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Rarely
do landfill owners specify native plants for vegetative
cover, but with patience and care the results can be
rewarding.
By
Penelope Grenoble O'Malley
A successful
native-plant revegetation program achieves 100% cover
in the first year (based on a stratified biological
assessment), but the learning curve is steep. Managing
the revegetated acres to ensure continued operation
of the landfill's environmental control systems is a
challenge in southern California, where wildfire is
also a threat.
Nick
Morell, environmental planner in the planning and permitting
section of the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts'
Solid Waste Management Department, sums up the challenge
of revegetating with native plants in a landfill environment.
"This is not your typical revegetation program.
What we have here is native plants growing on an engineered
landfill surface adjacent to a natural environment that
is prone to wildfires. In designing the revegetation
layout, we had to allow for inspection of our landfill
gas systems as well as monitoring of the landfill surface
for gas emissions. In a typical fish and game habitat
restoration project, you would pick an area that was
already disturbed or might have less-than-ideal conditions
and bring it to premium conditions, then plant trees
and shrubs based on those better soil conditions. On
the landfill surface, the cover soils have already been
put in place and compacted, and those are the conditions
you've got to work with."
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| The
Calabasas Landfill |
In 1984 Congress
passed legislation designed to limit the creation of
new solid waste disposal sites in units of the National
Park System (NPS) and to reduce the potential for adverse
effects from existing operations. The Calabasas Landfill,
a 505-ac. canyon cover operation in Agoura Hills, CA,
just west of the San Fernando Valley, is owned by the
County of Los Angeles and operated by the Los Angeles
County Sanitation Districts under a joint-powers agreement.
Under the new federal regulations, the Sanitation Districts
was required to apply for an NPS Special Use Permit
(SUP) to continue operation. The park service permit
amounted to another layer of oversight for the landfill,
which operates under a Conditional Use Permit from the
Los Angeles County Regional Planning Commission, specifying
long-term contour levels for the site, as well as other
numerous technical permits. The landfill is currently
operating at about one-third capacity, receiving 1,100-1,200
tpd of solid waste. At current levels, closure is estimated
to be approximately 30 years.
The
landfill is located in a northern segment of the Santa
Monica Mountains National Recreation Area (SMMNRA),
across the Ventura Freeway from the main body of the
150,000-ac. federally protected preserve but immediately
adjacent to a 4,000-ac. unit of the SMMNRA heavily used
by hikers, mountain bikers, and equestrians that also
provides a significant wild-habitat link between the
Santa Monica Mountains north into the Santa Susana Mountains.
Existing plant communities in the vicinity of the landfill
include valley oak savannah, coast live oak woodland,
coastal sage scrub, California black walnut woodland,
chaparral, riparian woodland, and native and non-native
grassland (the two canyons that comprise this bulk of
the park were once used as a cattle ranch). Existing
visitor-serving facilities include a trailhead and a
picnic area with direct views of the west-facing slope
of the landfill and a 30-mi. trail system that connects
the two canyons.
During
the landfill permitting process, the immediate goal
of the NPS, as the manager and administrator of the
SMMNRA, was to ensure that visitor use and enjoyment
would not be negatively affected by landfill operations.
At the same time, it was continuing to allow the solid
waste facility to operate as a component of Los Angeles
County's solid waste management system. After
a lengthy process that included an environmental review
and public input, the NPS issued the Calabasas facility
an SUP requiring the Sanitation Districts to clear the
west-facing slope of existing ornamental vegetation
and replant it with natives to blend in with surrounding
plant communities. The conditions under which the permit
was issued also required the Sanitation Districts to
submit its plans for a native-plant restoration program
to the NPS within three months of the effective date
of the permit, including a detailed listing of plant
species, a planting layout, methods of weed eradication,
and irrigation.
The first
in a series of annual reports required as a condition
of the permit is now in the hands of the park service,
and a year later, Morell characterizes the effort. "One
of our goals is not only to visually and aesthetically
blend the landfill into the park but also to allow visitors
to be educated and understand that this facility is
an integral part of the local environment. We want the
visitors' experience and perception of the landfill
to be a positive one, where they can say, 'Look, they've
revegetated the landfill with a native-plant community.'
