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• <br />Appropriate Uses <br />The Preserve's conservation areas will be managed as a natural open space with a passive <br />recreational trail corridor. Therefore, appropriate uses are limited to passive recreational <br />activities, such as: walking, running, nature and wildlife observation, ecological studies and such <br />other activities approved by The Preserve's Homeowners Association that will not disrupt or <br />degrade the ecological integrity of the site's natural resources and restoration areas. Biking and <br />dog walking may be considered as appropriate uses, should the site serve as a connection to a <br />regional bike path or walking path. However, such activities may disrupt natural areas, especially <br />when trail users stray from the designated trail corridor. Yard debris or commercial landscape <br />refuse should not be composted or disposed of within the conservation areas. Furthermore, <br />residential homeowners with yards adjoining the conservation areas should avoid encroachment <br />into designated outlots. Active recreational facilities, such as athletic fields and playgrounds, are <br />not considered appropriate uses for the conservation area. Artificial lighting should be carefully <br />sighted close to trail entrances and roads, and trail use may be limited to daylight hours. <br />VII. Recommendations for Monitoring & Adaptive Management <br />Ecological restoration and management is a process that involves adaptive decision making by <br />natural resource and planning professionals. Implementation of management activities are <br />designed to change natural community structure and functions, and these changes will likely <br />influence established management plans and strategies. For this reason, it is important to monitor <br />the results of implemented management activities and assess if changes to management plans <br />need to be made based on these observations. To maximize the effectiveness of restoration and <br />management actions and the likelihood of achieving desired natural resource management goals, <br />it is important to monitor chosen aspects of restoration and management projects on a regular <br />basis. Monitoring can be an expensive and labor- intensive process, or it may be done through <br />simple observations of environmental changes over time. Deciding what to monitor and how <br />extensive this monitoring should be are always difficult tasks. The level of effort in monitoring <br />will vary depending on available resources, staff, and/or qualified volunteers that may carry out <br />monitoring tasks. <br />At a minimum, the environmental characteristics that should be monitored within The Preserve's <br />conservation areas include: <br />1) The abundance and extent of invasive species, and the effect of management approaches <br />in reducing and limiting invasive species abundance over time; <br />2) The effects and relative success and failure of restoration and management actions to <br />achieve desired management goals over time; <br />3) The success of native restoration planting establishment, including species diversity, <br />seedling germination success, secondary weed species infestations, and opportunities for <br />natural community improvement over time; <br />4) Establishment of vegetation and design hydrology within wetland mitigation areas, <br />infiltration basins, and stormwater gardens, as well as sedimentation and/or erosion and <br />integrity of hydrologic infrastructure; <br />5) Changes in plant and wildlife diversity and wildlife habitat use within the restoration <br />areas; <br />The Preserve Conservation Development - Restoration and Management Plan 32 <br />