Wetland Restorations in the Sandusky River Watershed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Wetland Restorations in the Sandusky River Watershed

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Wetland Restorations in the Sandusky River Watershed – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wetland Restorations in the Sandusky River Watershed


1
Wetland Restorations in the Sandusky River
Watershed
  • By Ann Keefe
  • Wildlife Specialist
  • Seneca S.W.C.D.

2
Habitat for Healthy Water
Improving Water Quality in Ohios Critical
Coastal Area through Wetland Restoration
Heather Braun and Ann Keefe Ducks Unlimited, Inc.
3
Classes of Freshwater Marshes
Hydric Soil Hydric Vegetation Presence of Water
Wet Meadow
Shallow hemi-marsh
Open water marsh
Shrub-scrub
moist soil
Deep water marsh
4
Wetland Complex Example
Hemi-marsh
Open w/SAV
Shallow/Moist Soil
Wet Meadow
5
Wetland Loss gt 90
6
Wetlands Water QualityNPS Pollution is a Big
Concern
7
Sandusky BayCauses of Nonpoint Source Impairment
  • Organic enrichment
  • Dissolved oxygen
  • Habitat alteration
  • Flow alteration
  • Siltation

235-700 metric tons of sediment annually
8
Office of Coastal Management
  • Coordinate Ohios Coastal Nonpoint Pollution
    Control Program

Slide provided by ODNR Coastal Management
Program, 2003)
9
Habitat Alteration
Intensive Agriculture and Urban Sprawl Result in
major wetland losses
10
Wetland Benefits
  • Wildlife habitat
  • Groundwater recharge
  • Flood storage
  • Water quality
  • often overlooked !!

11
Flood Protection
  • Wetlands associated with rivers and lakes capture
    and retain water, reducing the duration and
    severity of foods.
  • Inland wetlands intercept surface flow and slow
    it down, reducing the potential for floods and
    minimizing drought.

12
Sandusky County Wetland outlets to Karst sinkhole
13
Wetland Water Quality Benefit
  • DNAP stream monitoring
  • seine Raccoon Creek
  • seine adjacent wetland
  • You compare!!!

 
14
Biological Activity Tremendous in Wetlands
compared to adjacentimpacted stream
15
Wetland Benefits - Water Quality
  • Nutrient and sediment sinks
  • 80 removal of nitrates
  • 92 removal of phosphorous
  • Sediment reduction linked to hydrology
  • 90 reduction of coliform bacteria
  • Pesticide reduction

16
(No Transcript)
17
Grassland Benefits
  • Nesting cover for wildlife
  • Restore native ecosystem
  • Absorb 7 1/2 inches of rain per hour
  • Water quality
  • gt75 removal of sediment
  • 67-96 reduction in nitrogen
  • 27-97 reduction phosphorous
  • 74 reduction of fecal coliform
  • 8-100 reduction pesticides

18
Wetlands Programs..
NAWCA
Habitat For Healthy Water
ODNR-DOW
CCRP
CREP
WHIP
CRP
WRP
USFWS
19
Habitat For Healthy WaterProgram
Ducks Unlimited Erie SWCD Green Creek Hunt
Club Ohio EPA ODNR-Div. Of Wildlife ODNR-Div. Of
Soil Water Ottawa SWCD Sandusky NRCS Sandusky
River Watershed Coalition Sandusky SWCD Seneca
SWCD Winous Point Marsh Conservancy
20
The basics of wetland funding
  • All programs provide cost-share-50 or greater
  • Some provide annual rental payments for
    short-term (i.e. 10-30 years), rates determined
    by soil productivity and by which program you
    choose (paid more for longer years)
  • Some programs provide one time bonuses (i.e. CREP
    pays 500 one time bonus)
  • Or, some provide lump sum payments for long term
    easements on deeds (up to 2500 per acre one time
    for WRP)

21
Land Before Restoration
22
10.9 ac near Muddy Creek before restoration
23
Project Eligibility and Evaluation
  • Location
  • Ohio Coastal Zone?Impaired Streams?Karst
    Region?
  • gt 50 hydric soils?
  • Land use and site characteristics
  • Tile in area?
  • Size
  • Proximity to conservation lands
  • Proximity to other BMPs
  • Length of contract


24

Wetland Restoration
  • Survey and design
  • PermitsArmy Corps, EPA, NEPA, SHIPO
  • Construction management
  • Management plan

25
Basic Restoration Techniques
26
CREP Wetland Seneca County July 11, 2005 Remove
topsoil under footprint of dike
Leave all other hydric soil areas as undisturbed
as possible
27
July 2005 Build dike with pan
28
Long process to compact 6 at time
29
Remember to keep toe clear
Allows gentle slope 31 or greater? more natural
transition, limits seepage
30
Wetland Sept 2005
Dikes are seeded in August, and begin to green up
by September. Water begins to pool in borrow
areas.
31
Sept 2005 first wetland plants germinate
Crop field begins to flood and wetland plants
start to replace the soybeans.
32
April 19, 2006 wetland fills with spring rains
wildlife moved in
33
Shorebirds, teal, mallards, geese, numerous
amphibians, wetland plants
34
Good buffers make good wetlands!
35
Muddy Creek Wetland before and after
36
Lake Erie Wetland RestorationErie County
BEFORE
AFTER
37
Close-up of Erie CountyWetland Construction
AFTER
38
Pickerel Creek Wetland
BEFORE
AFTER
39
Conclusions and Recommendations
  • Landowners want programs that restore wetlands
  • Wetlands are an overlooked component of approach
    to watershed health
  • More research and monitoring to determine
    relative effectiveness of wetlands
  • Partnerships are the key to accomplishing common
    goals

40
Thank-you!
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