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Tijuana Watershed
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Map of Tijuana watershed 

Hydrologic Unit 911.11 - 911.85
Hydrologic Areas:
Tijuana Valley 911.1
Potrero 911.2
Barrett Lake 911.3
Monument 911.4
Morena 911.5
Cottonwood 911.6
Cameron 911.7
Campo 911.8
Major Water Bodies: Tijuana River, Cottonwood Creek, and Tijuana Estuary 
CWA 303(d) List: Tijuana River: eutrophic, coliform bacteria, organic enrichment/ low dissolved oxygen, pesticides, solids, synthetic organics, trace elements, and trash  
Tijuana River Estuary: eutrophic, coliform bacteria, lead, nickel, pesticides, thallium, trash Pacific Ocean at the Tijuana River mouth: coliform bacteria
Major Impacts: surface water quality degradation, trash, sedimentation, eutrophication, habitat degradation and loss, flooding, erosion, and invasive species
Constituents of Concern: Freshwater: coliform bacteria, nutrients, trace metals, pesticides, miscellaneous toxics, low dissolved oxygen, and trash Groundwater: TDS, nitrates, petroleum, MTBE, and solvents
Sources / Activities: urban runoff, sewage spills, industrial discharges, agricultural / orchards, livestock / domestic animals, and septic systems
 

The Tijuana River watershed encompasses a region of approximately 1,750 square miles on either side of the California – Baja California border, and in terms of water quality degradation is probably the most severely impacted watershed in San Diego County.  Although only 27% of the watershed area is within California, the river discharges to the Tijuana Estuary and Pacific Ocean on the U.S. side of the international border.  On the U.S. side of the border, the cities of Imperial Beach and San Diego, and San Diego County have portions of their jurisdictions within the watershed.   The cities of Tijuana and Tecate are the most important urban centers on the Mexican side.  The current population of the entire watershed is approximately one million people.

The Tijuana River watershed is classified as a Category I (impaired) watershed by the State Water Resources Control Board due to a wide variety of water quality problems.  These problems are largely a result of non-point agricultural sources on the U.S. side of the border and a large variety of point and non-point sources on the Mexican side.  The Tijuana Estuary, a National Estuarine Sanctuary that supports a variety of threatened and endangered plants and animals, is threatened by inflows from the Tijuana River containing high concentrations of coliform bacteria, sediment, trace metals (copper, lead, zinc, chromium, nickel, and cadmium), PCBs, and other urban, agricultural, and industrial pollutants.

 

Binational information in Spanish and English / Información binacional disponible en español e inglés
 

There are many
beneficial water uses within the Tijuana Watershed as designated in the State Water Resources Control Board's San Diego Region Basin Plan.

 

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Leadership, cooperation, and education are the most
important tools we have for compelling change.
 
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