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Mounds View Silver View Park Pond <br />Wetland restoration is recommended to improve protection of water quality, provide higher quality wildlife <br />habitat, and sustain diverse native plant communities. Removing invasive shrubs in the understory as part <br />of the restoration process will also enhance park user views of the wetland habitat, pond, and associated <br />wildlife. <br />Northern Wet Meadow/Carr (WMn82) is recommended as a target native plant community for all but the <br />forested portion of the wetland complex. Northern Wet Meadow/Carr is an open wetland with continuous <br />cover by grasses, sedges, and forbs adapted to saturated soils and periodic inundation. When this <br />wetland community has over 25% shrub cover, it is classified by the MN DNR as Willow — Dogwood <br />Shrub Swamp (WMn82a). Several species of willow, red -osier dogwood, speckled alder, and sometimes <br />bog birch may be present. A MN DNR fact sheet describing this wetland plant community is available at <br />the following weblink: <br />httos://files.dnr.state.mn.us/natural resources/noc/wet meadow carr/wmn82.odf <br />For the forested portion of the wetland complex, the community should remain forested as a "Hardwood <br />Swamp" but can be significantly enhanced through invasive shrub removal and native seeding/planting. <br />Insert zoomed in map of area, so the reader does not have to flip back to the larger map for reference <br />Vegetation Management Goal <br />• Wetlands resembling Northern Wet Meadow/Carr and Hardwood Swamp with improved water <br />filtration capacity, wildlife habitat, and native plant diversity. <br />Northern Wet Meadow/Carr Vegetation Management Objectives <br />• Canopy cover is absent to sparse. Trees present may include species such as ash, elm, <br />cottonwood, boxelder, quaking aspen, and willow. <br />• Shrub cover may be variable, ranging from sparse to intermittent (0-75%) across the wetland <br />complex. Shrub cover is dominated by native species such as red -osier dogwood and willows. <br />• Invasive shrub cover is reduced to less than 5%. <br />• Herbaceous ground layer cover is increased to over 75% throughout and composed of diverse <br />native herbaceous species, represented by wetland grasses, sedges, and forbs. <br />Hardwood Swamp Vegetation Management Objectives <br />• Canopy cover is intermittent to continuous (over 75%) and composed of native hardwoods such <br />as cottonwood, boxelder, hackberry, and elm. <br />• Subcanopy cover may be present, variable in cover, and composed of native canopy species. <br />• Shrub/sapling layer cover is 25-75%, composed of native wetland shrubs such as elderberry, <br />willow, red -osier dogwood, silky dogwood, and nannyberry. <br />• Herbaceous ground layer cover is increased to over 50%, with a diverse composition of native <br />shade -tolerant wetland grasses, sedges, and forbs. <br />Project Number: 193806465 18 <br />