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Habitat Restoration Aids in Revitalization of Buffalo River

March 04, 2020

Since 2013, NOAA and partners have restored more than 20 acres of habitat at eight project sites along New York’s Buffalo River.

Arial_GLC-Toe-of-Kath-St_crop.jpg Toe of Katherine Street Peninsula in the Buffalo River Area of Concern. (Credit: Great Lakes Commission)

New York’s Buffalo River was once considered one of the most polluted rivers in the United States. It has spent more than 30 years on the list of the most environmentally degraded areas in the Great Lakes region, known as Areas of Concern. Since 2013, NOAA has supported habitat restoration in and around the Buffalo River Area of Concern. We have restored nearly two miles of shoreline and more than 20 acres of habitat across eight project sites—and helping bring the waterway back to life. 

After winding through Buffalo in western New York, the Buffalo River empties into the far eastern edge of Lake Erie, just south of Niagara Falls. For years, as industry in the city thrived, the river was subjected to an influx of industrial waste, sewage, toxic chemicals, and other pollutants. In 1929, a biological survey by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation concluded that the river “seemed to contain no form of fish life.”

Considered “biologically dead” as recently as the 1960s, the Buffalo River suffered from conditions that made it difficult for plants, fish, and other wildlife to survive. This included low levels of dissolved oxygen, high temperatures, and stagnant water flow. In 1987, the Buffalo River was listed as a Great Lakes Area of Concern, one of 43 “toxic hot spots” in the United States and Canada. 

Areas of Concern are designated based on a list of 14 beneficial use impairments. They indicate how a waterway’s poor health is affecting the environment, human health, and the economy. Local, state, and federal partners work to restore an Area of Concern by addressing its impairments. Once all impairments have been addressed, a waterway can be “delisted,” meaning its designation as an Area of Concern is removed.

Since 2010, the NOAA Restoration Center has worked with our partners through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. We have completed restoration work needed to delist Great Lakes Areas of Concern in the United States. We’ve supported more than 70 projects to protect and restore habitat in the Great Lakes states, including in the Buffalo River Area of Concern. 

Construction equipment at a habitat restoration site

Work underway at the Toe of Katherine Street Peninsula project site, one of eight NOAA-supported habitat restoration projects in the Buffalo River Area of Concern. (Photo: Great Lakes Commission)

NOAA, the Great Lakes Commission, Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper, and other partners have worked together on eight restoration projects in the Buffalo River Area of Concern since 2013, including: 

  • Riverbend (Phases I & II)
  • Toe of Katherine Street Peninsula
  • Blue Tower Turning Basin 
  • Buffalo Motor & Generator Corporation
  • Buffalo Color Peninsula
  • Old Bailey Woods
  • Ohio St. Boat Launch 

Together, these eight projects are working to address the river’s habitat impairments. They have stabilized the shoreline, captured and treated stormwater runoff, removed invasive species, reduced erosion, and more. This restoration work is expected to help lead to the delisting of the Buffalo River as an Area of Concern. Improved fishing along the river, renewed opportunities for kayaking and boating, and benefits to the local economy are also returning this river to its community.