Watersheds

A Living River: Charting the Health of the Upper Santa Cruz River - 2008 - Sonoran Institute - Cheryl L. McIntyre, Amy L. McCoy and Claire A. Zugmeyer

For thousands of years, people in the arid West have built their communities near rivers that supply drinking water, serve as navigation corridors, and support hundreds of plant, fish, and wildlife species. The Upper Santa Cruz is such a river, having sustained human communities for more than 3,500 years. From its headwaters in the San Rafael Valley in Arizona, the Upper Santa Cruz River flows south into Mexico where it completes a 25-mile U-turn and flows north back into the United States through Santa Cruz County, Arizona.

Mexican native trouts: a review of their history and current systematic and conservation status

Hendrickson, D. A., H. E. Pérez, L. T. Findley, W. Forbes, J. R. Tomelleri, R. L. Mayden, J. L. Nielsen, B. Jensen, G. R. Campos, A. V. Romero, A. van der Heiden, F. Camarena and F. J. García de León. 2002(2003). Mexican native trouts: a review of their history and current systematic and conservation status. Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 12: 273–316.

Abstract
While biologists have been aware of the existence of native Mexican trouts for over a century, they have received little study. The few early studies that did muchmore than mention their existence began in the 1930s and continued into the early 1960s, focusing primarily on distributional surveys and taxonomic analyses. Starting in the 1980s the Baja California rainbow trout became the subject of more detailed studies, but very little remains known of mainland trouts of the Sierra Madre Occidental. We review earlier studies and report on our own collections and 274 observations made between 1975 and 2000. We present newly discovered historical evidence that leads us to conclude that a “lost” cutthroat trout, a lineage not previously known from Mexico, was collected more than a century ago from headwaters of the Río Conchos (a major tributary of the Río Grande (= Río Bravo)), a basin not previously considered to harbor a native trout. We review the last century of regional natural resource management and discuss our own observations of trout habitats. Impacts of logging, road building and overgrazing are widespread and expanding. Many streams suffer from heavy erosion, siltation and contamination, and though long-term hydrologic data are generally not available, there is evidence of decreased discharge in many streams.  These problems appear related to region-wide land management practices as well as recent regional drought. Trout culture operations using exotic rainbow trout have rapidly proliferated throughout the region, threatening genetic introgression and/or competition with native forms and predation on them. Knowledge of distribution, abundance, relationships and taxonomy, not to mention ecology and population biology, of native trouts of the Sierra Madre Occidental remains inadequate. Vast areas of most mainland drainages are still unexplored by fish collectors, and even rudimentary information regarding basic biology, ecology and population structure of stocks remains lacking.  Concentrated exploration, research and management of this long overlooked and undervalued resource are all urgently needed. The history of natural resources exploitation that placed so many native trouts of the western United States on threatened and endangered species lists is repeating itself in the Sierra Madre Occidental.  Without concerted action and development of region-wide socio-economic solutions for current, largely non-sustainable resource management practices, native Mexican trout gene pools will soon be in grave danger of extinction.

Fishes of the Río Yaqui Basin: Arizona and México

Dean A. Hendrickson, W. L. Minckley, Robert R. Miller, Darrel J. Siebert and Patricia Haddock Minckley. 1980(1981). Fishes of the Rio Yaqui Basin: Mexico and United States. Journal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science, Volume 15, No. 3, pp. 65-106.

 

Rio Aros Panorama

View over the Rio Aros country. The far ridges in this image are in Chihuahua. This was taken on the Northern Jaguar Preserve north of Sahuaripa. Click for large panorama.

Panorama View of the Rio Aros CountryPanorama View of the Rio Aros Country

 

Panorama View of the Rio Aros Country

Panorama View of the Rio Aros Country

Rio Bavispe

Rio Bavispe by El Tigre, just above Presa AngosturaRio Bavispe by El Tigre, just above Presa AngosturaThe Rio Bavispe encompasses a large part of the northern part of the Rio Yaqui watershed (Sonora's largest). The main stem of the Bavispe starts in the Sierra Madre right on the border of Chihuahua, southeast of Huachinera, flowing northwest through mountainous country until the upper end of the wide Bavispe Valley. This valley trends northward until making a 180 degree curve around the Sierra El Tigre. From here it flows southward for around 80 miles before meeting the larger Rio Aros to form the Yaqui. Presa La Angostura interrupts this stretch forming a large reservoir.

