|
CULTURAL
HISTORY
Human
beings have left their mark on the Watsonville Wetlands for thousands
of years, however, the pace of the transformations resulting from human
contact has greatly accelerated in the past 200 years. The first peoples,
the Calendaruc and other Ohlone tribes were hunters and gatherers. They
left their mark on he land by setting fire to the land after harvesting
seeds in autumn thereby discouraging the growth of large woody plants
and promoted the regrowth of the perennial grasses and other plants they
used.
In 1769 Caption
Gaspar de Portola, Governor of Baja California, led an expedition of 64
men up the coast of what is now the state of California. They found a
large meandering wetlands on the floor of the Pajaro Valley. Mosquitoes
were their greatest enemies. He and his men found an abandoned village
containing the body of a large bird stuffed with grass suspended from
a pole. It's been speculated that these sightings gave origin to the name,
El Rio del Pajaro, or 'bird river' The Spanish settlers who followed Portola
concentrated their energies on ranching. Land was cleared for grazing
and new plant species quickly replaced the natives.
They were followed by the American settlers after the California Gold
Rush of 1848 which ushered in the great agricultural era, where dikes
were built to channel water and roads paved for access. So great was the
transformation of the environment of the Pajaro Valley between Portola's
arrival in 1769 and the incorporation of Watsonville in 1868, it has sometimes
been compared to the transition in Europe from a hunting and gathering
economy to an agricultural one.
At the start of the new millennium, the strongest pressures acting on
the valley's environment are related to the urban expansion that is rapidly
transforming the area. Eighty five percent of the valley's former wetlands
have already succumbed to development, resulting in a loss of both numbers
and diversity of plant and animal species.
Despite damage to its ecological functions, the Watsonville Slough system
is still a rich natural resource. With restoration and preservation it
has the potential to regain some of what has been lost.
|