For
its part, the NPS wants the site to function as both
a restoration and landscaping project. "We don't
want it to look like a manicured environment,"
says Ray Sauvajot, local NPS chief of planning, science,
and resource management. NPS concerns about long-term
irrigation include the consideration that too much water
could force unnatural growth in the species used to
revegetate and could attract exotic plant and animal
species that require extra water, which could compete
with the natives and upset the local ecological mix.
Sauvajot says the park service is pleased with the project
so far and notes that final evaluation will include
the ecological functioning of the site, the appropriateness
of the final species mix, and whether what was planned
achieved "good cover."
At the time
the project was initiated, vegetation at the site included
the typical ornamental vegetation the Sanitation Districts
uses to screen environmental control facilities (e.g.,
erosion control, gas system piping, roads), including
acacia (Acacia spp.), California pepper (Schinus
molle), Mexican fan palm (Washingtonia robusta),
oleander (Nerium oleander), myroporum (Myroporum
laetum), bottlebrush (Callistrnon citrinus),
and eucalyptus (Eucalyptus spp.). A variety of
invasive weed species (castor bean [Ricinus communis],
mustard [Brassica spp.], and alyssum [Alyssum
spp.]) was established on-site along with minor
quantities of native plants, including encelia (Encelia
californica), mule fat (Baccharis salicifolia),
and California buckwheat (Eriogonum fasciculatum).
Non-native grasses provided 100% ground cover.
The
cover material on the 20-ac. project site was evaluated
after the removal of the ornamental species and was
determined to have anywhere from 7 to 12 ft. of soils,
derived primarily from onsite shale, siltstone, and
other bedrock materials. Soil samples from nine test
sites indicated sandy loan, sandy clay loam, and loam
soils. Naturally occurring organic material was found
to be generally higher in quality than in the native
soils outside the landfill boundaries, which was due
to the fact that the project site had been vegetated
and irrigated for an extended time (the landfill has
been in operation since 1961). Except for one test site,
levels of soil pH, salinity, boron, sodium, calcium,
magnesium, nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium were
found to be suitable for native species. Surficial soil
in the northern half of the site was fairly compacted
but in the southern half only loosely compacted. The
contours of the finished slopes were accomplished through
a series of visual berms and benches (for drainage),
resulting in a terraced appearance, and an aboveground
piping system that connects to a series of vacuum-aided
vertical wells and horizontal trenches that collect
landfill gas.
Site
preparation required modification of the existing overhead
irrigation system with a localized deep-water drip system
to encourage deep root growth in the areas to be planted
with mosaics of trees and shrubs. It also included herbicide
eradication of the existing weeds and removal of any
remaining ornamental species throughout the site. All
removed vegetation was shredded and recycled at the
landfill. Because the goal of the final planting program
was to provide visual screening as well as habitat continuity
with the natural slopes immediately adjacent to the
landfill, container plants were established in groups
of 150 mosaics to mimic naturally occurring plant communities
and as an aid in achieving density in the landscape.
Prior to container installation, the entire site was
seeded using three different seed mixes (predominate
plants: bush sunflower, California sagebrush, caterpillar
phacelia, black sage, and native bunch grasses). Seed
collection was done locally, and the container plants
were grown from collected seeds or from seed stock germinated
in the nursery, which allowed for the preservation of
genetic diversity while ensuring that local natural
resources were not depleted. "I like to think
that the Sanitation Districts and the Calabasas Landfill
will be resources to provide seed for future projects,"
says Morell.
Performance
standards for the project were established in the NPS
SUP as a minimum of 50% survival of the container plants
installed after the first year and each year thereafter
and 30% minimum native-species cover throughout the
20-ac. site in the first year. The goal of 75% total
relative cover with native species was established for
the project after five years. To that end, a five-year
maintenance and monitoring program utilizing an NPS-approved
biologist was also stipulated in the permit, with the
monitoring to begin one month after installation. The
goal of the monthly inspections is to evaluate the overall
status of the site, including the condition of the container
mosaics and the drip-irrigation system and to make recommendations
on weed maintenance. Following the first year, monitoring
will be quarterly and results will be included in an
annual performance monitoring survey. Although an original
condition of the permit specified that the irrigation
eventually be phased out, the Sanitation Districts committed
only to minimizing irrigation in an effort to consider
the competing needs of meeting NPS regulatory requirements
and protecting its operation against the potential of
wildfire.
