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Biological monitoring

Wetlands: Monitoring plants


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Plants exhibit many qualities that make them ideal for indicating wetland condition, or health. Other than a handful of free-floating species, plants are confined to the location where they first root and therefore are fully exposed to disturbances. They are also found in almost all wetland habitats and are readily identifiable. Most importantly, individual species and wetland plant communities as a whole respond in predictable patterns to human induced environmental stress. These stressors include hydrologic alterations that disrupt natural wetland water dynamics; excess sediment and nutrient loading; and chemical pollution. Depending on the context, exotic invasive plant species, such as Narrowleaf cattail (Typha angustifolia), can act both as a response and a cause of stress to native wetland communities.

Wetland in MinnesotaSince 1995, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has worked to characterize wetland plant community responses across a gradient of human stressors. This work has primarily focused on developing plant Indices of Biological Integrity (IBIs) for depressional wetlands (wetlands within a depression in the landscape that have emergent marsh or shallow open water/aquatic plant communities). Depressional wetland IBIs have been fully developed and validated in the Mixed Wood Plains (i.e., North Central Hardwood Forest) and Temperate Prairies Ecoregions. A preliminary IBI has also been developed in the Mixed Wood Shield Ecoregion. In addition to IBI development, the MPCA has worked to develop the Floristic Quality Assessment (FQA) and landscape scale wetland condition indicators that rely on remote sensing data and Geographic Information Systems (GIS).

Water lilies and other aquatic plantsWetland plant community data and IBIs can be used for a variety of wetland management applications including:

  • Ambient condition monitoring (status and trends)
  • Best Management Practices (BMP) effectiveness monitoring
  • Problem investigation monitoring
  • Mitigation and restoration effectiveness monitoring
  • Permit issuance
  • TMDL investigations including, listing, delisting, and implementation effectiveness.

Reports

Maps

Omernik Level II Ecoregions and MPCA Wetland Monitoring Sites

Omernik Level II Ecoregions and MPCA Wetland Monitoring Sites

Standard operating procedures

Last modified on May 07, 2012 15:20