Entry ID | 2671 | ||||||||||||||
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Name of Applicant Organization (if applicable) | Red Rock Lake Association | ||||||||||||||
Address of Applicant Organization | PO Box 292 Pella, Iowa 50219 Map It | ||||||||||||||
Project Leader | Rich Paris | ||||||||||||||
Project Leader Address | 390 Hickory Lane Otley, Iowa 50214 Map It | ||||||||||||||
Project Leader Phone | (641) 891-4494 | ||||||||||||||
Project Leader Email | Email hidden; Javascript is required. | ||||||||||||||
FOR Member/Group Sponsoring the Project | Red Rock Lake Association | ||||||||||||||
Reservoir Name | Lake Red Rock | ||||||||||||||
Project Title | Lake Red Rock Fish Habitat Enhancement Project | ||||||||||||||
Google Maps Location | Marion County, Iowa 41°22′21″N 92°58′51″W | ||||||||||||||
Map of Reservoir (Required) | Figure-1.-Lake-Red-Rock-Area-Map3.pdf | ||||||||||||||
In which region is the reservoir located? | Temperate Plains (TPL) | ||||||||||||||
U.S. Congressional District | 1st US Congressional District of Iowa (Rep. Marianette Miller-Meeks R) | ||||||||||||||
Project Objectives | Project Objectives: To increase structural habitat, improve angler opportunities and enhance the quality of the fishery in Lake Red Rock. Surveys indicate that a healthy and productive fishery will be a stimulus to local economies and encourage relocation to productive communities. The objectives of this project will provide quality structural habitat for natural spawning, nursery locations for young fish, congregation areas for forage fish and feeding opportunities for predator fish. | ||||||||||||||
Priority Impairments addressed by the project: |
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Target Fish Species addressed by the project: |
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On-the-ground Start Date | 06/01/2024 | ||||||||||||||
On-the-ground End Date | 09/30/2025 | ||||||||||||||
Amount of Grant Request | $56,500 | ||||||||||||||
Amount of Non-Federal Funding | $121,720 | ||||||||||||||
Total Estimated Project Cost | $124,600 | ||||||||||||||
Project Overview | Project Overview: Lake Red Rock is a flood control reservoir on the Des Moines River, operated by the US Army Corp of Engineers (USACE), with initial construction beginning in 1960 and culminating with the completion of the dam in 1969. Located in the north central portion of Marion County Iowa between the towns of Knoxville and Pella with the primary purpose of flood risk management, but also authorized to provide wildlife management, fisheries management and other outdoor recreation opportunities. At elevation 742, normal conservation pool, Lake Red Rock is the largest lake in Iowa with a surface area of 15,250 acres, at full flood pool elevation of 780; the lake surface area exceeds 65,000 acres. The project area around the lake encompasses over 50,000 acres of fee land that consists of various upland terrains and has 25,000 acres of flowage easement, making Red Rock Reservoir the largest public land holder in Iowa; which is utilized by hundreds of thousands of outdoor enthusiast year round. Amenities are diverse and numerous around the lake that include multiple access points to the lake either along shorelines or at boat ramps for fisherman, boaters and other water recreationist. Campgrounds, picnic areas and year round cabins are available for use in public parks surrounding the developed portion of Lake Red Rock, with the upper undeveloped reaches of the project area primarily utilized by hunters and nature seekers. The USACE manages several recreation areas along the lake and below the dam in the tail water area, the Iowa Department of Natural Resources manages Elk Rock State Park (IDNR) on the south side of the lake and the Marion County Conservation Department (MCCD) manages Roberts Creek Park and Cordova Park on the north side of the lake, both the IDNR and MCCB areas are fee agreement contracts with the USACE (Figure 1. Lake Red Rock Area Map). Multi use trails adjacent to the lake are abundant and the trail surfaces vary from earthen to granular to hard surfaced. These trails connect many of the recreation areas to each other, with one hard surfaced trail culminating in the city of Pella. Current Habitat As is typical of a large flood control reservoir as described in the RFHP “Reservoir Fish Habitat Management” manual, sedimentation carried into the basin from a vast drainage is a key issue to deal with for fisheries management. "Unlike natural lakes, reservoirs tend to have large watersheds and large tributaries because they were engineered to capture as much water as possible to serve flood control…. Depositional filling effectively results in surface area and volume reductions, habitat fragmentation, loss of depth, and associated changes in water quality. Unnatural water-level fluctuations interact with wave action to degrade shorelines that were once uplands and are unable to withstand continuous flooding, which promotes erosion and ultimately homogenization of once diverse littoral habitats. Lack of woody debris deposition in the littoral zone, limited access to adjacent backwaters, and lack of seed banks and stable water levels to promote native aquatic vegetation characterize barren littoral habitats in many reservoirs" (2017 Dr. Miranda, Reservoir Fish Habitat Management, 1.1 Introduction). This is the perfect assessment of conditions at Lake Red Rock and describes how the current habitat conditions have been