Abstract

In West Virginia, USA, there are 24 conservation easement program wetlands enrolled in the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP). These wetlands are located on private agricultural land and are passively managed. Due to their location within fragmented agricultural areas, wetlands enrolled in ACEP in West Virginia have the potential to add wetland ecosystem services in areas that are lacking these features. We evaluated ACEP wetlands compared to reference wetlands on public land in West Virginia by using surrounding land cover, vegetative cover, and wetland features and stressors such as the presence or absence of erosion, upland inclusion, algal mats, and evidence of impacts from the surrounding landscape as surrogate measurements of wetland function on 13 ACEP wetlands and 10 reference wetlands. ACEP wetlands had higher percentages of tree coverage and a higher proportion of agricultural land in the areas immediately surrounding the wetland. Reference wetlands had higher percent coverage of emergent vegetation and had a higher proportion of forest in the immediate landscape. Our findings suggest that ACEP wetlands provide valuable early successional and forested wetland cover in a state that is largely forested. Because of this, it is important to maintain and even expand ACEP in West Virginia to continue providing a valuable source of early successional wetland habitat.

Highlights

  • Wetlands provide numerous ecosystem services and functions including carbon sequestration (Zedler & Kercher, 2005), water filtration (Fennessy & Craft, 2011), nutrient retention (Hansson, Bronmark, Anders Nilsson, & Abjornsson, 2005), flood and storm water storage (Clarkson, Ausseil, & Gerbeaux, 2013), and wildlife habitat (Dahl, 2011)

  • Our objectives for this study were to conduct a state-wide comparison of wetland characteristics on Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP) wetlands located on private land with a set of reference wetlands on public land to: (a) evaluate the characteristics of wetland ecosystems restored on agricultural land and (b) determine how surrounding land use, hydrologic and physical characteristics, and vegetative composition on ACEP wetlands compare to other available wetland habitat within West Virginia

  • ACEP wetlands were located within working agricultural lands, while reference wetlands were located on public lands within forested landscapes

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

A comparison of wetland features on passively managed conservation easements relative to reference wetlands has not been completed Such a comparison will allow us to determine how ACEP wetlands differ from reference wetlands and could provide valuable insight to landowners and managers that maintain wetlands in the state by identifying characteristics as well as potential sources of stressors. Our objectives for this study were to conduct a state-wide comparison of wetland characteristics on ACEP wetlands located on private land with a set of reference wetlands on public land to: (a) evaluate the characteristics of wetland ecosystems restored on agricultural land and (b) determine how surrounding land use, hydrologic and physical characteristics, and vegetative composition on ACEP wetlands compare to other available wetland habitat within West Virginia

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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