
Saratoga Springs. Photo by Bruce Rogers, USGS.
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Southern marshes
Saratoga and Valley Springs: both of these wetlands are located near the
southern boundary of Death Valley National Park. Saratoga
Springs consists of several spring mouths that provide
water to three large open water ponds. The
ponds total 6.6 acres when their areas are combined.
Given their size, this may be the third largest marsh
habitat in the Park behind the Saline Valley
marsh in the western portion of the Park and Cottonball
Marsh in central Death Valley.
Valley Springs is located
along the Amargosa River channel
five miles northwest of Saratoga Springs. The input
of water along various points of the river channel
is responsible for the presence of permanent water
along a two-mile reach of the river channel.

Picture of Saratoga Springs pupfish
from external
website. |
Wetland diversity
The fauna of these two wetlands is relatively diverse. The Saratoga
Springs pupfish lives only in Saratoga Springs ponds.
Five rare invertebrate species also occur at Saratoga
Springs and include the Amargosa tryonia snail, the
Amargosa spring snail, the Saratoga Springs belostoma bug, the Amargosa naucorid bug, and the Death
Valley June beetle. The first four species are strictly
aquatic in nature and live only in Saratoga Spring. The
June beetle lives on land, but its distribution
is limited to saltgrass habitats where shallow ground
water is present. The June beetle and
both snail species have distributions
which are entirely confined to the Amargosa River drainage.
Five notable bird species are known to occur at Saratoga
Springs: the yellow warbler ,
the Cooper's hawk, the western snowy plover, the long-billed
curlew, and the long-eared owl. All of these species
have been placed on state or federal
sensitive species lists because of habitat loss or population
declines across their geographic ranges. Saratoga Springs
is also unique in that
it is one of the few locations in the Park where red-spotted
toads and
Pacific tree frogs occur in the same area.
Valley Springs is not known to have a unique
invertebrate fauna, but does possess habitat that is
occupied by the Amargosa River pupfish. This pupfish
subspecies only exists at two locations
along the length of the Amargosa River. One site
is inside the Park at Valley Springs, and the other
is outside the Park in Tecopa Canyon.
Valley Springs also has been documented as having
Amargosa Canyon speckled dace, another species of
fish, following flash flood events.
Two rare water-dependent plant communities exist
at Saratoga Spring and the lower Amargosa River.
These include transmontane alkali marsh and alkali
seep habitats. In a review of the California
Natural Diversity Database, only ten alkaline seeps
and seven alkaline marshes exist in records of
the statewide database. The vegetation
at Saratoga Springs and Valley Springs consists
primarily of common reed, bulrush, and saltgrass.
A limited
amount of saltcedar is also present at Valley Springs.
(Excerpt from Wetland and riparian resources of Death Valley National Park and their susceptibility to water diversion activities. 1998, Douglas L. Threloff, NPS)
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