What Do Healthy Horses and Healthy Fish Have in Common?

What do healthy horses and healthy fish have in common? More than you think. Conservation Authorities across Ontario, typically develop big picture aquatic resource management plans for local watersheds that identify what they and private landowners alike need to do to improve the health of local land and water resources. This plan provides a foundation upon which to make environmentally sou
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What do healthy horses and healthy fish have in common? More than you think. Conservation Authorities across Ontario typically develop big picture aquatic resource management plans for local watersheds that identify what they and private landowners alike need to do to improve the health of local land and water resources. This plan provides a foundation upon which to make environmentally sound decisions that balance growth and urbanization with local natural resources, rural communities, and their businesses.

Aquatic Resource Management Plans are developed with the knowledge of past and present fish communities, water quality, and physical conditions like drainage area and geology that define the system’s current state of health. It provides long-term guidance to biologists as they establish priorities for enhancement and protection of sensitive aquatic resources. These plans often get to a level of detail whereby Conservation Authority staff and their partners, can identify issues that are preventing the system from achieving its optimal health. Given that the majority of land within the average Ontario watershed is privately owned, they recognize working with private landowners on their lands is key to addressing these issues.

A fisheries biologist often points directly to the equine landscape as a positive contributor to healthy watersheds and fish communities. Most equine establishments sustain many acres of well-managed pasture. When pasture is grazed on a proper rotation, frost-seeded in early spring to increase plant production, and small depressions or wet areas are drained using French drains, the horse and the fish in nearby streams maintain better health. We know the replacement of pasture or other natural vegetation communities with impervious surfaces like paving found in urban areas contributes to disturbed and contaminated runoff. Scientists have found that when 10% of a watershed is covered by these impervious surfaces, there is a rapid decline in fish habitat and an increase in erosion and loss of bank stability of creek systems.

Well-managed horse pastures improve water quality by capturing sediment and recycling nutrients before they enter a local creek. They also allow water to filter back into the ground, replenishing groundwater resources, which helps to sustain creek base flows and water temperatures for resident and migrating fish populations. Quite simply, these pastures contribute to a better ratio between pervious and impervious surfaces on a watershed scale, contributing to that critical guideline of less than 10% imperviousness

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