Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site R016XA002CA
Freshwater, Stratified, Fluventic
Accessed: 11/23/2024
General information
Provisional. A provisional ecological site description has undergone quality control and quality assurance review. It contains a working state and transition model and enough information to identify the ecological site.
Figure 1. Mapped extent
Areas shown in blue indicate the maximum mapped extent of this ecological site. Other ecological sites likely occur within the highlighted areas. It is also possible for this ecological site to occur outside of highlighted areas if detailed soil survey has not been completed or recently updated.
MLRA notes
Major Land Resource Area (MLRA): 016X–California Delta
16 – California Delta
Most of this area is in the California Trough Section of the Pacific Border Province of the Pacific Mountain System. A small part at the west edge of the area is in the California Coast Ranges Section of the same province and division. This MLRA was originally the conjoined flood plain along the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers. As sediment from these rivers built up in San Pablo Bay, a delta formed, creating many streams that divide this nearly level area into “islands.” Strong levees and drainage systems are needed to protect the islands from flooding. Elevation of the islands ranges from below sea level to slightly above sea level. This area is underlain by interbedded marine, estuarine, and fine-grained non-marine sediments transported to the delta by the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers as they flowed into San Pablo Bay. As the sediments built up, a delta formed and freshwater mixed with brackish water in marshes and on flood plains. As the marsh vegetation became covered with new sediments, the organic matter content in the soils built up to very high levels. When drained and exposed to the air, these peaty soils oxidize and shrink and then subside.
Classification relationships
Using the December 2010 draft EPA ecoregion level IV: 7j, Delta polygon mostly closely overlaps with MLRA 16.
MLRA 16 mostly aligns with the USFS (1997) ecological subsection 262AI, Great Valley, Delta.
Ecological site concept
This site is a complex patchwork of freshwater water-obligate, facultative wet and facultative plant communities that are primarily adapted to fluctuating water tables influenced primarily by flood events. This patchwork includes riparian vegetation dominated by woody scrub or shrubs with few to no tall trees; mature riparian forest usually associated with a dense understory and mixed canopy, including sycamore, oaks, willows, and other trees; and palustrine forested wetland that is intermittently flooded, and seasonally saturated.
It is found in along natural levees, some floodplains and occasionally adjacent to slough channels on slopes ranging from 0 to 2% primarily with soils that are characterized by thermic entisols with stratified primarily fluventic sediments, ranging from coarse- to fine-textured, derived from alluvial and eolian sediments. Drainage ranges from very poorly to somewhat poorly drained and salinity is limited and should not have any influence on the vegetation response or dynamics of the site.
Associated sites
R016XA001CA |
Tidally-Influenced, Freshwater 016XA001 is the dominant ecological site within the LRU and is primarily organic soils with historically emergent wetland vegetation. |
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Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
(1) Populus fremontii |
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Shrub |
(1) Salix |
Herbaceous |
Not specified |
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