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Type 2—Inland Fresh Meadows <br /> Inland fresh meadows (Type 2) wetlands have soil that is usually without standing water <br /> during most of the growing season but is waterlogged to within at least a few inches of its <br /> surface. Vegetation includes grasses, rushes, sedges, and various broad-leaved plants. In <br /> northern environments, typical species representatives are carex, rushes, redtop, <br /> reedgrasses, mannagrasses, prairie cordgrass and mints. Meadows may be present in <br /> shallow lake basins, sloughs, farmland "sags" or may border shallow marshes on the <br /> landward side. <br /> Table 4 (Cowardin et al p. 28) includes within its description of Type 2 wetlands as fen <br /> and northern sedge meadow. The water regime is described as saturated (B). This <br /> description, as used by some plant ecologists and wetland scientists, is specifically <br /> limiting and at least in some instances does not suggest that reed canary grass dominated <br /> wetlands would fall into this category. <br /> Type 3—Inland Shallow Fresh Marshes <br /> Inland shallow fresh marshes (Type 3) wetlands have a soil substrate that is usually <br /> waterlogged during the growing season and at some times may be covered with as much <br /> as 6 inches or more of water. Common vegetation includes grasses, bulrushes, <br /> spikerushes, and various other marsh plants such as cattails, arrowheads, pickerelweed, <br /> and smartweeds. Common representatives in the North include reed, whitetop, rice <br /> cutgrass, carex and giant burreed. Type 3 marshes may nearly fill shallow lake basins or <br /> sloughs or may border deep marshes on the landward side. They may also occur as seep <br /> areas in agricultural fields resulting from failing drain tile systems or where sand seams <br /> are near the surface on hillside slopes. <br /> Cowardin et al (Table 4, pg 28) describes the water regime as either seasonally flooded <br /> (C) or semipermanently flooded (F). The accurate categorization of Type 3 wetlands is <br /> most critical since seasonally flooded wetlands containing reed canary grass are eligible <br /> for larger de minimus fills (up to 10,000 square feet) than cattail marshes (only 400 <br /> square feet). The difference in hydrological regimes is discussed in the next section. <br /> Type 7—Wooded Swamps <br /> Wooded swamps (Type 7) wetlands have a soil substrate that is "waterlogged to within a <br /> few inches of its surface" (Shaw and Fredine 1956, pg 22) during the growing season and <br /> often can be covered with as much as 1 foot of water. Type 7 wetlands often occur along <br /> the edges of sluggish streams, on floodplains, on flat uplands and in very shallow lake <br /> basins. In the North, trees include tamarack, arbor vitae, black spruce, balsam, red maple, <br /> and black ash. Northern evergreen swamps frequently have a thick ground cover of <br /> mosses. Deciduous swamps frequently contain beds of duckweeds, smartweeds and other <br /> herbaceous plant species. Hardwood swamps frequently are associated with Type 6, <br /> shrub swamp wetlands. <br />