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NPS and Caltrans restore Furnace Creek habitat

Public safety also enhanced by diverting water off CA-190

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NPS and Caltrans restore Furnace Creek habitat 

Public safety also enhanced by diverting water off CA-190

furnace creek
Mandi Campbell (Timbisha Shoshone Tribe) and Bryan Winzenread (Caltrans District 9) cut a ceremonial ribbon at a culvert. Mike Reynolds (National Park Service / Death Valley National Park), Todd Parcells (Road and Highway Builders, Inc.), and Armando Rodriguez (Xanterra / The Oasis at Death Valley) look on. Credit: National Park Service / Kayla McCraren

DEATH VALLEY, Calif. – Furnace Creek, a stream in Death Valley National Park, is now flowing further in its natural channel- thanks to a recent California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) project. The agency added three culverts under Highway 190 to increase driver safety by preventing water from ponding on the highway.

This project comes on the heels of a series of National Park Service projects to restore habitat for species endemic to the park’s waters. Species that only live in Furnace Creek and nearby waters in Death Valley National Park include:

Snails:

  • Badwater snail (Assiminea infima)
  • Robust Ipnobius springsnail (Ipnobius robustus)

Crustaceans

  • Texas Springs amphipod (Hyalella muerta)
  • Travertine Springs amphipod (Hyalella sandra).
  • Two unnamed species of ostracodes, or ‘seed shrimp’

Insects

  • Furnace Creek riffle beetle (Microcylloepus formicoideus)
  • Nevares Spring naucorid bug (Ambrysus funebris)

Fast-forward to the early 2000s, when park visitors would ask, “Where is the creek?” Furnace Creek was about 20% of its historic length, due to development of the springs for drinking water and landscaping use.

In 2008, the National Park Service (NPS) stopped collecting drinking water from Travertine Spring and Texas Spring. Wells now provide water for the residents, hotels, and campgrounds in the Furnace Creek area. The NPS removed the spring boxes and Furnace Creek increased in flow. The next restoration effort was removal of nonnative palm trees, each one of which can use 200 gallons of water per day.

As Furnace Creek returned, it started running over CA-190, creating a driving hazard. The culverts installed recently eliminate this safety hazard and allow Furnace Creek to return to its former streambed, restoring critical habitat.

www.nps.gov/deva-

Death Valley National Park is the homeland of the Timbisha Shoshone and preserves natural resources, cultural resources, exceptional wilderness, scenery, and learning experiences within the nation’s largest conserved desert landscape and some of the most extreme climate and topographic conditions on the planet. Learn more at www.nps.gov/deva


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