formulated. Once the dam began operations, reservoir inflows and water level fluctuations exceeded expectations. Natural lake bottom structures began to degrade or even disappear and sediments started to accumulate, which created a muck/silt substrate, which over several years has become a predominately featureless stratum and virtually no aquatic macrophyte presence. Plan The habitat project is being implemented to improve degraded or nonexistent littoral structure in Lake Red Rock to bolster the fishery and increase angler success. The objectives of the project are to provide quality fish habitat in Lake Red Rock that will promote natural spawning, provide nursery habitat for fry and fingerlings, allow for congregation of forage fish and opportunities for predatory fish. To accomplish the goals of the plan, artificial fabricated fish structures (Mossback) in conjunction with natural materials, where feasible, will be placed in areas that will best promote the objectives of the project. Depth, shoreline composition, susceptibility to shoreline erosion from wave action and safety for other water recreationist will be scrutinized prior to placement of new habitat structures. The enhancement project will benefit any fish species that utilize physical structure, which include Largemouth Bass, Crappie and Bluegill. All three of these species are sought after by Lake Red Rock anglers. Channel Catfish will also benefit from the new structures, as will Walleye and White Bass to a lesser degree, primarily as nursery cover to facilitate growth until migrating to more open water areas. As an additional benefit to the project, the ACOE will be completing an already scheduled riprap project, doing two sections of shoreline stabilization with riprap in spring of 2023. One of the shoreline areas will be within the targeted area of the fish habitat enhancement project on an area referred to as Whitebreast Point and the other will be the T’Lam section (Figure 10.). 5400 tons of shot rock base and 10,500 tons of riprap will be used to stabilize a length of 1046 feet by 60 feet of shoreline in the T’Lam section; 3220 tons of shot rock base and 2200 tons of riprap will be used to stabilize a length of 350 feet by 60 feet of shoreline in the Whitebreast Point section, total combined cost for both sections will be $1,956,000. The Fishery The recreational fishery at Lake Red Rock is diverse, many fishermen are generalist looking to catch any fish, but many other fishermen are targeting specific species. Crappies, Channel Catfish, White Bass and Largemouth Bass are the most desired species sought after by anglers. Channel Catfish and White Bass are the most consistent for anglers to catch, Crappies are more easily harvested during spawning in April and May, but anglers have fair success all summer “Spider Rigging”. Several fishing clubs will host fishing tournaments at various times of the year for Crappies, Channel Catfish and Largemouth Bass. Very little ice fishing is done on Lake Red Rock, partially due to the difficulty in locating fish, changing water levels and varying ice thickness. In recent years, anglers have hard sporadic success catching crappies through the ice in the Competine Creek arm. The biggest obstacle to angler success is the lack of structure in the lake, making it more difficult for fisherman to locate fish. One of the priorities of this project is to provide more permanent habitat to create better opportunities for the fishery and anglers. Anglers visiting Lake Red Rock come from neighboring states as well as from local communities. According to the 2019 Iowa Lakes Survey, 78% of visitors to the lake are within 90 miles, with the average visitor traveling 60 miles. Expenditures averaged $32.95/day per Iowa trip takers. Lake Red Rock attracts an estimated 318,000 day trips per year, versus the statewide average of 65,000. This visitation rate generates in excess of 19 million in expenditures and is consistently one of the top seven visited lakes in Iowa (Krogman, IDNR, personal communication). A study by the American Sport Fishing Association in 2020 outlined the economic benefits of the four congressional districts in Iowa. In US Congressional District 1 and District 3, the two congressional districts encompassing the Lake Red Rock area, anglers created $179.9 million in retail sales and 1890 jobs (American Sport Fishing Association 2021). This suggests that Lake Red Rock greatly contributes to local economies and that a quality fishery is worth the expense to enhance and maintain. The Vermeer Foundation, Kuyper Foundation and Rolscreen Foundation, contributing partners, also recognize that quality recreational opportunities assist in recruiting and retaining a dedicated workforce as demonstrated by their financial support to the project. According to latest survey information provided by IDNR fisheries, abundant numbers of Channel Catfish, Crappies and White Bass were recorded. The amount of preferred sizes for each though was a small percentage of the total; 10% of Channel Catfish – 24-28 inches, 12% of Crappies – 10-12 inches and 16% of White Bass – 12-15 inches (Figure 11.). The IDNR stocked 10 million Walleye fry in 2021 and 1 million Hybrid White Bass in 2022, but by most estimates, survival rate to adults for stocked fry is only 2%. | ||||||||||||||