Implementation
of the program began in January 2001, and seed placement
and plant installation was completed in less than four
months. Overhead irrigation was provided three to four
times a week and supplemented as needed with drip irrigation
for the containers. The schedule was modified based
on review by the monitoring biologist and adjusted for
rainfall during the 2001-02 winter season. The site
is currently irrigated once every seven to 10 days,
a regime that allows the uppermost soil layer to dry
out. Weed maintenance is accomplished using an herbicide
when application won't affect native vegetation;
otherwise removal is accomplished with hoeing and hand-pulling.
All green material from weeding and from clearing trails
for gas monitoring is used at the landfill.
"The
time of year of installation was very important,"
says Morell. "We were able to install the containers
and the seed mix in the winter of 2001 to take advantage
of natural rainfall. Because we applied the seed mix
late in the year, the biologist recommended that we
continue to irrigate through the summer to ensure the
established seed would flourish. That, plus the biological
monitoring and continuous weed control, gave us very
good results, but it took this kind of concerted effort
to ensure the natives had that extra boost."
The "concerted
effort" paid off, with both cover and survival of native
species exceeding the NPS's first-year performance standards.
The mean cover of native species on a stratified basis
was approximately 100.3%; in fact, cover of greater
than 100% was found on several transects, reflecting
the multilayered nature of native-plant communities.
Overall cover of native shrubs was 83.1% and native
herbaceous material 17.1%. Non-native cover was measured
at 9.1%, while approximately 26.6% of the site remained
open ground. California bush sunflower was established
as the most abundant species, with more than 3,000 individuals
per acre, while a variety of other native shrub species
had established themselves, including California sagebrush
(Artemisia californica) with 12.1% cover, as
well as ashy-leaf buckwheat (Eriogonum cinerum),
purple sage (Salvia leucophylla), and black sage
(Salvia mellifera), which together contributed
12%. Native grasses were abundant at 1,389 individuals
per acre. Non-native cover included mostly non-native
grasses, including Bermuda grass, which was controlled
by an aggressive initial eradication effort, and onion
weed (Asphodelus fistulosus), mustards (Brassica
spp.), and an exotic species of statice (Limonium
sinatum). Total relative cover of native species
is estimated at approximately 75%.
Overall container-plant
survival was 81.3%, and survival of container plants
in mosaics was approximately 85%. Of the 40 trees planted
on-site, 16 were found alive at the end of the first
year for an overall survival rate of 40%. The Mexican
elderberry (Sambucus mexicana) was established
at approximately 14 individuals per acre, but the California
walnut (Juglans californica) experienced high
mortality with a survival rate of only 30%. Walnut mortality
occurred in both moist and dry conditions (i.e., with
and without overhead irrigation); additionally, walnuts
have been noted to be sensitive to transplantation and
do not typically establish naturally on western-facing
slopes. Five each of coast live oaks (Quercus agrifolia)
and valley oak (Quercus lobata) were planted;
three of the coast oaks were found alive (60% survival)
and four of the valley oaks (80% survival). Oak trees
planted during this project were not planted on the
landfill surface but were limited to adjacent areas
and only on native soil. The Sanitation Districts has
not planted the coast live oak, which is the dominant
native tree found in this area, on the landfill surface
primarily because the Los Angeles County Oak Tree Ordinance
(Title 22 of the Los Angeles County Code - Planning
and Zoning) protects all oak trees of a certain permit
size from damage, encroachment, and removal and does
not exempt voluntarily planted trees. Morell reports
that the Sanitation Districts is currently seeking a
modification to the ordinance to permanently exempt
all voluntarily planted trees - especially trees planted
on areas subject to differential settlement - from the
requirements of the protected-tree permit process.
