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Results of adding critical "sub-watersheds" to the proposed conservation plan. To reduce fragmentation, connect core habitats, and plan for improved water quality, a GIS technique was developed to incorporate sub-watersheds into the proposed conservation plan. Any smaller (fourth-order) watershed only partially covered by the first-cut Core and Wildlife Corridor Protection Area was added by expanding the boundary. Any first-cut boundary not adjacent to a smaller watershed was analyzed to find the nearest boundary (ridgeline) of any watershed size. If such a boundary did not exist within one-quarter mile of the first-cut boundary, a simple 1/4-mile expansion was used. This technique served to connect fragmented core habitats, and incorporate ecological landscape units in a defensible manner.

GIS Images

The Chattooga Watershed
Currently Protected Areas
Existing and Potential Old Growth Forest
Chattooga Conservancy Roadless Areas (as of 1996)
Conservation Plan "First Step"
Chattooga Conservation Plan

 

 

Intro
Description
Objectives
Scope
Functionality
Building on Success
Conserving Biodiversity
Native Forest
Old-Growth
Understory
Salamanders
Birds
Mammals
Economic Setting
Employment Trends
Individual Industries
Economic Base
Economic Strategy
Ecosystem Management
Origins
Timber to Ecosystem
Ecosystem Approach
Methodology
Core Prinicples
Applied Principles
Evaluation
Recommen-
dations

Protection Areas
Restoration Areas
Economic Dev. Areas
Stream Mgmt. Zones
Call to Action
Implemen-
tation

Federal Lands
State, Local, Private
Outside Watershed
GIS Images
Watershed
Protected Areas
Old Growth
CC Roadless Areas
CCP-1st Step
CCP-Watershed Anal.
CCP-Final Draft