QA Environment

Floodplains, estuaries, and riparian areas are critical habitats that support the health, growth, and survival of Pacific salmon and steelhead, migratory birds, invertebrates, and shellfish. These highly valuable areas also benefit people. These habitats support the lives and cultural practices of Tribal nations, support fertile agricultural lands, and offer spaces for outdoor recreation.

Success looks like increasing functional floodplain, estuarine/nearshore, and riparian habitat by: 

  • accelerating habitat restoration and acquisition projects,
  • improving regulatory frameworks and incentives for good land stewardship, and
  • advancing integrated floodplain management across the Puget Sound region. 

The Habitat Restoration Progress Indicators

  • measure the acres of floodplains, estuarine/nearshore, and riparian restoration activities funded, in progress, and completed,
  • assess whether the rate of regional habitat restoration funding and implementation is accelerating over time,
  • track regional progress towards achieving the 2030 Salmon Habitat Restoration Target: by 2030, fund and implement 7,200 new acres of floodplain, estuarine/nearshore, and riparian restoration activities Puget Sound-wide. 

The Habitat Acquisition Progress Indicators 

  • measure the acres of floodplains, estuarine/nearshore, and riparian area acquisitions funded, in progress, and completed,
  • assess whether the rate of regional habitat acquisition funding and implementation is accelerating over time. 

 

These indicators do not tell us how much habitat we are simultaneously losing. However, they help us understand habitat restoration and acquisition for protection, which are critical steps to preserve and improve the habitats we do still have.

Select a Progress Indicator in the table below to learn more.

Progress Indicators

TOPIC PROGRESS INDICATOR INDICATOR PROGRESS TARGET STATUS
TOPIC PROGRESS INDICATOR INDICATOR PROGRESS TARGET STATUS

Observations of the baseline period are coming soon. 

 

What factors affect these Progress Indicators? 

Capacity of local organizations.

Local salmon recovery organizations like Lead Entities and regional fisheries enhancement groups play a critical role in identifying and implementing priority restoration and acquisition projects. Additionally, entities like Conservation Districts, non-profits, and government agencies play key roles in supporting restoration and acquisition efforts. These types of projects require ample staff knowledge, capacity, and funding. Growing the capacity of organizations can help the recovery community achieve desired trends in these Progress Indicators.

Local, state, and federal funding for habitat restoration and protection.

Funding via programs including the Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund, Floodplains by Design, Puget Sound Acquisition and Restoration Fund, etc. can support the implementation of restoration and acquisition projects. Regional funding sources can also offer incentives for voluntary actions taken by landowners, like establishing voluntary riparian buffers on farmland or compensating farmers for the ecosystem services their land provides. Funding options need to be diverse and flexible across federal, state, and local funding sources. 

Additional common barriers to implementing restoration projects. 

Barriers impact the ability of Lead Entities to implement restoration and protection projects. For example, trust and participation across landowners, coordination across agencies on land purchases, and access to database technologies impact project sponsors’ ability to propose, implement, and track projects.

 

What other actions can we take? 

It is important to accelerate habitat restoration and acquisition in Puget Sound. However, there are other steps that we must advance to support ecosystem recovery. 

  • Track and evaluate restoration effectiveness, habitat condition, net habitat change, and salmon population status and trends to better understand regional progress improving habitats. 
  • Continue to fund and implement key restoration activities, including fish passage barrier removal projects and instream habitat restoration. 
  • Stop habitat loss and protect what we have by improving land use policy and implementation of the Growth Management Act and the Shoreline Management Act. 

Contributing Partners

Last Updated
12/10/2024 1:23 PM