San Diego Citizen Watershed Monitoring Consortium Saturday, 11th October 
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SDCWMC > Watersheds

San Diego River Watershed

Map of Penasquitos watershed


With a land area of approximately 440 square miles, the San Diego River watershed is the second largest hydrologic unit (HU) in San Diego County. It also has the highest population (~475,000) of the County's watersheds and contains portions of the cities of San Diego, El Cajon, La Mesa, Poway, and Santee and several unincorporated jurisdictions. Important hydrologic resources in the watershed include five water storage reservoirs, a large groundwater aquifer, extensive riparian habitat, coastal wetlands, and tidepools.

Approximately 58.4% of the San Diego River watershed is currently undeveloped. The majority of this undeveloped land is in the upper, eastern portion of the watershed, while the lower reaches are more highly urbanized with residential (14.9%), freeways and roads (5.5%), and commercial/ industrial (4.2%) land uses predominating.

The five reservoirs in the San Diego River watershed supply water to as many as 760,000 residents in the region. Other areas including the Cleveland National Forest, Mission Trails Regional Park, and the river flood plain near Lakeside represent three important undeveloped areas that host a wide variety of intact habitats and endangered species like the arroyo toad, least bell's vireo, and the southwestern pond turtle. In addition, Famosa Slough, near the mouth of the San Diego River contains extremely productive wetlands habitat.

The mouth of the river discharges into the Pacific Ocean at the community of Ocean Beach. Beach postings and closures from elevated levels of coliform bacteria more than doubled between 1996 and 1999 due to urban runoff and sewage spills. Discharge from the San Diego River outlet may also influence water quality in other nearby coastal areas including Sunset Cliffs, Pacific Beach, and Mission Beach.
Hydrologic Areas: Lower San Diego, San Vincente, El Capitan, Boulder Creek
Major Water Bodies: San Diego River, El Capitan Reservoir, San Vincente Reservoir, Lake Murray, Boulder Creek, Santee Lakes

If you would like to select one of these major water bodies as your collection site, follow these instructions to get the information you will need for the registration form:

  • Copy the name of the water body (e.g., San Marcos Creek).
  • Go to www.topozone.com and paste the water body name in the place name field.
  • Select CA and click the Search button. The results will look similar to the screenshot below: www.topozone.com results for San Onofre Creek

    The information you will need to write down or copy from the results are:

    • Type: the water body type.
    • USGS Quad: the Nearest City field on the registration form.
    • Lat: the latitude.
    • Lon: the longitude.
  • Enter the information into the Collection Site Information section of the registration form.

If you need assistance in selecting a collection site, please contact us. We'll be happy to help you find a site that's as close to your group' or school's location as possible.