Laserfiche WebLink
Table 4 (Cowardin et al 1979, pg 28) states that Type 7 wetlands include all water <br /> regimes except permanently flooded. This description is inconsistent with the more <br /> specific description of Shaw and Fredine (1956) that describes a Type 7 wetland as <br /> having waterlogged soil to within a few inches of the surface throughout the growing <br /> season. <br /> Wooded swamps (Type 7) are frequently mischaracterized as bottomland hardwoods <br /> (Type 1L), however there are significant differences in the hydrological regimes between <br /> the two. The nature of these differences is discussed in a subsequent section. <br /> Cowardin Water Regime Modifiers <br /> The purpose of water regime modifiers is to provide a better description of the variations <br /> in hydrology that occur in wetlands on a seasonal and annual basis. These descriptions <br /> are general in nature because wetland hydrology is extraordinarily dynamic. Hydrology is <br /> the most variable component of wetlands and can vary substantially within a single basin <br /> weekly, monthly, seasonally, annually and over decades. Extraordinarily wet or dry <br /> periods, whether short or prolonged, do have dramatic effects on the presence or absence <br /> of water in any given wetland. Whether a wetland has naturally occurring hydrology or <br /> whether it is partially or completely drained affects its behavior as a component of the <br /> landscape, its appearance, the vegetation that inhabits it, and the effectiveness of the <br /> functions that it performs. Wetlands may also have artificially induced hydrology due to <br /> stormwater inputs or interconnections to other wetlands via ditch or tile drain systems. <br /> Careful consideration of each wetland within the overall context of the landscape is <br /> necessary to understand which water regime best fits along with the special modifiers that <br /> describe alterations to wetlands. <br /> One special modifier class that is missing is the "stormwater pond" category. This is a <br /> commonly occurring condition in urban landscapes and should be added. Stormwater <br /> ponds may have been specifically constructed for that purpose or, in the past, previously <br /> existing wetlands were used to treat stormwater and now function as stormwater ponds <br /> rather than "natural" wetlands. <br /> Descriptions of the modifiers are taken from Cowardin et al (1979, pgs 21 — 22) and from <br /> Santos and Gauster (1993, pgs 30— 32). <br /> Descriptions within the parentheses are terms used on the NWI key and the longer <br /> description is the one used by Cowardin et al. (1979). Where a parenthetical term is <br /> excluded, the two terms are the same. <br /> Modifier "A" <br /> Temporarily Flooded (Temporarv) <br /> Surface water is present for brief periods during the growing season but the water table <br /> usually is well below the soil surface for most of the season. Temporarily flooded <br /> wetlands usually have plants that are characteristic of both uplands and wetlands. This <br /> modifier description is most appropriately assigned to Type 1 and 1 L wetlands but clearly <br />