Under permitted expansion of operational footprint for industrial materials activities, our client completed a combination of enhancement and preservation along 200 feet on each side of the stream banks on nearly 10,901 linear feet of a perennial stream and two tributaries in Botetourt County, Virginia. Mitigation activities began in September of 2013 and were completed March of 2014, resulting in 10,901 linear feet of preserved stream, 250 linear feet of stream stabilization, 53.6 acres of preserved riparian buffer, and 33.2 acres of enhanced riparian buffer including wetlands, woody species plantings and invasive species management. Including stream resources, the total project area preserved is 95.6 acres. Apex completed monitoring events and recommended treatments associated with invasive species management throughout the wetland stream complex and preservation/enhancement corridor. Year 10 monitoring was conducted in 2023 and in early 2024 the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality approved the completion of permit-required monitoring and transition of the project into long-term management. The site utilizes the area for educational purposes in the local community and in collaboration with regulatory agencies and consulting teams to improve function and value of the wetland and stream complex and enhancement of water quality in the overall watershed. #ApexCompanies #Wetlands #Preservation #AmericanWetlandsMonth Callie Thompson, PWS, CE Grace Nottingham
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Though Arizona’s Horseshoe Reservoir has been used to collect and store water, years of sediment build-up at the reservoir has shrunk its water storage capacity. We wanted to know: what riverside, marsh, wetland, or desert habitat could be established in the footprint of Horseshoe Reservoir if there was a dynamic and ever-changing river, instead of a lake? Explore our StoryMap investigating that question.
Horseshoe Reservoir: An Opportunity to Restore
audubon.org
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Type 3 Wetlands: Shallow Marshes https://conta.cc/3lZtbHa
Type 3 Wetlands: Shallow Marshes - Mitigation Partners, Inc (MPI)
mitigationpartnersinc.com
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Type 4 Wetlands: Deep Marshes https://conta.cc/3SEZFTz
Type 3 Wetlands: Shallow Marshes - Mitigation Partners, Inc (MPI)
mitigationpartnersinc.com
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Type 4 Wetlands: Deep Marshes https://conta.cc/3SEZFTz
Type 3 Wetlands: Shallow Marshes - Mitigation Partners, Inc (MPI)
mitigationpartnersinc.com
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Insightful look at what is happening with watershed management in #Wisconsin's crucial Central Sands region, just northwest of us here in the #Driftless. Courtesy of Esri StoryMap and Wisconsin Wetlands Association. Solid thoughts on how #wetlands may be a solution to a number of #groundwater problems. #conservation #naturalresources.
Hydrology First
https://storymaps.arcgis.com
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Defining the Role of the Structural Engineer in Developing Fire-adaptive Communities By Erica Fischer and Negar Elhami Khorasani The wildland-urban interface (WUI) is where structures or other human development interfaces or intermixes with wildland vegetation. Today, many WUI communities are being threatened by fire or consumed by it. To understand how this predicament came to be with respect to wildfire impacts on communities, the policies and mitigation practices of the past must be understood. At the beginning of the 20th century, the U.S. enacted policies that stipulated fires should be put out immediately within the wildland to protect timber crops. These policies were in reaction to the Big Blowup of 1910, which consisted of over 1,700 fires across Idaho, Montana, and Washington, burning more than three million acres of federal and private land and killing at least 85 people. These fires were estimated to have destroyed about 7.5 billion board feet of timber. Continue reading: https://lnkd.in/gM2itqen
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Great info here - James Beasley points out that there is no silver bullet, and large-scale effective management will require a multi-technique adaptive approach with private landowners and governmental agencies cooperating toward a common goal. https://bit.ly/3yRFNU3
Feral Hogs Are the Invasive Menace You've Never Thought About
wired.com
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See that cylindrical black object being pulled out of the river? That's an instrument used to collect dissolved oxygen (DO) data! The DRBC deployed several of these data collection instruments - called loggers - in the Delaware River Estuary to study DO trends in areas considered nursery grounds for juvenile endangered Atlantic sturgeon. The study targeted low-flow months (late summer- early fall, when DO levels are typically the lowest) and collected data from the top and bottom of the river. Having a robust data set is necessary to understand how DO levels affect young sturgeon. This study was performed in 2023 and will be again in 2024. We also wanted to take the opportunity to remind folks that Tuesday, February 20, 2024, is the last day to submit written comments on the EPA's aquatic life use proposal to upgrade water quality standards in the Delaware River Estuary. Visit https://lnkd.in/gXRCqc2k to submit comments. #DRBC #waterqualitymonitoring #delawarebasin #watershed #estuary #river #scienceandenvironment #watermanagement #waterquality #watermonitoring #waterresources #waterresourcemanagement
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Rewilding the Lower Snake River: A Comprehensive Look at the Benefits Beyond Salmon Recovery https://lnkd.in/gAKpvxK9
Rewilding the Lower Snake River: A Comprehensive Look at the Benefits Beyond Salmon Recovery
timesng.com
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