Los Angeles River environmental flows: Balancing water reuse and ecological support goals in an effluent dominated, urban river – USA

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Updated: 15/12/2025
Los Angeles River environmental flows: Balancing water reuse and ecological support goals in an effluent dominated, urban river – USA

Project Overview

Conserve Process NO
Enhance Process YES
Apply Complementary YES

Ecosystem Services

Provisioning

  • Provisioning Services are ecosystem services that describe the material or energy outputs from ecosystems. They include food, water and other resources.

Regulating

  • Regulating Services are the services that ecosystems provide by acting as regulators eg. regulating the quality of air and soil or by providing flood and disease control.

Habitat / Supporting

  • Ecosystem services "that are necessary for the production of all other ecosystem services". These include services such as nutrient recycling, primary production and soil formation.

Cultural

  • Cultural Services corresponds nonmaterial benefits people obtain from ecosystems through spiritual enrichment, cognitive development, reflection, recreation, and aesthetic experiences.

Major Issues

No issues provided.

EH Engineering Solutions

Watershed management plans have established conservative and

Watershed management plans have established conservative and aggressive plans to implement low impact design and best management practices (BMPs) to capture and treat stormwater in the Los Angeles River watershed. Many BMPs have already been constructed with the focus on water quality treatment and groundwater recharge. The effect of these BMPs on instream habitats and species was evaluated using the developed flow-ecology curves

Treated wastewater effluent is discharged directly into

Treated wastewater effluent is discharged directly into the Los Angeles River from three water reclamation plants (WRPs; also called wastewater treatment plants) and is the primary source of streamflow during the dry season.

Project Activities

  • Key ecohydrology related activities in the LA River demosite operate on three key dimensions:
  • 1) Data and information collection: this includes monitoring of physical and biological conditions in the river, collection of empirical data to fill key data gaps (i.e., continuous stream temperature data and habitat surveys), and identifying key limiting factors in addition to changes in streamflow that may affect ecology.
  • 2) Knowledge: development of conceptual and computation models that describe key physical and biological processes and future management scenarios being contemplated. These models serve as important tools that can form the basis for flow management and stream restoration decisions in the future that are grounded in science and integrate key processes.
  • 3) Wisdom: a primary goal of this study is to provide user-friendly management tools that take the complicated models and outputs and develop actionable and clear recommendations based on a suite of user-defined priorities. This study included quarterly stakeholder and technical advisory group meetings including scoping meetings from the project inception and meetings focused on the technical approach to the final data products produced. The goal is to ensure that the tools produced are sound and will ultimately be useful for the end users (i.e., stakeholder community, regulators, and managers). Providing useful management tools will help create more rapid implementation.

Expected Outcomes

Modifications to the volume and timing of discharge of treated effluent from the WRPs. Results of the flow-ecology analysis, and the associated tools have been used to evaluate trade-offs and negotiate discharges that promote recycled water use, while still supporting habitats and species supported in the river. In the future, estoration and revitalization actions will be designed to accommodate the agreed upon flows within cross-sections that promote establishment and support of desired habitats.

Latest Results

No results provided yet.

Social-Ecological System

Integrated view of principles, objectives, stakeholders and methodology.

Ecohydrology Principles and Solutions

Hydrological Quantification
  • Quantification of the hydrological processes at catchment scale and mapping the impacts | Ecological engineering (integration, dual regulation and biotechnologies in catchment scale for enhancement of ecological potential)
Ecological Identification
Ecological Engineering & Nature-based Solutions
  • Watershed management plans have established conservative and aggressive plans to implement low impact design and best management practices (BMPs) to capture and treat stormwater in the Los Angeles River watershed. Many BMPs have already been constructed with the focus on water quality treatment and groundwater recharge. The effect of these BMPs on instream habitats and species was evaluated using the developed flow-ecology curves | Treated wastewater effluent is discharged directly into the Los Angeles River from three water reclamation plants (WRPs; also called wastewater treatment plants) and is the primary source of streamflow during the dry season.

Objectives

EH Objectives
Water 5/5
Biodiversity 4/5
Services 3/5
Resilience 4/5
Cultural Heritage 0/5
Project Objectives
  • Culture, Previous studies have documented that numerous outdoor recreational activities occur on the LA River. In various reaches of the LA River, depending on flows and condition of the river bed and bank, recreational activities include kayaking, wading, fishing, horseback riding etc. Education, The LA River provides many educational opportunities to the local primary, middle, and high schools, as well as universities. For example, in Compton, CA, a disadvantaged community that has limited access to green space and nature, local schools have the opportunity to sample water and evaluate conditions of Compton Creek, a major tributary to the LA River. Law, The LA River is protected via the Federal Clean Water Act, the State Porter Cologne Water Quality Act, and the State Fish and Game Code. Policy, Through California Water Code Section 1211 (1211 wastewater change petitions), all wastewater treatment plants that intend to recycle some or all of their effluent must submit a petition illustrating that proposed changes will not adversely affect beneficial uses of receiving waters and ultimately gain approval from the State Water Board. Governance, The LA River is managed collectively by the County of Los Angeles and the US Army Corps of Engineers for selected reaches. The Cities of Los Angeles, Burbank, and Glendale manage treated effluent discharge into the river. Discharges are regulated via permits from the Regional Water Quality Control Board.

Key Stakeholders

University of California, Los Angeles, Colorado School of Mines, University of Portland, University of California Extension, California State University Chico California Department of Fish and Wildlife, US Fish and Wildlife Service, State Water Resources Control Board –Division of Water Quality, State Water Resources Control Board – Division of Water Rights, Long Beach Water Department, LA Mayor – LA River Works, City of Los Angeles, RCD Santa Monica Mountains, Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, LA Regional Water Quality Control Board, Watershed Conservation Authority, Mountains Recreation Conservation Authority, US Bureau of Reclamation, Upper LA River Water Master, LA Department of Water and Power, LA County Public Works, LA County Sanitation District, Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, Calleguas Municipal Water District, Rivers and Mountains Conservancy, Burbank Water and Power, City of Los Angeles, Bureau of Sanitation, Glendale Water & Power, City of Los Angeles LA Sanitation and Environment, LA County Flood Control District, Glendale Water & Power, US National Center for Atmospheric Research. Council for Watershed Health, The Nature Conservancy, Los Angeles Waterkeeper, The River Project, Heal the Bay, Friends of the Los Angeles River Environmental Science Association Consultants, Stillwater Sciences, MBC Aquatics, Studio-MLA, Brown and Caldwell The Environmental Flows Workgroup – subcommittee of the California Water Quality Monitoring Council, the California Environmental Flows Framework Technical Team, the Southern California Stormwater Monitoring Coalition

Methodology