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Natural Riparian Resources. Water. Vegetation. Landscape & Soil. Riparian/Wetland Vegetation Groups. Stabilizers Intermediate Colonizers Invaders. Stabilizer group. Establish along streams, rivers, lakes, ponds, springs, & seeps Strong, fibrous, deep root system Rhizomatous
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Natural Riparian Resources Water Vegetation Landscape & Soil
Riparian/Wetland Vegetation Groups • Stabilizers • Intermediate • Colonizers • Invaders
Stabilizer group • Establish along streams, rivers, lakes, ponds, springs, & seeps • Strong, fibrous, deep root system • Rhizomatous • Provide protection against water’s energy
Root Mass (Weight) Root Length Manning, M.E., et al, 1989
Sedges (Carex) “Sedges have edges” Stem Triangular Solid Leaves 3-ranked
Typical Habitat Saturated Soils Beaked Sedge (Carex utriculata) Formerly (Carex rostrata)
Rushes (Juncus) “Rushes are Round” Solid and Round or Compressed Leaves Alternate or 2-Ranked
Typical Growth Pattern Baltic Rush or Wire Grass (Juncus balticus)
True Grasses Stem Hollow With Nodes and Internodes Leaves 2-ranked
Fowl Manna Grass(Glyceria striata) Blue Joint Reedgrass (Calamagrostis canadensis)
Willow Roots Willow Willow Birch Alder Red Osier Dogwood
Intermediate • Plants that are considered colonizers • Establish on freshly deposited soil or disturbed sites • Have intermediate root systems • Can result in proper functioning condition
Spike Rush (Eleocharis pauciflora)
Arroyo Willow (Salix lasiolepis)
Colonizers • First to establish • freshly deposited soil • shallow open water • barren areas • Root systems • stoloniferous or rhizomatous • shallow and relatively weak • Critical to recovery
Water-cress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum) Brook Grass(Catabrosia aquatica)
Short-awned Foxtail (Alopecurus arundinaceus)
Invaders • Replaces stabilizers species as a result of disturbance. • Shallow, less massive root systems • Less protective of streambanks against water’s energy • Noxious weeds
Kentucky Bluegrass (Poa prentensis) East Fork Castle Creek Redtop (Agrostis gigentea) Formerly A.stoloniferand alba
Leafy Spurge Purple Loosestrife
6) There is diverse age-class distribution of riparian-wetland vegetation (recruitment for maintenance/recovery) • Purpose: To determine if the number of age classes that provide recruitment to maintain an area or to allow an area to recover are present. Multiple age-classes usually indicate that riparian-wetland areas can recover or maintain themselves. • Need to determine if reach has potentialfor woody vegetation and if it is necessary for functionality • At least 2 age-classes should be present • One of the age-class should be young • Older age classes can persist in degraded conditions • This is presence/absence issue, not an amount • Closed canopy/late seral types may have limited age-class diversity but still should have some
Wolf Creek Colorado – absolutely requires willow to function
Are there two or more age classes of stabilizer riparian/wetland species present within the riparian area?
Are there two or more age classes of stabilizer riparian/wetland species present within the riparian area?
Sufficient Herbaceous “Age-Class” Diversity – Nebraska sedge
“Yes” Sufficient willow age-class diversity – system “likely” needs willow & herbaceous veg to recover
“No” Insufficient willow age-class diversity (all mature) system needs willow to function
“Yes” Sufficient age-class diversity – Narrowleaf Cottonwood (Populus angustifolia)
7) There is diverse composition of riparian-wetland vegetation (for maintenance/recovery) • Purpose: To determine if the existing species composition is sufficient for maintenance or recovery. Diverse composition of riparian-wetland vegetation (relative to the site’s potential), is necessary to provide stability to the site. • Not all species a site is capable of producing need to be present, but more than two are common and required in most cases • This is a presence/absence question not amount • At least stabilizing species present (upland plants do not count) • Addresses entire riparian area (not just streambanks)
Are there at least two stabilizer riparian/wetland species present within the riparian area?
Are there at least two stabilizer riparian/wetland species present within theriparian area?
Are there at least two stabilizer riparian/wetland species present within the riparian area? There are two but dominated by one (CAAQ)
Castle Cr Utah – functioning well with herbaceous species (2 species of sedge)
“Yes” system needs to recover & has adequate R-W vegetation diversity to do it
“No” Species composition is JUBA and POPR (with some other UPL grasses) 2003
Sand + Popr + Upland Grasses + JUBA patches = Vulnerability to rapid channel response 2005
8) Species present indicate maintenance of riparian soil moisture characteristics • Purpose: To determine if the water table level is being maintained or raised as indicated by the presence of riparian-wetland vegetation. Maintenance of an existing water table or restoration of a former one is vital to the functionality of the system. • Flow regime will dictate the kind and extent of riparian-wetland plants – need to understand site potential • Obligate & Facultative Wetland plants must dominate the reach in order for a yes answer to be given
Indicator CategoriesIn: National List of Plant Species that Occur in Wetlands (USFWS) website -- http://www.nwi.fws.gov/bha/list88.html • Obligate Wetland (OBL):Occur almost always in wetlands. • Facultative Wetland (FACW): Usually occur in wetlands but occasionally in nonwetlands. • Facultative (FAC): Equally likely to occur in wetlands or nonwetlands.
Indicator Categories • Facultative Upland (FACU): Usually occur in nonwetlands. • Obligate Upland (UPL): Occur in wetlands in another region, but occur almost always in nonwetlands.