Document Details

Restoring the Heart of a Healthy Estuary: A Review of Restoration in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta and Suisun Marsh

Dylan Chapple, Jennica Moffat, Ron Melcer, Margot Mattson, Kaylee Griffith, Kate Anderson, Kate Anderson, Annika Keeley, Cheryl Patel | December 19th, 2025


The restoration of native species-dominated ecosystems is critical for improving ecosystem health and meeting policy goals in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta and Suisun Marsh (upper San Francisco Estuary, collectively), one of the largest estuarine systems in North America. To accomplish large-scale restoration in this heavily altered system, a variety of projects, programs, and motivations inform restoration planning and implementation. Chapter 4 of the Delta Plan synthesizes restoration goals across these efforts to produce comprehensive ecosystem restoration targets of between 60,000 and 80,000 acres across seven ecosystem types by 2050, but a comprehensive review of restoration progress and planning to date is needed. To fill this gap, this paper analyzes the current state of ecosystem restoration in the upper San Francisco Estuary in the context of the Delta Plan targets. We review current scientific and management literature and implementation approaches, and synthesize acreage totals across completed, in-progress, and planned projects for four ecosystem types where substantial development of restoration in the system has occurred: tidal wetland, non-tidal wetland, riparian, and floodplain. We find that tidal wetland restoration has progressed more rapidly than other ecosystem types, motivated by mitigation requirements related to the federal Endangered Species Act. Across all ecosystem types, we identify both promising progress and clear needs for accelerated planning and implementation of restoration projects to meet Delta Plan 2050 targets, and discuss ongoing needs related to science, funding, and implementation.

Keywords

ecosystem restoration, endangered species, native fish, Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, science management, wetlands