A pair of watersheds located about 8 mi southwest of Prescott, on the
Prescott National Forest, were gaged in 1958. One watershed designated
as Whitespar A was about 300 acres in size and an adjacent watershed designated
as Whitespar B was 250 acres. The elevations of Whitespar A and B range
from 5,900 to 7,200 ft. The climate is semi-arid with 26 inches of annual
precipitation over 30 yr. About 90% of the streamflow from the untreated
watershed occurred between December and April. Medium-dense chaparral composed of shrub live oak/hairy mountain mahogany (Quercus turbinella/Cercocarpus
breviflorus) habitat type provided a crown cover of about 50%. Whitespar
A was dominated by chaparral with isolated areas of Gambel oak and ponderosa
pine along the upper ridges and north-facing slopes. Whitespar B was totally
covered with chaparral.
The initial research emphasis on the Whitespar watersheds was on water
yield responses, with sediment production as a secondary hydrological
evaluation. The major input and output measurements were precipitation,
stream discharge, and sediment production. There was also emphasis
on developing methods for controlling chaparral and converting a shrub
cover to grass. As the research program evolved, environmental and ecological
issues became increasingly important. One of these issues was increased
nitrate concentrations that had been detected earlier on the Three-Bar
experimental watersheds. The need to convert chaparral in a mosaic
pattern to enhance wildlife, reduce fire danger and nitrate release resulting
from brush control, and improve esthetics strongly influenced later treatments.