Overview
-
Status
Ongoing -
Estimated Completion
2023 -
Location
Three Mile Lake, Iowa -
Grants Received
$300,000 -
Partners
Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Union County Board of Supervisors, Union County Conservation Board, Southern Iowa Rural Water Association, City of Creston Water Works, High Lakes Outdoor Alliance, Union County Soil and Water District, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship
Three-Mile Lake is an 880-acre multi-purpose reservoir located in rural southern Iowa. The lake was constructed in 1995 with a main focus of providing public drinking water to 30 towns and over 13,000 rural water customers. In addition to a public water supply source, the lake offers many recreational opportunities including no-wake areas for fishing, sailing, and a designated zone for powerboating and water skiing. The lake is surrounded by hundreds of acres of wildlife management areas for public hunting and wildlife viewing. The Union County Conservation Board manages a portion of the public land around the lake and provides amenities such as a full-service campground, primitive campground, rental cabins, event lodge, swimming beach, and playground areas providing year-round recreational opportunities.
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Why It Matters
Fish habitat is an important component of reservoir fish management. Sportfish need a diversity of fish habitat for spawning, foraging, cover from predators, and winter and summer refuge. Some fish habitat structures (ie. dirt mounds, rockpiles, cedar tree brushpiles) were constructed when Three-Mile Lake was constructed in the early 1990’s. In 2016-2017, cedar tree brushpiles and rockpiles were added to the lake using donated materials. However, quality fish habitat is still lacking at Three-Mile Lake especially rock structures. The rock structures create small crevices that attract aquatic invertebrates. Aquatic invertebrates are an important food source for fish therefore fish are attracted to the structures. These structures can improve fishing success for anglers as well. The rock structures can improve fishing success for anglers by acting as “fish attractors”. New rock structures including gravel spawning areas, rockpiles, rock fields, and rock reefs will be added to the lake during the Three-Mile Lake Restoration Project that will be new “fish attractors” for anglers at Three-Mile Lake.
Three-Mile Lake currently supports a quality Largemouth Bass population with good numbers of bass exceeding 15 inches. This makes Three-Mile Lake attractive to bass tournament anglers. Three-Mile Lake hosts over 20 bass fishing tournaments annually. The addition of new rock structures will create additional areas for tournament and recreational anglers to fish at Three-Mile Lake.
First, this project will connect audiences to the outdoors by providing a quality fishing opportunity for the local community and visitors. The water quality and fish habitat improvements will create a restored lake that will be attractive to anglers fishing the Creston area lakes. Secondly, this project conserves wildlife and wildlife habitats by utilizing a comprehensive lake restoration approach from the watershed to the lake itself. The addition of best management practices in the watershed as well as in-lake sediment/nutrient retention to improve the water quality in the lake will benefit all sportfish in the lake. The fish habitat improvements will create “fish attractors” for anglers to have more successful fishing trips to Three-Mile Lake.
Three-Mile Lake is considered a major destination fishery in Iowa. The Iowa DNR’s Fisheries Research Section conducted a roving creel survey at Three-Mile Lake from 2016-2021. According to their survey, Three-Mile Lake draws anglers from the Omaha, NE/Council Bluffs, IA and Des Moines, IA. In fact these two urban centers are second only to Creston, IA (local community) as a source of anglers for Three Mile Lake. These two urban centers are also home to Bass Pro Shops retail stores. Therefore it is likely that anglers from these urban centers shop at their local Bass Pro Shop before traveling to Three-Mile Lake for fishing.
What FOR Is Doing
After the 2018 watershed assessment, the Iowa DNR began to work with a private engineering firm, FYRA Engineering Inc., to identify additional restoration practices that can be implemented within the watershed as well as in-lake improvements that can lessen sedimentation from the lake’s agriculture-intensive watershed and ultimately improve the lake’s water quality. Two new embankments will be constructed in critical areas of the Three-Mile Lake Wildlife Management Area (WMA). Three existing ponds on the Three-Mile Lake WMA will be dredged to increase capacity for sediment retention. Three-Mile Lake has a large (25 acres) sediment/nutrient retention basin at the upper end of the reservoir. However, over time this basin has become full of sediment that is beginning to spill over into the lake. FYRA is investigating options to improve this structure either through targeted dredging, raising the elevation of the silt dam, or constructing a secondary silt basin below the existing structure. The option selected to improve this important structure will depend on United States Army Corps of Engineers permitting as well as available funding. Two additional in-lake silt basins will also be constructed in reservoir tributaries that receive considerable sediment/nutrient delivery.
In addition to the sediment catchment basins, the Three-Mile Lake stakeholders plan to prevent shoreline erosion into the lake due to wind and wave action. Shoreline erosion can lead to increased turbidity and negatively impact the lake’s water quality. The water level will be lowered by a maximum of 12 feet beginning in fall 2022 for shoreline improvements. Many areas of the shoreline are eroding into the lake leading to water clarity issues. Over 1,300 feet of shoreline in critical need of repair will be deepened and armored with Class E rip rap. An additional up to 13,000 feet of shoreline will be armored with Class E rip rap to prevent future shoreline erosion into the lake. Fishing jetties are popular locations for shoreline anglers to access the lake. Two of the 10 existing fishing jetties will be extended and three of the fishing jetties will be benched to create improved shoreline fishing opportunities for anglers.
While the lake is lowered in 2022-2024 for in-lake restoration activities (shoreline armoring, construction of in-lake silt basins, etc), new rock fish habitat structures including 30 gravel spawning areas, 20 rockpiles, 10 rock fields, 10 rock reefs, and five extra wide rock reefs will be constructed to improve rock fish habitat in Three-Mile Lake. The spawning areas will consist of small limestone chips placed in 18-42 inches of water for panfish species such as Bluegill Lepomis macrochirus and Crappie Pomoxis spp.to use to deposit their eggs and guard their nests. These nearshore spawning areas are not only beneficial to panfish species for reproduction, but can also be fish attractors for anglers. Rockpiles, rock fields, and rock reefs are constructed using Class E rip rap placed at varying water depths to create unique underwater structures for sportfish. The crevices created by the congregation of rock attract aquatic invertebrates which then attracts sportfish for foraging. These structures not only provide panfish with cover from predator sportfish, but can also act as fish attractors for anglers. These structures are marked with a GPS and the coordinates are uploaded to the Iowa DNR’s Interactive Fishing Atlas (https://programs.iowadnr.gov/maps/fishingatlas/default.html ) so that anglers can locate these structures in real time. Over 1,300 feet of shoreline in critical need of repair will be deepened and armored with Class E rip rap. An additional up to 13,000 feet of shoreline will be armored with Class E rip rap to prevent future shoreline erosion into the lake. The shoreline improvements will not only prevent future water quality issues, but will also provide some additional underwater rock habitat for sportfish. Fishing jetties are popular locations for shoreline anglers to access the lake. Two of the 10 existing fishing jetties will be extended and three of the fishing jetties will be benched to create improved shoreline fishing opportunities for anglers.
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