Upload
jlarndt51
View
193
Download
1
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Preseted at the 2010 TESNAR COnference.
Citation preview
Determining Indirect Impacts to Wetland Plant Communities resulting from Mine-induced changes to
Groundwater Hydrology
The Crandon Mine Experience
Jim Arndt, Ph.D., Westwood Professional Services
John Almendinger, Ph.D., Mn Dept. Natural Resources
History: 7 years Scoping, 20 years data collectionExxon, Crandon Mining Company, Nicollet Minerals
COE Lead Agency, EPA, WiDNR, Tribes, Public Interveners
• Promote informed federal agency decision-making by ensuring that detailed information concerning significant environmental impacts is available to both agency leaders and the public.
• An EIS is the most detailed NEPA instrument that is reserved for projects that have a substantial potential for adverse environmental impact.
• Lead and reviewing agencies identify and evaluate the likelihood and magnitude of significant impacts.
• If potential impacts cannot be identified or their magnitude determined, informed decisions regarding the nature of the impacts, and the potential for avoidance, minimization, and mitigation cannot be made
National Environmental Policy Act
Mine FacilitiesMine Infrastructure
• Facilities (119 acres)• Access Roads• Power Transmission• Pipelines• Tailings Management
Area (292 acres)• Soil Absorption System
(SAS)• Surface Water
Supplementation• Rail lines
Proposed Action: 3 years construction, 28 years mining, 4 year reclamation
Wetland Resources Analysis Plan: Issues
• Direct and indirect impacts on wetland hydrology, plants, soils, and functions
• Direct fill impacts• Indirect impacts on wetlands and
wetland plant communities from mine de-watering, supplementation well(s), and SAS operation, reclamation and recovery of watertables.
Significance Criteria (Easy):
Hydrology, Vegetation, Soils
•• Wetland hydrology is removed (WT not > 12 inches for Wetland hydrology is removed (WT not > 12 inches for greater than 5% of the growing season.greater than 5% of the growing season.
• Wetland vegetation removed. Hydrophytes less than 50 percent (aerial coverage) using vegetation assessments stipulated in the 1987 Wetlands Delineation Manual.
•• Wetland soils removed. Wetland soils removed. Would no longer have the Would no longer have the moisture regime required of hydric soilsmoisture regime required of hydric soils
Result in change in wetland jurisdictional status
Significance Criteria (Hard): Wetland
Functions• Percentage reduction or increase in raw
scores of functional assessments performed on wetlands that could be affected by the project
• Percentage to be determined from distribution of wetland functions in individual wetlands and throughout the impact area of influence
Indirect impact, losses and gains in functions
Impact Area of Influence
•• Most conservative estimate of Most conservative estimate of 0.250.25--foot contour of estimated foot contour of estimated steady state water table steady state water table drawdown with mine dedrawdown with mine de--watering and supplementation watering and supplementation well using USACE modelwell using USACE model
•• Most conservative estimate of Most conservative estimate of 0.250.25--foot contour of estimated foot contour of estimated steady state water table rise in steady state water table rise in the SAS area using USACE the SAS area using USACE modelmodel
Methodology: Define Baseline Conditions
• Existing wetland delineations, wetland hydrogeologic settings, and wetland function assessments
• Baseline conditions assumed to represent No Action conditions
• Baseline data entered into a database for GIS analysis
Impacts on Wetland Plant CommunitiesBaseline Plant Community Data
• 46 detailed semi-quantitative samples (PEC)
• 9 Detailed Species Lists (Foth & Van Dyke)
• 15 quantitative transects (Normandeau)
• 158 Functions Assessments (Normandeau)
• ~ 20 wetland delineations
• ~100 photo-interpretations to class
Site Characteristics
• Sub-glacially molded till
• Lots of outwash, complex stratigraphy
• Underlying sandy unit (layer 2) of concern
• Wetland at varying elevations
• Wetlands of varying characteristics
• Three recharge types with respect to interactions with layer 2
• Five condition classes with respect to inlets and outlets, surface water interactions.
PEC Functions Database (Demo, Output)
Hydrology– Determine impacts of groundwater drawdown and
mounding on wetland hydrology– Compare baseline hydrologic regimes to steady state
cone of depression or groundwater mound from USACE groundwater model (controversial)
• Impact assessment performed in a GIS
Groundwater Drawdown Modeling (per EarthTec)
Step 1: Assignment of Wetlands to NPC Classes: Reclassification
• Compare existing plant communities to those adapted to conditions under the Proposed Action
• Existing plant data from ecological plot studies in Minnesota and Wisconsin were used to rank native plant species and the Crandon wetlands by affinity for specific hydrologic regimes
Ordination Example
Minnesota Native Plant Classification SystemWFn53a
WFn53aClass Code
Ecological System – Wet ForestFloristic region – Northern
Moisture (0 driest – 9 wettest) Nutrients (0 poorest-9 richest)Type (a driest/poorest in class)
WFn53a Northern Wet Cedar Forest
– Other Similar Classes• FPn63 – Northern Cedar Swamp, wetter, peat
dominated, different understory plants.• WFn64 – Very Wet Ash Swamp, more ash, wetter,
richer.
