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6.4.9 Exhibit 1- Soiis Information this soil. The <br />SAIL SURVEY use °f necked <br />ortant secondary <br />favorable habitat for rmg- <br />Wildlife is an iT Ptde nongame species can <br />and recreational cropland areas P dove. Many escape <br />otential for urban in the survey ourning areas for nesting and ssev_ <br />ood p rowth The pheasant and m establishing esting cover is e.~ <br />,his soil has g o ulation g ~ ction. be attracted by undisturbed n ~elop- <br />relopment. Increased P p omesrte con-m rat are the cover. For Pheasants, laps for habitat de' <br />,a has resulted in increased h b¢ included in P culture. R6e a~- <br />it wets and dries in areas °f intensive alm can <br />soil features for urban dev orp a load. Septic tial and should le deer and anteloapna reseeding <br />ief limiting otential of the subsoil as ment, especially camp. azing <br />rink-swell p o{ this soil to supp but community land wildlife, for e. livestock gT <br />id the limited ability ro erly, managing velop- <br />tion fields funct~o~ idedpf the population den- <br />mk absorp rapid perinea- trotted by urban or recreational dubclass <br />e systems should be Ph¢ moderately be sealed- where needed. Suited to ability land <br />ewag es. Because of a Sagoons must This soil is not ~ the flood hazard. CaP Bottom <br />ity increas sewag ability subclass because °f aced; Sandy <br />of the substratum, well. Cap ment ated, VIw nonimg <br />~ility shrubs and trees gx'0w~ irrig This is <br />Lawns, ¢rcent sloP¢s• This IVw 0 to 1 percent slo4¢S• 700 <br />ated. 0 to ~ P . flood range site. loam, el¢vations of 4, <br />Ile img sandy loam, drained soil on Br¢sser sandy ouited by the <br />10-Bankard ecessively ed in 11- well drained soil on terraces at <br />is a deep, somewhat e. to 5,000 feet. It form in alluvium deare small areas <br />q,150 and rivers. In- a deep, feet. It formed in the lower <br />plains at elevati°ns °f along streams vet bars to 4,800 ever. Included in a epy` rand <br />Brous sand and gTa gouth Platte R and gr <br />stratified recent all are Hum ave sand loam <br />chided in mapping Bankard soil is of soils that h a ish brown sandy <br />noncalcare Qis opllthis f the substratum. er is gz' Y and yellowish <br />and small ar ~~¢° Sui-face lay The underlying pa'-t ° ically the svrfao¢ lay sub- <br />Typically about 4 inches thick. calcareous Typ inches thick. The subsoil is brown <br />sandy loam ale brown loam, and about 11 clay loam about 19 inches thick. The <br />brov;n de th of 60 inches is P loam, inches is loamy Sand' are <br />brown sandYdepth of ~ capacity <br />material to a P. available water <br />sand stratified with thin lenses of son Y water stratum to a and th is 60 inches °T <br />moderately rapid. Available eability hazard is <br />vel. effective rooting deP erosion <br />fine eability is de th is 60 inches or Perm and the <br />hazard is moderate. The Hoff is slow, <br />capacity is low. The effective roaniag he erosion more. gurface ru for irrigated crops It <br />runoff is slow, <br />used almost entirelyown in the area includ- <br />more. Surface cropping- It's sandy and lO This soil is s commonly gr ain, potatoes, <br />low'- best use. Tall wheat- to all crop alfalfa, small gx' <br />This soil is suited to limited of the beans, ing system is 3 <br />to flooding• Pasture is the furrows ing corn, sugar beets, corn for silage, <br />and annu frequ ntloMg are some is smte followed by roc- <br />subject anon by and onions. An example of a suitablec~ °PP <br />s tall fescue, l ht roves the ifalfa ¢w conservation P <br />mercial fertilizer imp to 4 y¢ars of a ain, or beans. F <br />most suitable cro es LCom by sugar beets, small g* elds. <br />and flooding is b ¢ roduced. is dominated maintain top Suitable, but furrow ir- <br />valve of forag egetation r¢edg~-ass, does are needed to ation are and m and coin' <br />amount and native sand anure <br />The potential ass, sand bluestem, Much ll methods of "T`g i¢lds. <br />indiangr and blue grg¢~Cion in rig lion is the most common. BarnY ¢nerally <br />sw-itchSTass, needleandthread, nmental plantings.are g rd in <br />ama, includes other soils and them mercial fertilizer arenvu~o¢d for toF rincipal bozo <br />sideoatsrgrge site difficult t° mapounds the P <br />of this attern that it 's es from 2.500 P Windbreaks and ¢ controlled by cul- <br />such a cot"plex P avorable to this soil. Soil blob S an b leaving a strip of <br />potential production 500 pounds in unf suited trees and shru ation <br />tall and mid estabbsh only in th¢ tree row and by <br />separately. cars to 1, lemeni•°•1 irrig <br />the rows. SupP rag ry <br />per acre in favorable Y . deteriorates, tAe and forbs and duri <br />condition seed, tivating ween lanting ival <br />Years As range Tama, sand drop „reeds Veg¢tatton bed at the time of P ood surv <br />grasses d¢crease; blue g s. i7ndesirablbecomes may b¢ need and have g onderosa <br />and forage Production drop a condition r, eastern redcedar, p <br />increase; site as rang periods. TreMso~~in j~l~ suite hackberry~ The <br />taking are Rocky Russian-olive. ana bloc, and Stberi- <br />and annuals invade the should be based on Seed- elm' <br />poorer. of v¢getation roduction. pin¢, Siberian <br />Management total annual p shrubs best suited are skunkbush s of this soil. <br />leaving half of the ¢ enouSh to mterseedand an Peashrub. condary use non- <br />half and in areas larg sand bluestem, impoTlant se dove and many <br />ing is desirable only Swiuhgrass, blue grama, P°- Wildlife is an mourning areas for <br />~ prepare a seedbed. little bluestem, ass are necked pheasant, ¢stablishing <br />rama, ediate wheatgr grog- b¢ attracted by peasants, undistu an <br />reedgl'ass, sideoats g and interm using an ame species can <br />wheatgrass, Soil can be seeded by e cover. For p be gn¢luded in p <br />toss drill Hosting and estop <br />bescent This ~ Stupble• A g in areas of intensive <br />suitable for seed~n~ clean sorghum has proven most suc- nesting cover is essential espec ally <br />in sprang for habitat development, <br />interseeder Seeding early rban and recreational <br />is required. to tp¢ establishment agriculture. ood potential for u ow well. The <br />cessful. not suited shrubs, and trees gr <br />¢nerally pnsite investigation is This soil has gwns <br />This soil is g Shrubs. and possible tree and development. La <br />and growth of trees afeasibilitY <br />needed to determine <br />shrub species. <br />