The Texas Water Resources Institute, TWRI, will host a free Texas Riparian and Stream Ecosystem Education Program workshop from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Nov. 21 in Salado for area residents interested in land and water stewardship in the Salado Creek watershed.

 Salado Creek. (Photo courtesy of TWRI.) The Nov. 21 Texas Riparian and Stream Ecosystem Edcuation workshop in Salado will focus on the Salado Creek watershed.
The Nov. 21 workshop in Salado will focus on the Salado Creek watershed. (Texas Water Resources Institute photo)

Co-hosted by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, Texas Riparian Association and TWRI, the workshop will include a morning session at the Salado Museum and College Park, 423 South Main St., and an afternoon session with a walk and presentations along Salado Creek.

Attendees must  RSVP by Nov. 13 at tx.ag/salado2023, or by email Alexander Neal, TWRI program specialist, Bryan-College Station, at Alexander.Neal@ag.tamu.edu.

The program will also include a lunchtime presentation with a catered lunch being offered for $15 or participants can bring their own lunches. The catered lunch price also helps cover the coffee and snack breaks.

“Riparian education workshops motivate informed landowners and local residents to adopt and support practices to better manage riparian and stream ecosystems,” Neal said. “Not only are water quality and quantity directly benefitted by the proper management, protection and restoration of these critical areas, but also enhanced are the soundness of stream banks, fish communities and aquatic habitats, just to name a few.”

Workshop focuses on Salado Creek watershed efforts

The Salado Creek watershed is the focus of water quality improvement efforts by stakeholders.

“Stakeholders recognize successful water quality improvement requires implementing a variety of management strategies,” said Whitney Ingram, AgriLife Extension agent in Bell County. “The riparian and stream workshop is an educational event supporting this effort.”

Neal said the workshop will focus on the nature and function of stream and riparian zones as well as the benefits and economic impacts from properly functioning riparian systems.

“Riparian areas — the green vegetated land areas adjacent to the bank of a stream, creek, bayou, river or lake — are unique and important ecosystems that provide many benefits including habitat and forage,” Neal said. “The goal of the workshop is for participants to better understand riparian and watershed processes, the benefits of healthy riparian areas and what resources are available to prevent degradation while improving water quality.”

Workshop presentations will be given by representatives of TWRI, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, AgriLife Extension, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, the Texas A&M Forest Service and the Texas Riparian Association.

Neal said they can offer the workshop at no cost thanks to program funding provided through a Clean Water Act nonpoint source grant from the Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Continuing education units offered

Ricky Linex, wildlife biologist retired from the Natural Resources Conservation Service, Weatherford, said participants will receive a certificate of completion and appropriate continuing education unit certificates at the conclusion of the training.

The workshop offers many types of continuing education units, including three units — two general and one integrated pest management — for Texas Department of Agriculture pesticide license holders. Foresters and professional loggers can receive six hours from the Texas Forestry Association, six and a half hours from the Society of American Foresters, and eight hours from the International Society of Arboriculture. It offers seven credits from Texas Floodplain Management Association, seven hours for certified crop advisers, and six hours for Texas Nutrient Management Planning specialists. The program may also be used for continuing education units for professional engineers and architects.

The riparian education program is managed by the Texas Water Resources Institute, part of Texas A&M AgriLife Research, AgriLife Extension and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Texas A&M University.

Contact Neal for more information, or visit texasriparian.org or facebook.com/TexasRiparianAssociation.

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