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<br />reported that 10% of the ponds contained fish. These responses may have <br />represented the percentage of ponds that were stocked with sportfish species <br />since all floodplain ponds sampled by the Colorado Division of Wildlife <br />contained fish. <br /> <br />Mapping the floodplain revealed little difference (only a few inches in <br />elevation) between the 50- and 100-year floodplains (Colorado Water <br />Conservation Board 1996a,b). Generally, the boundaries of the 50- and 100- <br />year floodplains overlap. Of 246 ponds between Palisade and Loma, Colorado, <br />55 were above the 100-year floodplain, none were located between the 50~100 <br /> <br />Table 1. Distribution of public and private ponds in the floodplain of the <br />Upper Colorado and Gunnison rivers. Modified from Mitchell (1995). <br /> <br />River Total 0-0~5 >0.5-1 >1-5 >5-25 >25 <br /> No. of acres acres acres acres acres <br /> Ponds <br />Colorado 247 111 32 67 33 4 . <br />Gunnison 61 19 16 19 6 1 <br />Total Ponds 308 130 48 86 39 5 <br /> <br />floodplain, 55 were between the 10-50 year floodplain, and 136 were below <br />the IO-year floodplain (Maddux 1996). For the Gunnison River between Delta <br />and the confluence with the Colorado River for which floodplain information <br />existed (17 ponds), none were above the IOO-year floodplain, 9 were located <br />between the 50-100 floodplains, 6 were between the 10-50 year floodplain, <br />and 2 were below the IO-year floodplain (Maddux 1996). Mitchell (1995) <br />reported that 20% of 308 ponds connect with the rivers each year and 40% <br />connect with the rivers at least 1 in 10 years. Information on the flood <br />event when ponds in the fl oodp 1 a in connect wi th the Upper Colorado and <br />Gunnison rivers will be summarized in a Colorado Division of Wildlife report <br />that is due in October, 1997 (P. Martinez, 1997, Colorado Division of <br />Wildlife, Personal Communication). <br /> <br />C. Fish and Wildlife Resources. Conspicuous and dominant wildlife species in <br />floodplain areas of the Colorado and Gunnison rivers include the Canada <br />goose (Branta canadensis), great blue heron (Ardea colchicus), various <br />species of dabbling and diving ducks, various shorebirds, muskrats (Ondatra <br />zibethicus), and northern leopard frog (Rana piDiens). Various passerine <br />birds migrate through or nest in the project area. The species of birds <br />that inhabit the riparian zone in the floodplains of both rivers are too <br />numerous to list indiVidually. Refer to the checklist of bird species for <br />Mesa County in Appendix A. Similar species would also occupy the riparian <br />zone in Delta and Garfield Counties. <br /> <br />Thirty or more birds that feed on fish use floodplain ponds for feeding <br />(Appendix B). These birds include aquatic diving birds (e.g., grebes and <br /> <br />10 <br />