The French Creek
Watershed
French Creek is renowned as one
of the most important streams in eastern North America: one that
is rich in biological diversity and has outstanding water quality.
The Nature Conservancy has identified French Creek as a globally
significant watershed, listing it as "one of the last great places
in the United States."
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Geography of French
Creek
French Creek begins in southwestern
New York and winds southward for 117 miles through the Pennsylvania
counties of Erie, Crawford, Mercer and Venango. Joining with
the Allegheny River in Franklin, Pennsylvania, French Creek
is part of the Mississippi drainage rather than the eastern,
Susquehanna River watershed. The French Creek watershed encompasses
1,270 square miles and includes major tributaries such as
Cussewago Creek west of Meadville and Sugar Creek east of
Franklin. En route to the Allegheny River, French Creek
flows past undisturbed natural lands, farms, small cities
and towns, industrial and commercial areas, and second-home
developments. The population of this largely rural watershed
area is slightly under half a million.
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Rich in History
French Creek holds a special
place in American history. It served as a key north-south
route for the Mound Builders and Iroquois Indian tribes, and
was a strategic waterway for the British and French in the
1750s in their struggle to gain possession of the Mississippi
Valley and North American territories to the west. In 1753
George Washington visited the region to assess strength of
the French forces at Fort LeBoeuf. The French Creek region
remained a battleground throughout the French and Indian War
and the American Revolution. For the next century, French
Creek remained a vital transportation route within northwestern
Pennsylvania, moving goods between Lake Erie and the Allegheny
River.
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| George Washington checking
out a Creek Connections display on how students are learning
about the creek that he once canoed in 1753. |
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Rich in Biological
Diversity
Experts recognize French Creek
as one of the most significant natural resources in Pennsylvania
and eastern North America because of the variety of plantsand
animals the stream hosts. More types of fishes and mollusks
are found there than in any other stream in the state. The
stream contains over 70 species of fish and 25 species of
mollusks, several of which are endangered in the state and
in the nation. Fourteen of the creek's fish species are darters
, including the rare eastern sand darter which was rediscovered
in 1991. Freshwater mussels are valuable indicators of water
quality. Research indicates that 25 mollusk species still
inhabit the French Creek watershed and only one species has
been lost compared to historical records. Seven of these mussels
are now found almost nowhere else in the state.
(Shown Left: Pocketbook Mussel)
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Unusual Geology
The biological diversity and water
quality in French Creek stem in part from the stream's geologic
history. Before glaciers covered most of northwestern Pennsylvania,
French Creek flowed north into the Lake Erie/St. Lawrence River
system. The stream therefore contains fauna indigenous to that system.
Glacial erosion and deposition altered the watershed and redirected
the French Creek to join the Allegheny River, enabling the migration
of southern fauna into the present ecosystem. Glaciation is also
responsible for tremendous groundwater resources that provide year-round
flow to French Creek and its tributaries. Glacial sediments in the
watershed contain abundant calcium carbonate (e.g., limestone) that
effectively buffers streams from the highly acidic precipitation
that characterizes the region.
An Ecological
Benchmark
French Creek is remarkably unpolluted
as compared to the other tributaries of the Ohio River drainages,
which have been impacted by intensive row-crop agriculture. Most
streams of comparable size in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois have lost
many native invertebrates and fishes because of siltation and nutrient
enrichment from agricultural runoff, and because of channel alterations
(channelization). By virtue of the low population density and less
row-crop farming in western Pennsylvania, French Creek has sustained
less of an impact, and thus retains surprisingly diverse fauna,
comparable to the diversity found in these other streams before
Europeans arrived. Thus, French Creek can serve as a benchmark for
assessing human impact and for measuring the success of restoration
programs for streams throughout the Ohio River drainage.
Threats to French Creek
The threats to the biological diversity
and good water quality can be attributed to human interaction with
the environment. Non-point source pollution (pollution entering
the stream from no specific location) includes runoff of fertilizers
and pesticides from agricultural fields and lawns. Animal
waste from pastures or from cows entering the stream are adding
to the unnatural nutrient enrichment of the water. Excessive
nutrient levels can cause algal blooms, which eventually die and
use up oxygen in the process of decomposition. Road
salts and sediment from dirt roads also affect the water quality
in the area. Another problem in the watershed is the
lack of riparian buffer zones (streamside forests) along some creek
sections. Riparian zones help to trap sediment and nutrient
runoff from agricultural fields, thus keeping them from reaching
the stream. Point source pollution (pollutants
entering from a specific spot) includes failing sewage treatment
plants and home septic systems and some industrial activity.

Southwest
Pennsylvania Waterways
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