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IV. Restoration and Management Needs and Recommendations <br />Restoration and Management Goals and Objectives <br />• Restore, manage, and improve pre- existing moderate and low quality natural <br />communities and natural resources within the conservation areas; <br />• Re- establish and/or restore native vegetation cover within highly disturbed and non- <br />native landscape areas within the conservation areas that is ecologically appropriate and <br />suited to the environmental conditions of the site and is suitable to proposed human uses <br />and desired site aesthetics; <br />• Re- establish prescribed fire as a management tool onsite; <br />• Protect and manage existing endangered plant populations; <br />• Establish conservation signage (and other infrastructure) that help facilitate sustainable <br />natural resource management and other programmed activities. <br />• Provide recreational and educational opportunities for the residents of The Preserve and <br />that are compatible with sustaining, restoring, and improving the natural vegetation and <br />ecological functions of the conservation areas; <br />• Implement surface water and public infrastructure planning and development within the <br />site and adjacent landscape that compliments (and does not further degrade) the natural <br />resources of the site (Use of alternative stormwater management techniques); and <br />• Create a required wetland mitigation basin in northeast corner of site, establishing <br />appropriate native species cover and hydrology (wet meadow, wet prairie, emergent <br />marsh). <br />Prescribed Native Plant Communities <br />Much of the existing vegetation of the conservation areas is currently in a moderate to low <br />quality natural condition or degraded semi - natural condition. All natural areas within the <br />designated conservation areas will require considerable resources to restore and/or manage <br />vegetation as natural plant communities well into the future. Furthermore, areas of very disturbed <br />semi - natural vegetation and non - native cover (i.e. degraded wet meadows, degraded shrub <br />swamp, degraded emergent marsh etc.), will require restoration tasks such as invasive and exotic <br />vegetation removal, chemical and manual treatments and/or biological controls of noxious weed <br />species, and replanting /reseeding with native plant community cover. <br />To reduce the resources required for restoring and managing native vegetation within the <br />conservation areas, pre- existing natural communities will not be converted to other natural <br />community types. Figure 6 illustrates the location and extent of prescribed natural and semi - <br />natural vegetation types within the conservation areas. Rather, existing natural communities will <br />be managed, improved, and augmented with appropriate native species seed mixes and plantings <br />when necessary. Furthermore, the developer shall restore and managed 11.9 acres of the <br />conservation areas in years one through three of the plan. Additional resources will be required <br />to implement the restoration of the remaining 29 acres within the conservation outlots <br />(specifically, Outlot D). The following are detailed descriptions of natural community types <br />(wet meadow, shallow /mixed emergent marsh, wet prairie, dry prairie /oak savanna, and oak <br />forest) that have been prescribed for the conservation areas, as depicted in Figure 6. Native <br />species list appropriate for re- seeding, planting, and re- establishing natural communities that are <br />specified in the following text are provided in Appendix C. <br />The Preserve Conservation Development - Restoration and Management Plan 12 <br />