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Southwest Wetlands Interpretive Association
Mission
SWIA is dedicated to the education in and acquisition, preservation and restoration of wetlands.
History
In 1977, developers were planning an elaborate residential marina in the Tijuana River estuary in Imperial Beach, California. To protect this critical habitat, local environmental activists initiated a grassroots movement to stop the marina development. In 1979 this group formed the Southwest Wetlands Interpretive Association (SWIA), a non-profit 501(c)3. Working cooperatively with the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS), the marina development was blocked and the estuary spared. In 1980 the 505-acre Tijuana Slough National Wildlife Refuge was created to permanently protect endangered and threatened species that depend on the estuary and salt-marsh habitat. In 1982 the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) extended federal protection with the creation of the 2800-acre Tijuana River National Estuarine Sanctuary. The Sanctuary, now known as the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve (TRNERR), contains the Refuge and other public and private land.
In 1990 SWIA, together with California State Parks (CSP), USFWS and NOAA, constructed the award-winning, $1.2 million Tijuana Estuary Visitor Center at the northern end of the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve (TRNERR). In 1992 SWIA was project manager for Ecoparque, an innovative, low tech wastewater recycling project in Mexico. This binational project addressed sewage overflow issues at the border and was funded through the State Coastal Conservancy.
Over the years SWIA has managed cutting edge wetlands restoration projects throughout the Tijuana River Valley. In 1992 the Tijuana NERR Management Authority adopted the Tijuana Estuary Tidal Restoration Program (TETRP) that calls for the restoration of 520 acres of inter-tidal wetlands. TETRP is one of the largest wetlands restoration projects in the nation. In 1997 SWIA managed the first phase of this plan, the Oneonta Tidal Linkage project, which enhanced circulation and increased tidal flushing in 200 acres of intertidal salt marsh. In 1999 SWIA managed the next phase of TETRP, the Model Marsh Project. Through excavation, re-vegetation and natural species colonization this project created a twenty acre intertidal marsh plain with both mudflat and vegetated areas. SWIA is currently the project manager for TETRP II, which is in the process of developing a restoration plan based on Model Marsh research findings for the remainder of the target wetlands. SWIA is currently partnering with the State Coastal Conservancy and United States Fish & Wildlife Service to develop a program to eradicate and control invasive non-native plants in both public and private lands in the Tijuana River Valley.
Who is involved?
Projects
Current projects and priorities:
- Visitor Center
- Goat Canyon Quarry Restoration
- Tijuana Estuary Tidal Restoration, Phase II
- Oneonta Tidal Linkage
- Model Marsh Project
Goals
The ecosystems and research facilities at the Tijuana Estuary are used by faculty and students from many colleges and universities. In order to better understand how estuaries function, there is regular research and monitoring of vegetation, fish, marine invertebrates, birds, reptiles, and exotic species. In addition, water conditions such as salinity and temperature are sampled every thirty minutes at multiple sites throughout the estuary. The Reserve’s Educational Water Quality Monitoring Laboratory uses volunteers to study bacterial contamination of estuarine waters, demonstrating one way in which the education and research missions of the Reserve can be linked.
A primary goal of research conducted at the Tijuana Estuary is to provide sound science for effective management of coastal resources, including wetland restoration. The Reserve has embarked on an ambitious restoration program, aimed at recovering hundreds of acres of lost wetlands. Continued research at the Tijuana Estuary will help guide this effort to recover some of California’s most threatened habitats.
Why we joined the Conservation Resources Network
To be part of a conservation-minded organization in order to achieve
a synergistic network to support land conservation in San Diego
How are we unique?
Business Partnerships?
Contact for more information:
Southwest Wetlands Interpretive Association
P.O. Box 575
Imperial Beach, CA 91933
Phone: 619/575-0550
Fax: 619/424-6420
email: info@swia4earth.org
Web address: www.swia4earth.org
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Southwest Wetlands Interpretive Association
P.O. Box 575
Imperial Beach, CA 91933
Phone: 619/575-0550
Fax: 619/424-6420
Email: email: info@swia4earth.org
Web address: http://www.swia4earth.org/
Our priorities are…
Did you know that…
Since 1979, SWIA has managed $30 million of wetlands projects in the Tijuana Estuary. SWIA works in collaborative partnerships with federal, state, and local agencies and is a cooperating association with California State Parks and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
SWIA supports education programs at the Tijuana Estuary Visitor Center and serves as a public member of the Management Authority plus various committees countywide. SWIA’s volunteer Board of Directors is committed to preserving wetlands and working wherever needed.
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