Title: Wetland Loss
1Wetland Loss
- Wetland loss is the loss of wetland area, due to
the conversion of wetland to non-wetland
habitats, as a result of human activity. - The United States alone has lost more than half
of its original wetlands, and we continue to lose
over 100,000 wetland acres a year.
2Wetland degradation is the impairment of wetland
functions as a result of human activity.
3The United States alone has lost more than half
of its original wetlands, and we continue to lose
over 100,000 wetland acres a year.
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522 states have lost 50 percent or more of their
original wetlands
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7California has lost the largest percentage of
original wetlands within the state (91)
- (means that currently less than one-half of 1
percent of California's total acreage is
wetlands)
8Florida has lost the most acreage (9.3 million
acres).
9The mid-western farm belt states of Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and
Wisconsin account for over 36 million acres of
wetlands lost since the country was settled.
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11Frayer et al. estimated that 87 percent of the
wetland losses from the mid-1950's to the
mid-1970's were due to agricultural conversion.
1287 of wetland drainage from mid-1950s
mid-1970s agricultural 1990s wetland loss due
largely to urban sprawl
13Artificially Drained Land in the US
14Agricultural tile drain Ritchey Woods Natural
Area
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16New Drain Installation Ritchey Woods Natural
Area
17Wetland Restoration - Ritchey Woods Natural Area
18In the 1990s wetland loss continued, but the
cause shifted from agricultural development to
urban sprawl
19Impact of Wetland Loss
- Wetland acreage has diminished to the point where
environmental and socio-economic benefits (i.e.,
ground water supply and water quality, shoreline
erosion, floodwater storage and trapping of
sediments) are now seriously threatened - Role of wetlands in global climate change
currently being debated
20Impaired Waters of the US (1998)
Water Threatened / Total Miles in Watershed
US EPA, 2001
21Artificially Drained Land in the US
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24White River Wetland IUPUI
25Riparian Buffer - IUPUI
26It is estimated that restoring 6 of wetlands in
flood-prone areas and relocating homes and
businesses, would largely eliminate costly floods
in the Midwest
27Data from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
indicates that developers had a success rate of
99 in securing permits to fill wetlands between
1988 and 1996.
28Extent of Wetland Loss Worldwide
29Asia
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- wetland loss has been occurring for thousands of
years - Lowland rice cultivation began in SE Asia about
6,500 years ago - no trace remains of the natural floodplain
wetlands of the Red River delta in Vietnam, which
originally covered 1.75 million hectares
30- virtually nothing left of the one million
hectares of natural floodplain vegetation which
once covered most of the Sylhet Basin in
Bangladesh - Much of the 40 million hectares of rice
cultivation in the central plains of India must
have been developed at the expense of natural
wetlands
31South America
- 6
- most wetlands remained more or less intact until
recent decades - Cauca River Valley system (Colombia), 88 of
mapped wetlands were lost between the 1950s and
1980s - Magdalena River delta (Colombia), 80 of mangrove
forests died between 1970 and 1987 (changed
hydrologic cycle)
32Caribbean
- Long history of wetland reclamation and
alteration - A survey of 220 Eastern Caribbean coastal
wetlands (predominantly mangroves) between 1989
and 1991 revealed that virtually every site
visited in the 16 islands showed evidence of
damage, and over 50 showed severe damage.
(Bacon, 1993)
33Indiana Wetlands
- Presettlement Wetlands (ca. 1780)
- 5,600,000 acres
- 24.1 of surface area
- Current (1998) Distribution of Wetlands
- 813,000 acres
- 3.5 of surface area
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35Wetland Distribution in Indiana, 2002
Number of wetlands per square mile
36Percentage of land area as wetland by County
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38Clean Water Act
- 1972,1977
- Section 404 established a permit system for the
discharge of dredged or fill materials into
navigable waters - Term wetlands was not used in the Act
- Initial permitting given to the USACE, later
shared with USEPA
39Food Security Act
- Introduced in 1985, amended in 1990
- Established two conservation programs for the
protection of wetlands - Doesnt prohibit filling, offers incentives and
penalties to protect wetlands - NRCS does delineation
40Swampbuster in the Food Security Act
- Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
- Emphasis on cropped wetlands
- Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP)
- Tries to provide incentives to protect, preserve,
and enhance wetlands - WRP offers options of permanent easements,
30-year easements and 10 year restoration cost
share agreements
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43The SWANCC Decision
- January 9, 2001
- Solid Waste District of Northern Cook County
(SWANCC) v. United States Army Corps of Engineers - Challenged extent of federal jurisdiction of
isolated wetlands - Reduced federal jurisdiction left to states to
determine level of protection
44HEA 1798 and HEA 1277
- The classification of an isolated wetland is
based on the level of quality of the wetland - The level of protection afforded isolated
wetlands is then based on the size of the wetland
by class - The new wetland protection program for Indiana
allows disturbance of the wetland by human
activity to affect its level of protection
regardless of the potential of the wetland for
restoration
45Indiana Isolated Wetland Regulations
- New legislation rule making on-going
- Defines 3 classes of wetlands based on quality
- Apply different rules for permitting filling
isolated wetlands based on classification - Different requirements for mitigation depending
on class of wetland impacted
46Class I Wetland
- Supports only minimal wildlife or aquatic habitat
for threatened or endangered species - Wetland is gt50 non-native, invasive species
- Does not support significant wildlife or aquatic
habitat - Does not possess significant hydrologic function
No permit required to impact Class I Wetland if
1/2 acre or less
47Class III Wetland
- An isolated wetland located in a setting
undisturbed by or minimally disturbed by human
activity or development - Supports more than minimal wildlife or aquatic
habitat or hydrologic function - Or is a rare or ecologically important type
48- No permit required to impact Class I Wetland if
1/2 acre or less - No permit required to impact a Class II Wetland
of ¼ acre or less - Class III Wetlands subject to stronger
protections
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