Rio Bavispe emerging from the Sierra Madre, upper Bavispe Valley near HuachineraRio Bavispe emerging from the Sierra Madre, upper Bavispe Valley near Huachinera

History

The Rio Bavispe valley holds quite a bit of history having been the center of many Apache raids and Mexican military attacks. Missionaries first settled this area in the early 1600's.

Major Tributaries

The

Rio Agua Prieta begins in the southeastern corner of Arizona around Douglas and the surrounding country and meets up with the Rio Fronteras which flows north from near Nacozari de Garcia. The Fronteras flows perennially in areas and has some nice cottonwood/willow riparian forest. Sonoran Mud Turtles and native fish can be found there.

The Cajón Bonito joins the system near here and drains the Sierra San Luis and northern end of the Sierra Madre. The upper part of the Cajón Bonito is an amazing example of an extraordinarily healthy riparian ecosystem. From here the Rio San Bernardino flows south to meet the Bavispe proper at Morelos at the Northern end of the Sierra El Tigre.

Rio Sonoyta

Rio Sonoyta Watershed MapRio Sonoyta Watershed MapThe Rio Sonoyta, despite grazing across the watershed, agriculture, groundwater pumping, and the incredible dry nature of the region, still has perennial flow in stretches west of the town of Sonoyta. These areas supports the native Quitobaquito Pupfish (Cyprinodon macularius eremus) and the Rio Sonoyta Mud Turtle (Kinosternon sonoriense longifemorale) life history PDF.

Much of the bottomland, especially in the middle stretches of the watershed, has been cleared for agriculture. Mesquite bosques along the Rio Sonoyta were said to have been an amazing sight into the 1900's before they were cleared.

2005 Biological Inventory, Rio Aros, Sonora

Rio Aros Raft TripRio Aros Raft TripTrip report on 2005 biological inventory of the Rio Aros and Yaqui from Natora, Sonora to Sahuaripa. Rafts and inflatable kayaks were used to gain access to this remote and rugged area. Trip participants included Aaron Flesch, Lane Larsen, Samia Carrio-Percastegui, Chris O'Brien, Michael Bogan, Eric Wallace, and Sky Jacobs, among others.

We inventoried the flora and fauna of this stretch river and a few of its tributaries. This is rugged territory and has had little exploration. After the fact we learned that our efforts may have helped stop a large dam project being proposed for the area, a pleasant surprise, to say the least!

This trip was the culmination of two previous years of river exploration in the area by Aaron Flesch and myself. This region is the northern-mostLane Larsen with New-found DogLane Larsen with New-found Dog extent of a number of species with more tropical affinities. It is very wild due to being supremely rugged. It is also one of the last few decent breeding areas for the Jaguar in all of Mexico. Naturalia with help from the Northern Jaguar Project purchased a 45,000 acre reserve (Rancho Los Pavos and Rancho Zetasora) at the confluence of the Rios Aros, Yaqui, and Bavispe to protect the Jaguar.

Our guide on this expedition, Lane Larsen, passed in late 2006 from a work related accident. He was the most adventurous person I had ever met and always had a more outrageous (true) story than the last. This trip would not have been what it was without him, his adventurous spirit, and his willingness to donate his time and energy for a good cause. This page is dedicated to him.

Attached is the report in PDF format. Please feel free to use information contained in the report, but give proper credit. See some photos of this trip in this Wild Sonora gallery.

Cajon del Agua, Sonora

Cajon del Agua, SonoraCajon del Agua, Sonora

Part of the Rio Magdalena watershed, Cajón del Agua starts near the southern end of the Sierra La Madera and by Rancho La Lamina. It flows west on the north side of the Sierra Cucurpe. The Cajón is exceptional in a couple ways. First it is very tropical for it's northerly location with real Sinaloan thorn-scrub. Species include Ficus petiolaris (rock fig), Bursera fageroides, B. laxiflora, Lysiloma microphylla, L. watsonii, and Fouquieria macdougalii (tree ocotillo), as well as a palm species that I am not certain of. Secondly it has a perrinial creek and beautiful canyon walls that harbor a very lush bottom of riparian trees including sycamore, cottonwood, several willow species, walnut and mulberry.

Equally amazing is the diversity of birds recorded there including nesting Black Hawks, Nutting's Flycatchers, Sinaloan Wrens, Happy Wrens, Fan-tailed Warblers, Rufous-capped Warblers, and Yellow-billed Cuckoos.

Also as seen in the photo at right, the canyon walls and scenery are stunning. This is a special place!

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