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<br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />,I <br />"I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />'I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />annual discharge as measured at the Colorado - Nebraska state line occurs in these three <br />months. Flows during the fall, winter, and early spring months (October through April) <br />increase somewhat over summer flows and are fairly uniform. Each month, these flows <br />contribute approximately 7% to the South Platte River's total annual discharge as <br />measured at the Colorado - Nebraska state line. This uniform flow is an attribute of the <br />return flows from the alluvial groundwater aquifer. <br /> <br />VEGETATION <br /> <br />Native plant communities occurring on the TRSW A and PESW A include, open and closed <br />cottonwood stands, mixed willow-cottonwood stands, willow stands, wetlands, salt <br />meadows, and short to mid grass prairie communities. In addition to native plants, the <br />CDOW has introduced and cultivated many exotic plant species for wildlife management <br />purposes. These plants include, American plum, Russian olive, eastern red cedar, rocky <br />mountain juniper, and various row crop plants like corn, millet, sorghum, and sunflowers. <br />These non-native species have been planted mainly on the TRSW A on historically farmed <br />lands. The native plant community along these flood plains is typically 80 to 90 percent <br />grasses, 5 to 10 percent forbs and 5 to 10 percent shrubs. Alkali sacaton is the dominant <br />plant in the potential plant community. Switchgrass, western wheatgrass, prairie cordgrass, <br />inland saltgrass, alkali bluegrass, Baltic rush, and Nebraska sedge are prominent species. <br />Canada wildrye, little bluestem, slender wheatgrass, big bluestem, various sedges and <br />rushes, American licorice and fourwing saltbush are present in small amounts. <br />Cottonwoods and willows ofthe river bottom form bordering plant communities and <br />occasionally a cottonwood or willow may be seen in this plant community. <br /> <br />Short to mid grass prairie communities border the flood plain in areas dominated by sandy <br />types of soil. The plant community is about 75 to 90 percent grasses, 5 to 15 percent forbs, <br />and 5 to 10 percent shrubs. Sand bluestem, prairie sandreed, yellow Indiangrass and <br />switchgrass are the dominate species. Needle-and-thread, blue grama, Bessey sandcherry, <br />and sand sagebrush are secondary plants. Little bluestem, hairy grama, thickspike <br />wheatgrass, western wheatgrass, sand dropseed, tall dropseed, prairie junegrass, red <br />threeawn, sand paspalum, sandhill muhly, Indian ricegrass, Schweintitz flatsedge sun <br />sedge, bottlebrush squirreltail, bush morningglory, spreading eriogonum, stickleaf <br />mentzelia, prairie spiderwort, Nuttal evolvulus, lemon scurfpea, and snowball sandverbena <br />are also present in small amounts. No trees are native to the short to mid grass prairie <br />communities of these sites. Several parcels within this community have been inter-seeded <br />with switch grass on the TRSW A. A list of potentially occurring native plant species for the <br />project area can be found in Appendix B. <br /> <br />FISH AND WILDLIFE <br /> <br />Warmwater riverine habitats like those found on the TRSW A and PESW A are <br />characterized by highly fluctuating, and turbid flows -- characteristics which favor native <br /> <br />8 <br />