The 3-D graphs resulting from the methods and procedures described in Part 1 indicate appropriate sites in which to seed or transplant locally common riparian species into the Silver Bow Creek floodplain, if seed or transplants are available. Ten graphs are presented, most of them representative of a broader class of plants and habitats. Two main patterns are evident. One class of plants is restricted to a rather narrow hydrologic range with particle-size class playing a minor role. Another class of species occurs in one of the wetter hydrologic classes on coarse substrates, and also on somewhat drier sites when combined with finer-textured substrates. Ordinations also identified a few species of broad amplitude that can be the best choices for revegetation where long-term hydrology cannot always be predicted with certainty or where it fluctuates greatly. For most species, the soils-hydrology ordinations provided a useful and relatively unambiguous approximation of where plants should be seeded or transplanted into a reconstructed riparian zone. Some species' edaphic habitats must be considered in the context of historical fluvial processes. For example, a set of species might typically establish on raw, moist substrates. Once established, the plants trap sediments during floods while stream downcutting lowers the water table, so that when sampled the remaining original plants are in a drier hydrologic regime than the one required for establishment. Some deep-rooted species persist in the drier habitat by maintaining contact with the capillary fringe; others are replaced by species better adapted to the new hydrologic regime and texture. A revegetation plan based solely on the observed hydrology of mature plants could erroneously indicate sites too dry for seedlings to survive. In some cases, therefore, our results must be tempered with a deeper understanding of species autecologies and fluvial processes. Matching plant species to appropriate habitats remains the basis for adapted-species revegetation. Preliminary practices and results along Silver Bow Creek are briefly mentioned.