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The indicator status for individual plants as defined by the updated 2016 Minnesota National Wetland <br /> Plant List are identified and described in the following table: <br /> Table 1. Vegetation Indicator Categories <br /> . . -.. • . <br /> Obligate (OBL) Almost always <br /> Facultative Wetland (FACW) Usually <br /> Facultative (FAC) Equally likely to occur in uplands <br /> Facultative Upland (FACU) Rarely <br /> Upland (UPL) Almost never <br /> Hydric Soil <br /> A hydric soil is a soil formed under conditions of saturation, flooding, or ponding long enough during <br /> the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part. Examples of hydric soil <br /> indicators include: the accumulation of organic matter, low-chroma soil matrices, gleying, redox <br /> concentrations, redox depletions, and hydrogen sulfide odor. <br /> Wetland Hydrology <br /> According to the 1987 manual, wetland hydrology is present when the area is inundated either <br /> permanently or periodically at mean water depths less than or equal to 6.6 feet, or the soil is <br /> saturated to the surface at some time during the growing season. The Midwest Regional Supplement <br /> requires fourteen (14) or more consecutive days of flooding or ponding, or a water table of twelve <br /> (12) inches (30 cm) or less below the soil surface, during the growing season at a minimum <br /> frequency of five (5) years in ten (10) (50% or higher probability) to satisfy wetland hydrology. <br /> The wetland hydrology criterion can be satisfied with observation of one (1) primary hydrology <br /> indicator or two (2) secondary hydrology indicators. Potential primary indicators of wetland <br /> hydrology may include, but are not limited to: inundation, saturation, water marks, drift lines, <br /> sediment deposits, and a thin muck surface. Potential secondary indicators of wetland hydrology <br /> may include, but are not limited to: surface soil cracks, drainage patters, saturation visible on aerial <br /> imagery, and the FAC-neutral test. <br /> Map Review <br /> Prior to fieldwork, several mapping sources were consulted to identify potential wetland habitats. <br /> The sources consulted include the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) National Wetland <br /> Inventory (NWI), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resources Conservation <br /> Service (NRCS), formerly Soil Conservation Service (SCS) Soil Survey, Minnesota Department of <br /> Natural Resources (DNR) Public Waters Inventory (PWI), and United States Geological Survey <br /> 1205 & 1225 Shoreline Drive Page 3 <br />