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Wetland Restoration
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Mapping Sandy Creek: Richardson
with Duke Forest
manager Judson EdeburnPhoto:Jim
Wallace |
Workers are beginning to transform a heavily
eroded, silt-clogged stretch of Durham's Sandy Creek into an eight-acre
restored wetland and flood plain designed to help protect the Triangle's
drinking-water supply and control storm-water runoff.
The restoration, a project of the Duke Wetland Center, is being
funded by nearly $1.5 million in grants and in-kind gifts. The
wetland center is part of the Nicholas School of the Environment
and Earth Sciences.
"By restoring the natural flood plain that used to be here
before the onslaught of urban development, we'll recreate a healthy
wetlands ecosystem that sops up pollutants and improves wildlife
habitat," says Curtis Richardson, director of the wetland
center and professor of resource ecology at the Nicholas School.
Project sponsors include the Clean Water Management Trust Fund,
the North Carolina Wetland Restoration Program, Duke Forest, Duke's
facilities management department, and the wetland center. Other
faculty members from the Nicholas School and Duke's Pratt School
of Engineering are also collaborating.
The project will include re-contouring and replanting more than
2,000 feet of degraded stream and constructing an earthen dam and
a four-acre storm-water reservoir. Duke Forest's Al Buehler Trail,
located near the Washington Duke Inn and golf course, will pass
along the dam. Over the years, torrents of storm water diverted
by paving have cut deeply into the banks of Sandy Creek, eroding
its natural bends and creating "a straight chute for sediment
and pollution," Richardson says. "We've lost the bends
and contours that allowed the water to overflow into surrounding
bottomlands, where wetland plants and soils could absorb the majority
of the pollutants."
Richardson's team will address that problem by engineering a new,
more naturally meandering streambed for Sandy Creek and filling
in its old channel. Creek banks and low-lying areas will be re-shaped
and planted as hardwood wetlands, which researchers believe will
remove up to 70 percent of the creek's sediment and nutrients.
"Our goal is to recreate an ecosystem similar to what you
would have found here seventy-five to 100 years ago," Richardson
explains. He and his team have completed a biological census of
the area and collected three years' worth of pre-restoration data
on its soil, water, plants, and wildlife.
Besides serving as an example of a rare Piedmont wetland, the eight-acre
ecosystem will provide a site for research on biological diversity,
hydrology, mosquito control, invasive plant species, and other
environmental concerns, he says. "What we learn here will
benefit many wetlands and watersheds nationwide."
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