Introduction

Past Floods in the
Lower Mississippi Valley


The Great Flood of 1927

The MR&T Project

Spillway Site Selection

Design Advances

Spillway Operation

Spillway Operational Effects

Natural Resource Values

Environmental Values

Cultural Resource Values

Recreational Values

Return to Home Page

Spillway Operation Natural Resources in the Spillway
Top of Page
Top of Page
Top of Page

Spillway Operation Natural Resources in the Spillway

[Take our Bonnet Carre' Spillway Quiz after reading this brochure.]

Effects of Mississippi River Floodwaters
During operation of the spillway (about once every 10 years), materials suspended in the Mississippi River's water are deposited in the floodway and lakes Pontchartrain and Borgne. In addition, the vast input of fresh water into these brackish and saline lakes has an immediate, short-term, adverse environmental effect.

The long-range effect, however, is extremely favorable because it simulates the natural flooding cycle of the river and provides a replenishment of valuable nutrients to the ecosystem. Spillway openings are strongly associated with increased oyster, crab and other fisheries production in lakes Pontchartrain and Borgne for several years after flood events.

Bonnet Carre' Spillway Water Quality Monitoring Bonnet Carre' Spillway Water Quality Monitoring
New Orleans District monitors water quality and fishery impacts in Lake Pontchartrain during project operations.

With each opening, the river deposits an average of 9 million cubic yards of sediment, mostly silts and sand, within the floodway. These deposits are removed by private contractors and local government agencies for use as fill material in residential and industrial developments. Because most of the surrounding region is near or below sea level, this sediment is a valuable local resource.

Bonnet Carre' Spillway flood waters entering Lake Pontchartrain
Diverted flood water enter Lake Pontchartrain providing valuable nutrients to the ecosystem.

In addition to the infrequent operation of the spillway for flood control, about every other year a small portion of the Mississippi River leaks through the spaces between the timbers of the spillway. This minor diversion of fresh water normally occurs for a few weeks in the spring or early summer when the river is high enough to exceed the elevations of the spillway weir but not high enough to warrant project operation. These minor diversions are termed leakage events (less than 10,000 cfs in comparison to a spillway opening with its design flow of 250,000 cfs).

The introduction of fresh water during leakage events simulates the natural cycle of overbank flooding and provides numerous ecosystem benefits to the aquatic and terrestrial resources in the spillway. These benefits include improved water circulation in the spillway's water bodies, nutrient introduction and restocking of fishery resources. Recreational crawfishing, for example, increases significantly due to the optimal conditions produced by these events. These frequent, small-scale diversions of Mississippi River water are also beneficial to the Lake Pontchartrain estuary.

Crawfishing in the Bonnet Carre' Spillway
Crawfish are abundant in the spillway, largely due to the infusion of fresh water and nutrients during high water in the Mississippi River.

Contact
Kathy Gibbs, CEMVN-PA
Chief, Public Affairs Office
New Orleans, LA
504-862-2201
Kathy.Gibbs@usace.army.mil

Updated May 18, 2005

District Public Affairs Site Marker