Native
cover in fully irrigated areas was approximately 100%,
compared to 13% in areas not irrigated from overhead
but receiving water only from the drip system. Although
the success of the native-vegetation cover is attributed
partially to overhead irrigation provided to the seeded
areas immediately after installation - both cover
and density were greatest in areas irrigated by both
the overhead and drip irrigation installed for the container
plant mosaics - Morell says the Sanitation Districts
has no immediate plans to add more overhead systems.
"We're all in a learning curve, and at least
for the immediate future, we've decided to leave
things the way they are, in part to study the long-term
effects."
In
fact, establishing the correct level of irrigation might
become one of the crucial factors in site management,
requiring a balance of three priorities: appropriate
plant growth, integrity of the landfill surface, and
fire control. "The container plants and the seed
mix have to tolerate a certain amount of supplemental
irrigation," says Morell. "Otherwise you
create a hazard condition on the landfill surface instead
of an environmentally beneficial program. We are attempting
to manage the system for evapotranspiration. These soils
have high clay content, and if the surface form cracks,
we may be forced to use heavy equipment to repair the
slope, and this will mean removing the vegetation.
"Fire
control is another issue you don't have to deal
with when you use ornamental vegetation. If a fire in
the adjacent coastal sage community burned up to our
site and our vegetation wasn't moist, it could
burn right onto the facility and impact all the environmental
control systems." One solution Morell is considering
proposing to the park service as the vegetation on the
site matures is using dolomite or shale excavated on-site
to create natural-looking fire breaks. This solution
would replace cutting or mowing perimeter vegetation
and include monitoring to ensure that tall vegetation
establishes itself in front of, but not immediately
adjacent to, gas system components and irrigation lines.
In
March 2002, not quite a year after project installation
was complete, temporary access trails were established
through heavily vegetated areas to ensure that technicians
could make quarterly gas monitoring sweeps. South Coast
Air Quality Management District regulations require
that a landfill be divided into grids of 50,000 ft.2
and the technician walk a continuous course of 2,600
lin. ft. in each grid while taking an integrated air
sample within 3 in. of the ground. Additional revisions
of the original rule require slope and deck monitoring.
In the revegetated site, the trails needing to accomplish
this were cleared by hand in areas where the vegetation
had formed a closed canopy, the goal to trim rather
than remove individual plants. "With ornamental
vegetation, we'd just mow," says Morell.
A particular target has been the well-established bush
sunflower (59.4% cover in the shrub layer), and preliminary
results have indicated that trimming the abundant shrub
has had a beneficial effect by allowing light to reach
smaller shrubs, such as the ashy-leaf buckwheat, needle
grasses, and purple sage. One goal of the monitoring
paths and walkways needed to maintain the gas system - which
the park service preferred be no wider than 3 ft. - is
to mimic existing natural game trails. Deer are already
using the site, and Morell suggests that the monitoring
trails already tie into the natural deer trails in the
adjacent recreation area.
Lessons
Learned So Far?
"One recommendation
I would make to anyone who revegetates using natives
under less-than-ideal conditions is to establish performance
standards based on total cover rather than species composition.
You want to work with the species that are available
and be prepared to make substitutions if some species
does not establish well, either in the nursery or the
field. Figure out what exists in the natural environment,
then what works in your superimposed man-made environment,
and work with that. What this amounts to is acknowledging
the unknown variables that might exist in the environment
so you end up with a result you can measure, plus a
result that provides a lot of wildlife habitat value.
"We
found the native plants prefer to be installed in the
winter and some seeds do better in the summer than others,
so in terms of your seed mix, you want to keep that
in mind when you set the timing of your contract. Also,
if you have enough lead time that you can have seed
germinated in the nursery, your project won't
have as much impact on the local native environment.
Native plants don't establish as quickly as ornamental
vegetation, and they don't give you the instant
gratification of a forested appearance. But I think
that many people who enjoy the natural environment remaining
in southern California see the importance of using native
vegetation. It takes more patience, but what we're
seeing here in Calabasas is that within a year, with
proper management and a very successful seed mix, we
have a facility that's starting to blend in with
the natural areas."
Journalist
Penelope Grenoble O'Malley is a frequent contributor
to environmental publications.
MSW
- March/April 2003
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