Portion of Class Description
Fieldwork: Crandon Wetlands to Mn NPC Classes
PEC Project Field Database (Demo, Output)
Air Photo Interpretation and Field Verification Used to Place Crandon Wetlands In Minnesota’s
NPC Classification
Step 2: Ordination (DCA Decorana)– Non-metric, multi-dimensional ecological statistics. Similar samples
are near each other and dissimilar objects are farther from each other. – These relationships are then characterized numerically and/or
graphically.
– John Almendinger (MnDNR) very familiar with DCA ordination and used extensive dataset developed on 1,079 (now over 2000) releve plots in Minnesota to develop classifications on wetlands for which we had detailed Crandon Data
• MnDNR data with functional understanding of how the vegetation relates to water-table, nutrient status, substrate, and hydrology.
• Representative wetlands in the Crandon Mine Project• Data accumulated, plant community numbers/distribution, soils,
hydrology, classification• Placed in a relational database
MnDNR Data with Wetlands
in Crandon Area
Ordination FAQshttp://ordination.okstate.edu/
Step 3: Assessment of Indirect Impacts to Plant Communities
• Estimate new plant community composition assuming the rate of the change agent (e.g., groundwater drawdown) would result in converting one adapted native plant community to another
Watertable Data for Wetland Classes in the Crandon Area
Hydrologic Impact Sensitivity Groups• None-to-Slight HSIG. Monitoring or mitigation is not anticipated.
Sufficient habitat variability exists for most plants to persist within a wetland basin subject to falls or rises in WT position and variance. Changes in species’ abundance may occur, but significant loss of species or invasions of weedy species capable of dominating the wetland are unlikely.
• Moderate HISG. Monitoring is recommended, and mitigation would depend upon the monitoring results. Turnover in species (losses and invasions) or changes in physical site properties are likely to cause slow recovery to the community’s initial state. Permanent changes in site properties or the invasion of ecologically dominant plants are possible. Wetlands sensitive to modest changes in mean WT position or altered variance were placed in this category when these modest changes were small compared to the predicted accuracy of the groundwater model.
• Severe HSIG. Mitigation likely required. Class-level, System-level, or irreversible changes in the vegetation are expected, even after restoration of the groundwater regime. Permanent alteration of physical site properties, high turnover in species and invasion of ecologically dominant plants expected. Not applicable to recharge or supplemented wetlands.
Example: WFn53, Northern Wet Cedar Forest
– Vegetation: Patchy to interrupted canopy (25-75% cover) dominated by white cedar. Black ash may also be abundant. The groundlayer is herb-dominated and very rich, with 50-100% cover in a typical stand.
– Soils: Layer of well-decomposed organic material 25-150 cm deep over mineral soil. Underlying mineral soil can be of almost any texture, but medium and fine textures are common.
– Hydrology: wet throughout most of the growing season, but dry sufficiently often to prevent further accumulation of peat. Frequently in areas of groundwater discharge evident as seepage areas, spring runs, or cold-water streams. (Mean WL 2.2 feet +/- 2.4 feet)
Example: WFn53, Northern Wet Cedar ForestSensitivity to Groundwater Drawdown
• None-to-Slight HSIG; < 2.0 foot drawdown; remains in WFn53– Class has sufficient habitat variability for most plants to persist within
a wetland basin subject to falls in WT position under 56cm (~2 feet).
• Moderate HISG; 2-4 foot drawdown, conversion to Northern Wet Ash Swamp (WFn55)– WFn55 has similar variance in WT compared to Northern Very Wet
Cedar Forest but the mean WT position is significantly deeper.
• Severe HSIG; > 4 foot drawdown, conversion to Wet-MesicHardwood Forest– The mean WT position at top of gray (gleyed) horizons at about
150cm with bright iron-rich mottles, which indicate soil aeration, were used to estimate the variance in WT position as about 130cm. This would be sufficient to convert most very wet cedar forests to a community that is essentially terrestrial.
Demonstration: Appendix B
Step 4: Summarize Data: Hydrologic Impact
Sensitivity Classes for Discharge Wetlands
Hydrologic Impact Sensitivity Classes for
Recharge Type 3 Wetlands
Hydrologic Impact Sensitivity Classes for
Soil Absorption System Wetlands
(Groundwater Rise)
Suggestions, Issues
• Groundwater hydrology: variability, scale, accuracy
• Function and value assessments: limited categories, resolution, not available for all wetlands– Use accepted model, incorporate recent literature, new
data, airphoto interpretation, interpolation• Plant community assessments: Need for
quantitative data– Detailed assessment of representative wetlands– Monitoring plots