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Los Angeles, CA
$325.00
Title
Urban Wildlife Habitat - Los Angeles River
Artist
Ram Vasudev
Medium
Photograph
Description
Los Angeles River wildlife habitat photography by Ram Vasudev
This is an early morning view of the Los Angeles River, a wonderful urban wildlife wetland habitat undergoing restoration. This part of the River is lined with lush green vegetation and is home to a variety birds and fish. Seen here are a Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) and Mottled Ducks (Anas fulvigula)
The LA River is undergoing an extensive rehabilitation in an attempt to return it and its wildlife to the original glory. Historically, the river provided a source of water and food for the Tongya people before the arrival of the Spanish. It was an alluvial river that ran freely across a flood plain that is now occupied by Los Angeles, Long Beach and other cities in Southern California. Its path was unstable and unpredictable, and the mouth of the river moved frequently between Long Beach and Ballona Creek. In the early 19th century, the river turned southwest and discharged into the Santa Monica Bay. A flash flood in 1825 diverted its course to its present one, discharging into the San Pedro Bay. Unpredictable and devastating floods continued to plague it well into the 1930s, leading to calls for flood control measures. The Army Corps of Engineers responded by completely encasing the river's bed and banks in concrete, with only a trickle of water usually flowing down its middle. It served primarily as a flood control channel, fed by storm drains. As a result, much of the original wildlife and 95 percent of the riparian areas were wiped out, according to a recent environmental assessment.
Things are changing quickly for the better, though. A move is afoot, in response to environmental concerns, to rehabilitate the LA River to its splendor of a hundred years ago from the eye sore that it was quite recently. The Army Corps of Engineers, with support from the Federal government, the city and the state, is developing an extensive plan to transform two segments of the river stretching 11 miles in length into green space for natural habitats for wildlife by restoring wetlands that have been lost to urban sprawl. This in addition to cleanup effort from local environmental groups. The process seems to be coming along quickly, as seen in this scene I witnessed this morning. Just a year or so ago, I had noticed lot of trash on the banks, including Styrofoam cups. None of that today, and the River seems quite pristine.
Today, there is an abundance of wildlife on the LA River, including Snowy Egret, Black-necked Stilt, Great Blue Heron, Mallard, Cinnamon Teal, American Coot, Mottled Duck, Muscovy Duck, White Pelican, Canada Goose, Osprey, California High Desert Mourning Dove, Black-chinned Hummingbird, Barn Owl and red-tailed Hawk. Uncommon/rare species include Green Heron, Yellow Warbler, Lazuli Bunting, Loggerhead Shrike, Hooded Merganser, Western Meadowlark, the endangered Least Bell's Vireo, Southern Willow Flycatcher, Orange Bishop and American Peregrine Falcon. These species either nest or live off of the resources of the river. The River is also host to a variety of fish, including Common Carp, Largemouth Bass, Tilapia, Green Sunfish, Amazon Sailfin Catfish, Bluegill, Black Bullhead, Brown Bullhead, Channel Catfish, Fathead Minnow, Crayfish and Mosquito Fish.
In summary, man-made environmental destruction is at least partly reversible, if enough people care about the issue. The LA River is slowly but surely returning to its original glory. Some rivers were never meant to be tamed!
Sources: wikipedia.org, lariverwild.wordpress.com, ladpw.org, latimes.com, weburbanist.com, sepulvedabasinwildlife.org, and me.
Image copyrighted
© Ram Vasudev
All rights reserved
This work is protected by US and International Copyright laws. Do not steal this art by downloading to a computer, printing, copying (including screen capture) or reproducing in any form. It is illegal to do so and all infringements will be pursued to the full extent of the law.
Uploaded
July 4th, 2014
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Viewed 1,606 Times - Last Visitor from Houston, TX on 03/28/2024 at 6:09 PM
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Hemet, CA - United States
Beautiful work! Thank you for submitting your artwork to the Southern California Artist Collective Group where the image is now featured on the home page. Feel free to post this in the Featured archive in the group discussion page section L/F
Strykersville, NY - United States
What a great capture - lovely shared space for these waterfowl. Must be a wonderful place to wander with camera in hand! Just perfect. F/L T P
Columbus, OH - United States
Wow! What a wonderful capture!...Love all of the variety of texture in the greens...and the birds! Beautiful image!...f/v
Plymouth, MA - United States
Wonderful view !!! This is the kind of project that makes my heart sing !!!
San Diego, CA - United States
Ram I would have never guessed LA River! Captivating capture and whatever they are doing to preserve its natural habitat is most definitely working.
Port Orchard, WA - United States
The Great Blue Heron is such an outstanding accent against all the green. Excellent capture.
Vida, OR - United States
So exciting to see these in the wild and great to see the LA River looking like this (it was all concrete when I lived there! - beautiful capture!
Ruskin, FL - United States
what a beautiful scene and glad to hear about the restoration; great capture!
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