawning and nursery habitat in the upper watersheds of the Pajaro's tributaries (Corralitos Creek, Uvas Creek, Llagas Creek and Pacheco Creeks), although the Pajaro River mainstem itself provides poor spawning and rearing habitat due to low summer flows and high sedimentation loads. In a 1912 report, Stanford University ichthyologist John Otterbein Snyder indicated that there were reports of Chinook salmon ( Oncorhynchus tschawytscha) in the Pajaro River watershed. However, his 1909 seine nets obtained no small specimens at his collecting stations. In 1953, local Gilroy resident, Herman Garcia Sr., caught a Chinook salmon in the Uvas Creek tributary of the Pajaro River. Although the image shows no adipose fin, California's hatcheries were not clipping adipose fins until the 1970's, so it may be an artifact of the taxidermy. However, citizen science and author William "Bill" Leikam reported salmon in Corralitos Creek while fishing for steelhead trout in 1956 in the reach along Freedom, California at the season's first large winter storms. Two adult Chinook salmon and long were caught by gill net and released in a 2005 study of San Felipe Lake, although these may have been fall-run Chinook from hatchery net-pen operations that released these fish at Moss Landing. Snyder did not report Coho salmon ( Oncorhyncus kisutch) south of the San Lorenzo River, north of the Pajaro River mouth on the California coast.
Historically, the Pajaro River is one of two Northern California coastal rivers mentioned in 1829 by Russian explorer K. T. Khlebnikov as hosting sturgeon, presumably white sturgeon ( Acipenser transmontanus), along with the Russian River.
San Felipe Lake, which is the central feature of the "Bolsa de San Felipe", is designated as a "California Important Bird Area" by the National Audubon Society. The Bolsa is a crossroads for birds migrating between San Francisco Bay to the north, Monterey Bay to the west and the Central Valley to the east. The Bolsa is also identified by the National Audubon Society as a "bird vagrant trap", a site where bird species far outside of their normal range appear. Also noteworthy is perhaps the southernmost record of North American river otter ( Lontra canadensis) in a California coastal watershed. In 1969 river otter were recorded eating freshwater mussels (California floater ( Anodonta californiensis)) on the Santa Ana Creek tributary of Tequisquita Slough, 2 miles east of Hollister.
The Pajaro River CARE project was funded by the California Natural Resources Agency.
The Pajaro River Watershed Integrated Regional Water Management Plan (IRWMP) is a movement by the Pajaro Valley Water Management Agency (PVWMA), San Benito County Water District (SBCWD), and Santa Clara Valley Water District (SCVWD) to join together in order to create and benefit the watershed as a whole.
The Pajaro River Bench Excavation Project which was approved in 2012 will remove excess sediment and vegetation from the bench in order to better allow flow through the levees to improve flood protection. Approximately 336,000 cubic yards will be removed. The project begins at Murphy's crossing, and extends 7.5 miles westward to the Pacific Ocean ending before highway 1.
The state of California allocated $7.6 million to the Pajaro watershed to pay for water projects. One project funded was the building of two 1 million gallon storage tanks for the waste water recycling plant which provides water to local agriculture in the Valley.
In early 2015, a land purchase in the upper Pajaro Watershed was purchased by Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority in an effort to preserve agriculture, and increase floodplain and wildlife protection in Santa Clara County. This land is where Llagas Creek and the Pajaro River intersect, with about 183 total acres. The intention is to leave the land undeveloped, thereby reducing risk of flooding for the lower watershed. It is also intended to preserve and restore habitat corridors linking the Santa Cruz, Gabilan, and Mt. Hamilton Ranges.
Flooding
Timeline
1890 A severe flood was enhanced when a rail bridge's pilings by the mouth of the river allowed for debris to accumulate and cease discharge to the ocean. As a result, the floods were remembered as the "Highest yet known" for the next 50 years. 1894 Flooding near the city of Watsonville, California 1907 Major flooding region wide. 1911 Each year experienced overflow near the city of Watsonville. 1914 1915 1916 1922 1927 1931 1933 1937 1938 Flooding 1949 (Army Corps of Engineers levee construction) 1955 Flooding 1963 Overflow near the city of Watsonville. 1982 Flooding of agricultural land at Llagas Creek at the Pajaro River bordering Santa Clara and San Benito Counties. Floodwaters at the confluence of Pajaro River and Carnadero Creek flooded agricultural lands in Santa Clara and San Benito counties. The Pajaro River inundated part of Watsonville and adjacent agricultural land. High stages in the Pajaro River blocked Watsonville drainage. 1983 Flooding in agricultural lands at the confluence of Pajaro River and Carnadero Creek. 1986 Significant flooding on the Pajaro River in February. 1995 All residences and businesses damaged; 2,500 evacuations
1997 Flooding 1998 Town of Pajaro evacuated. The levee along the Pajaro River was breached in several places, and a Presidential disaster was declared. 2005 Town of Pajaro is flooded. Evacuation orders were never given until the flooding started. Resulting in stranded citizens. And much more unneeded loses. 2023 Town of Pajaro evacuated to surrounding shelters the following day. The levee along the Pajaro River breached at midnight on March 10 due to ongoing storms in the region and poor levee conditions.
Geology
Geography
Climate
Watershed
Upper watershed
Lower watershed
Water quality
Ecology
Improvements
External links
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