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<br />SECTIINTWO <br /> <br />EnVironmental SettiRg <br /> <br />I <br />I <br />t <br />, <br />t <br />I <br />I <br />1 <br />I <br />1 <br /> <br />generally sufficient to detect changes since the early I 980s, with the exception of the problems <br />noted below. Periodic updating of the BOR GIS database would be required to monitor future <br />changes. Some problems involved in using existing spatial databases to assess changes since the <br />early 1980s include the following: <br /> <br />. The WELUT database only includes a portion of Bridge Segment 12. <br /> <br />. The term "wet meadow" appears to have been used to identify all bottomland grasslands in <br />the WELUT database. Specific areas of functional wet meadow are not separated from other <br />bottomland grasslands on the floodplain, and they were not identified at all outside of the <br />floodplain. <br /> <br />There may be other problems, which will be reported by BOR as it completes the GIS database. <br />However, the current GIS database should provide an adequate baseline for future monitoring of <br />land use and habitat changes. <br /> <br />Other than the work of Currier (1982) and Nagel (1995) and studies specific to Mormon Island <br />Crane Meadows and the Rowe Sanctuary, there appears to be limited information on plant <br />community composition, structure, and ecology specific to the study area. The WELUT and <br />BOR GIS databases include only broadscale vegetation classifications, and they are not <br />appropriate for assessing the locations, areas, or changes within more narrowly defined <br />communities. <br /> <br />2.9.2 Platte River Hydrology <br />To be provided by BOR in a subsequent draft. <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />2.9.3 Bottomland GrassJandslWet Meadows <br /> <br />Many of the past studies of habitats along the Platte River have used the term "wet meadow" to <br />loosely describe a complex of wetlands and bottomland grasslands. It is often not clear in the <br />existing literature whether t.l::e habitat values de~cribed for wet meadows apply to all bottomland <br />grasslands, only wetlands or areas with open water, or to sites with mixed habitats. lbis may <br />limit the usefulness of the existing baseline for monitoring future changes, depending on the <br />habitat values being assessed. <br /> <br />The existing baseline does not appear to adequately identify the locations of wet meadows (as a <br />wetland type). As mentioned in Section 2.9.1, wet meadows were included with other <br />bottomland grasslands in the WELUT database and may be handled the same way in the BOR <br />database. The NWl maps available for the area are not up to date and may not be accurate. All <br />of the existing spatial data based on air photo interpretation is likely to be affected by the <br />inherent difficulty of separating wet meadows from other bottomland grasslands without detailed <br />field studies. Accurate determination of wet meadows and other wetland types would probably <br />require an on-site wetland delineation using evaluation of vegetation, soils and hydrology. <br /> <br />2-14 6BF0097286OOJn.doc 612/1999(9:52AM)lURSGWCFS12 <br /> <br />IIRS I:nIiIJer MIDdwanf CIJde <br />Federal Sl:trIt:cs <br />