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Part Two: The Salmon/Trout, Raquette, and Grasse Watersheds
FINAL REPORT
November 2002
Prepared by
Leslie Karasin, Project Coordinator R. P. Curran, S. S. Halasz, D. M. Spada, J. W. Barge New York State Adirondack Park Agency, Ray Brook, NY |
E. B. Allen and G. K. Gruendling State University of New York at Plattsburgh |
K. M. Roy, C. G. Buerkett and C. C. Cheeseman Adirondack Lakes Survey Corporation, Ray Brook, NY |
For the
State Wetlands Protection Program
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Grant No. CD992644
Figure 1. Location of Adirondack State Park in
New York State
Figure 2. Major watersheds in Adirondack Park
Figure 3. Adirondack Park Land Classification in the St.
Lawrence II watershed
Figure 4. Sub-watersheds in the St. Lawrence II project
area
Figure 5. USDA/SCS 11-digit watersheds in the
Salmon/Trout Watershed
Figure 6. USDA/SCS 11-digit watersheds in the
Raquette/Grasse Watershed
Figure 7. Wetlands in the St. Lawrence II project area
Figure 8. Wetlands map provided for the Bog River Flow
UMP
Figure 9. Wetlands map provided for the St. Regis Canoe
Area UMP
Figure 10. Wetlands map provided for the Raquette
Boreal Wild Forest UMP
Figure 11. Large wetlands in the St. Lawrence II
project area
Table 1. Sub-watersheds of the St. Lawrence II
watershed project area
Table 2. Major wetland cover types of the St. Lawrence II
project area
Table 3. Wetland cover type distribution based on Class1
and Class2 labels
Table 4. Relationship, by area, of Class1 and Class2
wetland labels
Table 5. Relationship, by number of polygons, of Class1 and
Class2 labels
Table 6. Area and number of wetland polygons with the
Beaver modifier
Table 7. Area of wetland water regime modifiers by wetland
Class1
Table 8. Wetlands data table provided to DEC for the Bog
River Flow UMP
Table 9. Large wetland complexes
APPENDIX 1: Quadrangle Index
APPENDIX 2: Legend for Adirondack Park Wetlands Mapping Project
APPENDIX 3: Wetlands Data Table - organized alphabetically by NWI
label
APPENDIX 4: Wetlands Data Table - organized in order of decreasing
area
APPENDIX 5: Sub-watersheds Metadata
APPENDIX 6: Wetlands Metadata
APPENDIX 7: ArcInfo AML for assigning watershed flow direction
APPENDIX 8: ArcInfo AML for creating regions in sub-watershed map
The St. Lawrence River Basin Study titled, "Watershed Protection of the St. Lawrence River Watershed with Special Consideration to Large Tracts of Land Part Two: The Salmon/Trout, Raquette, and Grasse Watersheds" is one of 10 EPA-funded State Wetlands Protection Program projects awarded to the Adirondack Park Agency, and marks the completion of detailed wetland and watershed maps for about 70% of the Park. Part I of this study focused on the St. Regis River Basin and was completed in 2000.
The St. Lawrence River Basin is ecologically unusual because of its concentration of large peatland complexes. Three-quarters of the land in the project area is wilderness, wild forest, or resource management, resulting in large contiguous forest areas.
The objectives of this study were to:
A total of 708 sub-watersheds were mapped in the 961,218.8 acres (388,993.0 ha) that comprise the Raquette, Grasse, and Salmon/Trout river basins. Out of this acreage, 122,711.3 acres (49,659.7 ha) were mapped as wetland, which constitutes 13% of the total watershed area. The influence of beaver activity was seen in 25% of the total number of wetlands, or 19% of the total wetland area.
Wetland maps and associated statistical data and habitat interpretations were provided to New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Unit Management Planners for inclusion into three UMPs: St. Regis Canoe Area, Bog River Complex, and Raquette Boreal Wild Forest.
Data collected in this project, when combined with the data layers from the Oswegatchie/Black and Upper Hudson watersheds, provides a consistent continuous picture of the wetlands and surface hydrology of these portions of the Park and will continue to be of immense value for wetland resource protection in the future.
This project was funded by a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Wetlands Protection, State Development Grant No. CD992644, and was completed in cooperation with the Remote Sensing Lab at the State University of New York at Plattsburgh, and the New York State Adirondack Lakes Survey Corporation.
At the Remote Sensing Lab at SUNY Plattsburgh, thanks go to Kyriel Taylor, Michael Sundberg, Adrienne Pike, Lisa Walsh, Peter van Erp, Evan Kline, and Jaclyn Ammaturo. At the Adirondack Park Agency our gratitude is extended to the entire staff, especially Judy Smith, and Dan Fitts.
Although the research described in this report has been funded wholly or in part by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under assistance agreement no. CD992644 to the New York State Adirondack Park Agency, it has not been subjected to the Environmental Protection Agency's peer and administrative review and therefore may not necessarily reflect the views of the EPA and no official endorsement should be inferred.
Continue to next section of St. Lawrence II report:
Background, Study Area, and Objectives
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