Stewards of the Sydenham
Planted over 4 million trees since 1980
Restored over 100 hectares of wetland since 2000
Partners in Conservation
- Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada
- Environment and Climate Change Canada
- Ontario Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry
- Ontario Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks
- Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs
- Walpole Island First Nation – Bkejwanong Territory
- Aamjiwnaang First Nation
- Chippewas of Kettle & Stony Point First Nation
- Chippewas of the Thames First Nation – Deshkan Ziibiing
- Caldwell First Nation
- Delaware Nation – Eelünaapéewi Lahkéewiit
- Munsee-Delaware Nation
- Oneida Nation of the Thames – Onyota’a:ka
- Upper Thames River Conservation Authority
- Salthaven Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Centre
- Ontario Nature
- Ducks Unlimited Canada
- Wildlife Habitat Canada
- Forests Ontario
- University of Windsor Healthy Headwaters Lab
- FishCAST
- TD Friends of the Environment
- Rural Lambton Stewardship Network
- Ontario NativeScape
- ALUS (Middlesex, Lambton, Kent)
- Sydenham Field Naturalists
- Lambton Wildlife Inc.
- Enbridge
- St. Clair Region Conservation Foundation
What can I do?
There are many ways you can be a steward of the Sydenham!
Donate
Donate to the Captive Hatch and Release Program (CHRP). Each dollar will go directly towards actions that directly benefit our native turtles, such as egg collection and protection, site monitoring, habitat restoration, and much more!Donate online here: https://shop.scrca.on.ca/product/captive-hatch-and-release-program/
Plant a tree
Help restore the local environment by planting trees or constructing a wetland on your property. Trees help improve water quality by capturing nutrients and runoff, anchoring soil in place with their roots, and providing cooling shade for streams. But that’s not all – forests and wetlands offer many important benefits such as habitat, clean drinking water, flood reduction.Contact the SCRCA to learn about tree planting programs and possible grant opportunities for rural landowners.
Improve soil health
Whether on a farm or in a garden, improving soil health helps to improve water quality. Cultivate healthy soils by using ground cover (aka cover crops in farming), not disturbing soil structure, increasing organic matter (mulch, compost). Healthy soils are able to retain more moisture so they need less watering.Reduce runoff
Pollution from overland runoff is one of the biggest threats to the aquatic environment. During a heavy rain or the spring snow melt, water moving across the land picks up pollutants like fertilizers, sediment, salt, or pesticides and carries it into local stormwater drains, ditches, rivers and eventually lakes. Planting trees especially along streambanks and shorelines, restoring wetlands, improving soil health, using a rainbarrel, disconnecting rain gutters from septic systems are all ways to reduce runoff and capture pollutants.Only use chemicals like fertilizers at the right time
Be careful not to spread manure, apply fertilizer or pesticides before a heavy rain, on top of snow, or on frozen ground as they will spend little time on the land where they are needed before being washed into local watercourses. In winter, also try to reduce your use of road salt only to what is needed.Just as nutrients from fertilizers and manure help grow plants and crops on land, they also help to grow plants in water – this results in algal blooms and low oxygen levels that fish and other aquatic animals need to survive.

