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<br />I <br />I <br />I <br />f, <br />l, <br />I' <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />~ <br />I, <br />t <br />I <br />I <br />[ <br /> <br />: ~. \ <br /> <br />1\'\", ~., 1 <br />Jl) .J..) J .. <br /> <br />SEellONTWO <br /> <br />Environmental Selling <br /> <br />2.1 DESCRIPTION OF THE CENTRAL PLATTE STUDY AREA <br /> <br />The Central Platte Valley study area extends along the Platte River from near Lexington, <br />Nebraska east to near Chapman, a distance of approximately 110 miles. This section of the <br />Platte provides habitat for three of the four target species - whooping crane, least tern, and piping <br />plover - and is designated critical habitat for the whooping crane. It includes portions of nine . <br />central Nebraska Counties - Dawson, Gosper, Phelps, Buffalo, Kearney, Hall, Adams, Hamilton, <br />and Merrick. The major cities and towns include Grand Island near the eastern end, Kearney in <br />the middle, and Lexington near the western end. The elevation of the Platte River ranges from <br />about 1,750 feet on the east to 2,300 feet on the west. <br /> <br />The study area is divided into 12 bridge segments, including the 11 bridge segments used by <br />Currier et al. (1985), and a twelfth segment on the western end from Overton to Lexington. The <br />bridge segments are identified in Table 2-1 and shown in Figure 2-1. These bridge segments are <br />used in the presentation of biological data in the subsequent report sections, where this level of <br />detail is available. The width of the study area is about 7 miles (3.5 miles on either side of the <br />Platte River). This width is consistent with the analysis by Currier et al. (1985) and provides a <br />buffer area of upland habitat on either side of the 1- to 2-mile-wide floodplain. <br /> <br />Table 2-2 summarizes some basic features of each bridge segment, including river and floodplain <br />characteristics, presence of developments, and conservation areas. <br /> <br />2.2 VEGETATION AND LAND COVER TYPES <br /> <br />Vegetation and land cover types present in the Central Platte Valley were mapped in the early <br />19805, and are currently being re-mapped by the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) based on aerial <br />photography flown in August 1998. The results of the BOR study will be added to this <br />document when it is available. Table 2-3 will provide a summary of the acres and percent of <br />each land cover type within each bridge segment based on the 1998 aerial photography. Table <br />2-4 will provide a comparison of changes in the areas of riverine habitats from 1982 to 1998. <br /> <br />Currier et al. (1985) provides the results of the first study, which used a GIS database developed <br />by the Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance TrUst, Inc. (Trust) through a contract with the <br />FWS Western Energy and Land Use Team (WELUT). The database consists of the river channel <br />in each segment and an area extending for 3.5 miles on both sides of the channel. The number of <br />river miles covered by the database is greater than the 11 bridge segments because a buffer of 3.5 <br />miles of river channel was included at the ends of Segments I and II. The database was based <br />on aerial photography from September 1982, which represents a period of low flow for the Platte <br />River (about 260 cubic feet per second (cfs) at Grand Island). Twenty-four surface cover types <br />were identified and used in the analysis, including six riverine, four agricultural, ten <br />development, and four other types. Riverine surface cover types were designated in those areas <br />inside the historical floodplain boundary. For a few surface cover types such as alfalfa, open <br />water, ernergents, and cropland, land areas were designated both inside and outside the <br />floodplain boundary. <br /> <br />IJIIS t:nIiBtIr M...cMMt "'* <br />ItIIItnI SetrII:es <br /> <br />68F0D97286OO1r1.doc 61211999(9"52 AMjlURSGV'ICFS/2 2-1 <br />