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Missouri stream restoration projects use nature’s strength to prevent erosion

The Nature Conservancy is rebuilding eroded streambanks in Missouri to reduce sediment pollution, which is one of the largest sources of water contamination in the state.

Since the summer of 2017, conservationists have been working with environmental engineers to stabilize streambanks at LaBarque Creek near Pacific. They're also doing so along the Elk River in southwest Missouri, where sediments have polluted the watershed. Through bioengineering techniques, they repair the streams by using deep-rooted native plants, biodegradable coconut fibers and other natural materials, such as wood, to keep the banks from depositing sediments into the water.

The work, when successful, can improve water quality, provide better wildlife habitat and prevent erosion caused by flooding.

After months of monitoring the project sites, the Nature Conservancy has seen the benefits it hoped to achieve. At LaBarque Creek, for example, conservationists have seen fish species, such as the long-eared sunfish, reappear after the restoration work. Sediment pollution can be harmful to aquatic life, said Barbara Charry, the conservancy’s Lower Meramec River coordinator.

Barbara Charry is the Nature Conservancy's lower Meramec River coordinator. She said bioengineered streambanks can reduce flood risk and improve wildlife habitat.
Credit Eli Chen | St. Louis Public Radio
Barbara Charry is the Nature Conservancy's lower Meramec River coordinator. She said bioengineered streambanks can reduce flood risk and improve wildlife habitat.

“The sediment itself gets into the water and so animals that filter that water get suffocated,” Charry said. “Fish that are spawning and leaving their eggs on the bottom, those are going to be smothered and they’re not going to be so productive.”

Before the bioengineering work, the land surrounding LaBarque Creek was a bare, former ballfield. The stretch where the Nature Conservancy worked is on a property belonging to Washington University’s Tyson Research Center. The center’s staff had informed conservationists about the erosion problems at the creek, said Steven Herrington, the Nature Conservancy’s director of freshwater conservation.

“There was no vegetation out on the site,” Herrington said, ”and as the water would come from upstream that way, come down through this bend, it just kept taking chunks of the stream with it.”

The two sites also have proved resilient to major floods, which is important, given how climate change could bring more heavy rains to Missouri, Charry said.

“This kind of solution reduces that flood risk,” Charry said. “It slows that water down, it allows it to 

Steven Herrington, the Nature Conservancy's director of freshwater conservation, said the bioengineering techniques have helped create better habitat for insects and aquatic species that live in and around LaBarque Creek.
Credit Eli Chen| St. Louis Public Radio
Steven Herrington, the Nature Conservancy's director of freshwater conservation, said the bioengineering techniques have helped create better habitat for insects and aquatic species that live in and around LaBarque Creek.

dissipate more naturally.”

The LaBarque Creek site has not shown signs of erosion, despite three flood events in the past year, according to conservationists.

A more traditional approach to stabilizing streambanks would involve concrete and rip-rap, or quarry rocks, to prevent erosion. Bioengineering is less costly, creates habitat for wildlife and looks more appealing, Charry said.

“This is highly engineered but looks completely natural,” Charry said, as she stood at the LaBarque Creek site.

Because of the wide-ranging benefits to the environment, the Nature Conservancy wants the Environmental Protection Agency to consider making bioengineering as a part of its plan to clean up the Big River Mine Tailings Superfund site.

The Elk River project covered 1,650 feet and cost $652,000. The LaBarque Creek site covered about 300 feet and cost $40,000.

The bioengineering method has been used in past decades to restore salmon and trout populations in other parts of the country, but this is the first time it’s been used in Missouri. The Nature Conservancy plans to use such techniques to restore a portion of Keifer Creek at Castlewood State Park next year.

Follow Eli on Twitter: @StoriesByEli

Copyright 2021 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

This is how LaBarque Creek looked before restoration work took place.
Steven Herrington | The Nature Conservancy /
This is how LaBarque Creek looked before restoration work took place.
The Nature Conservancy conducted restoration work on 1,650 feet of Elk River, near Noel in southwest Missouri. More than seven acres of the bank had eroded since 1996.
Steven Herrington | The Nature Conservancy /
The Nature Conservancy conducted restoration work on 1,650 feet of Elk River, near Noel in southwest Missouri. More than seven acres of the bank had eroded since 1996.
The Nature Conservancy worked on the Elk River site from December, 2017, until February, 2018.
/
The Nature Conservancy worked on the Elk River site from December, 2017, until February, 2018.
Bioengineering techniques use natural materials found in the environment, such as these branches, to stabilize streambanks and keep them from depositing sediments into the water.
Eli Chen | St. Louis Public Radio /
Bioengineering techniques use natural materials found in the environment, such as these branches, to stabilize streambanks and keep them from depositing sediments into the water.

Eli Chen is the science and environment reporter at St. Louis Public Radio. She comes to St. Louis after covering the eroding Delaware coast, bat-friendly wind turbine technology, mouse love songs and various science stories for Delaware Public Media/WDDE-FM. Before that, she corralled robots and citizen scientists for the World Science Festival in New York City and spent a brief stint booking guests for Science Friday’s live events in 2013. Eli grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago, where a mixture of teen angst, a love for Ray Bradbury novels and the growing awareness about climate change propelled her to become the science storyteller she is today. When not working, Eli enjoys a solid bike ride, collects classic disco, watches standup comedy and is often found cuddling other people’s dogs. She has a bachelor’s in environmental sustainability and creative writing at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and has a master’s degree in journalism, with a focus on science reporting, from the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism.