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Draft Project Overview. Project Goals. Cultural Resources. Historical & Current Natural Resource Assessments Of the Coonamessett River Valley, Falmouth, MA Charles J. Katuska, P.W.S. Project Description. Ecological Resources. Study Area. Schedules & Status. Procedures.
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Draft Project Overview Project Goals Cultural Resources Historical & Current Natural Resource Assessments Of the Coonamessett River Valley, Falmouth, MA Charles J. Katuska, P.W.S. Project Description Ecological Resources Study Area Schedules & Status Procedures Preliminary Results
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Instructions: • Delete sample document icon and replace with working document icons as follows: • Create document in Word. • Return to PowerPoint. • From Insert Menu, select Object… • Click “Create from File” • Locate File name in “File” box • Make sure “Display as Icon” is checked. • Click OK • Select icon • From Slide Show Menu, Select Action Settings. • Click “Object Action” and select “Edit” • Click OK Project Description (2) • Collect record information and interview knowledgeable individuals as necessary to produce - Investigation and report of historic land-use and pre-colonial ecological conditions within the Coonamessett Valley. Recommendations for additional natural resource inventory and assessment. • Additionally Identify at least two reference areas – one within the Coonamessett system, one in a nearby river system – to be used generally as a “proxy” for potential, proposed, or anticipated conditions resulting from any restoration actions to be taken within the Coonamessett River Watershed
Instructions: • Delete sample document icon and replace with working document icons as follows: • Create document in Word. • Return to PowerPoint. • From Insert Menu, select Object… • Click “Create from File” • Locate File name in “File” box • Make sure “Display as Icon” is checked. • Click OK • Select icon • From Slide Show Menu, Select Action Settings. • Click “Object Action” and select “Edit” • Click OK Study Area • Coonamessett River “Watershed” Above Coonamessett Pond - use contributing groundwater area (USGS WRI Rpt.98-4237) Below Coonamessett Pond - use topographic surface divide
Instructions: • Delete sample document icon and replace with working document icons as follows: • Create document in Word. • Return to PowerPoint. • From Insert Menu, select Object… • Click “Create from File” • Locate File name in “File” box • Make sure “Display as Icon” is checked. • Click OK • Select icon • From Slide Show Menu, Select Action Settings. • Click “Object Action” and select “Edit” • Click OK Cultural Resources • Falmouth Historical Society Archives • Falmouth Public Library • Barnstable County Registry of Deeds • Barnstable Public Library • Cape Cod Commission • Massachusetts State Archives • Cape Cod Cranberry Grower’s Association (Middleborough Public Library) • Cape Cod Museum of Natural History • Coonamessett River Restoration Working Group
Instructions: • Delete sample document icon and replace with working document icons as follows: • Create document in Word. • Return to PowerPoint. • From Insert Menu, select Object… • Click “Create from File” • Locate File name in “File” box • Make sure “Display as Icon” is checked. • Click OK • Select icon • From Slide Show Menu, Select Action Settings. • Click “Object Action” and select “Edit” • Click OK Ecological Resources • Falmouth Department of Natural Resources • Falmouth Fisherman’s Association • MA Department of Fish & Game • MA Division of Marine Fisheries • MA Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program • Massachusetts Audubon Society • Waquoit National Estuarine Research Reserve • US Fish & Wildlife Service • NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service • Marine Biological Laboratory
Instructions: • Delete sample document icon and replace with working document icons as follows: • Create document in Word. • Return to PowerPoint. • From Insert Menu, select Object… • Click “Create from File” • Locate File name in “File” box • Make sure “Display as Icon” is checked. • Click OK • Select icon • From Slide Show Menu, Select Action Settings. • Click “Object Action” and select “Edit” • Click OK Status & Schedule • Research substantially complete (additional interviews as possible) • Field work substantially complete • Draft document/graphics in preparation • Draft Document July 27, 2004 for Review & Comment • Final Report August 1, 2004
Preliminary Results (1) • Coonamessett River is a regionally significant natural resource system the exists by virtue of an uncommon hydrogeologic framework • Coonamessett River Valley (and tributary recharge areas) has been affected by human disturbance factors (agricultural, industrial, and residential land use) for over 300 years • Site-specific records of pre-disturbance environmental conditions are non-existent • Palynological and paleoecological studies are generally too coarse-grained to contribute site specific value
Preliminary Results (2) • The groundwater hydrology that supports the Coonamessett River system is relatively intact. Extractive uses seems to be below impact threshholds • Although, significant progress has been made in cleaning up the MMR’s FS-28 plume, the temporary surface water inputs from the clean-up complicate interpretation of ecological functions - past, present, and future. • The surface water flow regime throughout the entire Coonamessett River is entirely controlled with structures and actively managed
Preliminary Results (3) • Terrestrial biodiversity (vascular plants, mammals, birds, some reptiles and amphibians) within the overall Coonamessett watershed is at or near expected maxima, with the exception of historic extinctions (wolf, passenger pigeon, heath hen, etc.) Numerous rare species present, although individual populations may be low • Wetland and Aquatic biodiversity (vascular plants, some reptiles, most amphibians, fish) within the overall Coonamessett watershed is suppressed by current and past land uses. Sport fish and river herring are intensively managed
Preliminary Results (4) • Past industrial uses (1700-1850) were responsible for the initial alteration of riverine and wetland habitats along the Coonamessett River • Agricultural water management and agrochemical uses have resulted in (and continue to result in) significant modifications to in-stream habitat use and value since 1850-1870 • Conflict between public use (primarily fishery resources) and private use (industry, agriculture) of the Coonamessett River resources is 300 years old. Recreational values here much more recent
Preliminary Results (5) • Varied conditions in the abandoned bogs along the Coonamessett River (wooded swamp, shrub swamp, wet meadow, Sphagnum bog, suggest that multiple restoration endpoints are available. • The Quashnet River, with a system of recently restored wetland habitats, offers many valuable lessons and an on-going program of restoration performance monitoring data. • The Mashpee River, which was never impounded or commercially developed for cranberry bogs, is a unique natural resource on Cape Cod and may represent the best available restoration reference system