Abstract
AbstractWetland permanence, the duration and frequency that surface water is present, affects biological communities and whether wetlands are protected under legislation in some jurisdictions. Wetland drainage in the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) has changed the distribution of wetlands because smaller and more temporary wetlands are more likely to be drained. This change in distribution affects biodiversity and other wetland ecosystem services. In Manitoba, Canada, wetlands are treated differently under the Water Rights Act based on permanence classification and can either be drained with a simplified registration (temporary and ephemeral wetlands), drained with a permit requiring mitigation (seasonal wetlands), or are protected from drainage (semipermanent and permanent wetlands). To facilitate implementing a conservation program targeting the most vulnerable wetlands, we built a classification model using LiDAR and Sentinel‐2 data (1312 training observations). Our random forest model had 73% accuracy on 563 test observations and is applicable across the agricultural region of southwestern Manitoba. We predicted the wetland permanence class of 365,499 wetlands and built an online tool to help practitioners implement a conservation program that pays producers to conserve temporary and ephemeral wetlands. Our approach is applicable elsewhere in the PPR and other regions with variation in wetland permanence.
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