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Ceremony commemorates Cascade Brook salt marsh restoration
10 Region, October 25, 2004
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On October 7, restoration partners and officials from multiple agencies and Congressional offices met to celebrate the Cascade Brook salt marsh restoration project in Scarborough Marsh, a State Wildlife Management Area. Speakers included: · Northeast Region External Affairs Congressional Liaison Specialist Marci Caplis, Phil Bozenhard, Regional Biologist from Maine Dept. of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, Bruce Knight, Chief, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Joyce Swartzendruber, State Conservationist, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Gene Lagomarisino, State Chair, Ducks Unlimited, Congressional staff from both of Maine's Senators and the 1st District Congressman, Lois Winter, USFWS Gulf of Maine Coastal Program, Wayne Munroe, District Conservationist, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Journalists and photographers from three newspapers and two television stations attended and reported on the event. The genesis of this 100-acre salt marsh restoration project dates back to October, 1996 when a 500+-year flood blew out a large road culvert, smothering 2 acres of previously healthy salt marsh vegetation with spoil material from the roadbed, and ripping out 45 large piles of marsh peat (ranging in size from 1 cu. yd. to 100 cu. yds.) which floated downstream until they came to rest on the marsh surface. At the time of the flood, partnerships for salt marsh restoration were not in place, and Maine Dept. of Inland Fisheries had nowhere to turn for help in restoring the marsh. The impact in Cascade Brook grew more severe as Phragmites, an invasive non-native plant overtook the newly disturbed areas. By the late 1990s, federal, state, NGO and business partners had become engaged in salt marsh restoration projects in Scaborough Marsh, and the problems at Cascade Brook became a clear priority for restoration. Restoration partners spent several years conducting site visits and gathering data, designing the restoration project, obtaining permits, raising funds, conducting community outreach, developing a pre- and post-restoration monitoring protocol, locating contractors. On-the-ground restoration work was initiated in 2003 and was completed in 2004 and included: · Lowering a water control structure to increase tidal flow · Partially removing an underwater berm · Removing 5000 cubic yards of spoil material on the marsh surface and in the tidal creek · Removing 45 peat piles · Controlling Phragmites In the end, this high priority project cost $208,000 (including one year of pre- and five years of post-restoration monitoring) and involved 18 contributing partners, ranging from federal and state agencies to non-government organizations, businesses, and contractors. Gulf of Maine Coastal Program staff Lois Winter and Sandra Lary were actively engaged in identifying the restoration site, developing the restoration design and monitoring plan, obtaining permits, and raising funds from multiple partners, and coordinating with multiple partners throughout the design and implementation phases.

No contact information available. Please contact Charles Traxler, 612-713-5313, charles_traxler@fws.gov


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