Project Methods | Project Methods: With technical assistance from the Iowa DNR Fisheries bureau, locations will be identified that exhibit the most promising features for placement of structural habitat, predominately in the Whitebreast Creek and Competine Creek arms of Lake Red Rock. The project we are requesting assistance for will encompass purchasing Mossback Fish structure (Figure 13.) or comparable materials to be constructed (Figure 14.), which will then be placed at the selected locations. Plans at this time are to purchase: 42 Essential Shallow Water Bundles, 20 Essential Deep Water Bundles, 22 Basic Shoreline Bundles and 14 Mega Reefs as recommended by IDNR staff. The habitat enhancement project will directly impact the amount of physical structure and increase the viability of the Lake Red Rock fishery and can be measured as follows: | ||||||||||||||
Monitoring Plan | Monitoring Plan: Red Rock Lake Association members and USACE personnel will conduct angler interviews in 2023 and prior to deployment of new fish habitat structures in 2024, with technical advice from Iowa DNR Fisheries Bureau. Data from these interviews will be compared to data from subsequent surveys after the introduction of new habitat. This data will allow for comparison of angler catch success, locations of success and satisfaction of success and see if these align with the placement of new fish structures. This information combined with the Iowa Lakes Survey, which is conducted every five years, should enable a better calculation of visitation and economic impact. IDNR staff will utilize sonar mapping to assist in providing accurate descriptions of new habitat locations and monitor any changes in habitat quality. IDNR staff will provide comprehensive fish sampling using electrofishing and hoop nets to survey all species present for two years, plus data analysis. | ||||||||||||||
Outreach Plan | Outreach Plan: The Red Rock Lake Association membership will enlist and coordinate volunteers in conjunction with an already established USACE volunteer program. Companies associated with the foundation partners will be encouraged to provide teams of employees to assist with components of the project. The opportunities to be involved will be primarily with the assembly and deployment of the fish habitat structures for which the requested funding is being utilized. Awareness of, and recruitment of volunteers for the Lake Red Rock Fish Habitat Enhancement Project will be shared by in person contacts, on the RRLA website and Facebook page, on the Lake Red Rock USACE Facebook page and displays at the Visitor Center, on the Marion County Conservation Facebook page and through informational packets created for local media sources (Figure 15. Illustration of a display for a previous small grant project). Progress throughout the course of implementing the project will be updated on RRLA, USACE and MCCB social media outlets. The RRLA firmly believes that involving community members in the success of this project will lead to more engagement and ownership of recreational needs and improvements in and adjacent to Lake Red Rock. | ||||||||||||||
Please list the project deliverables (with quantities whenever possible). |
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Will the project deliverables have an impact on potential climate effects on reservoir habitat conditions? | No | ||||||||||||||
Will state agency staff be involved in the project? | Yes | ||||||||||||||
State Agency Involvement | IDNR staff will utilize sonar mapping to assist in providing accurate descriptions of new habitat locations and monitor any changes in habitat quality. IDNR staff will provide comprehensive fish sampling using electrofishing and hoop nets to survey all species present for two years, plus data analysis. A new bathymetric survey of Lake Red Rock was done in 2022 and will be utilized to prepare a fish habitat management plan. | ||||||||||||||
Agency Letters of Support and Plans |
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Does the project involve one or more youth groups? | Yes | ||||||||||||||
Please list all partners involved in the project: |
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Some folks are having issues with the above table. If you have any issues whatsoever, please upload your partner list here. | |||||||||||||||
Budget Narrative | Narrative: At least 84 Mossback Fish Habitat bundles, 14 Mossback Fish Habitat Mega Reefs, concrete blocks, waterline, innerduct conduit, wire, cable and hardware to anchor structures will be purchased and placed in Lake Red Rock. Paid labor will be provided by the Iowa DNR Fisheries Bureau staff, Marion County Conservation staff and Army Corp of Engineers staff. Duties include planning and coordination, construction and placement of structure and data collection and analysis. Volunteer labor will be provided and coordinated by the Red Rock Lake Association, estimated at 550 hours; this number includes .7 man-hours/structure (498 structures) to construct fish habitat and 1.5 man-hours/bundle for placement of each structure bundles, hours for angler interviews and coordinating purchase of materials. An additional 30 hours will be provided by Central College students for assembly of fish structures. Paid staff labor is calculated at $24/hour and volunteer labor is calculated at $18/hour per grant application instructions. See. Figure 16. uploaded Project Budget Detail table in Partner Upload box. Budget Narrative: As illustrated in the project budget table, find the following details: | ||||||||||||||
FiscalYear | 2024 |
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