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Below are photographs taken by Ohio EPA staff during several seasons
of field research for the wetland bioassessment program. Enjoy a stroll
through the Ohio landscape and learn about the uniqueness of Ohio's wetlands!
Scofield Swamp is a large, emergent marsh with
a buttonbush-willow shrub-dominated zone along its north and west sides,
located in Clark County, Ohio. Scofield Swamp is located in a very large,
shallow, u-shaped valley and receives surface water inputs from surrounding
active farm fields. It is a headwater wetland to the Little Miami River.
In early spring, it is dominated by white water-cup (Ranunculus longirostris
Godron), but becomes overrun by late summer with pigweed (Amaranthus
hybridus), an agricultural weed.
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Triangle Lake Bog State Nature Preserve
is a kettle hole, zoned, sphagnous bog in Portage County (northeast),
Ohio. The flora of northeast Ohio has a strong boreal element due
to lake effect snows and cooler winter temperatures from Lake Erie.
Triangle Lake Bog is one of the finest, least disturbed bogs remaining
in Ohio, with a floating sphagnum mat, swamp loosestrife (Decodon
verticillatus), leatherleaf (Chaemadaphne calyculata),
and tamarack (Larix laricina) surrounding an acidic kettle
lake. |
Sheldon's Marsh State Nature Preserve is one
of the few, remaining, hydrologically unrestricted Lake Erie coastal marshes
and is located in Huron County, Ohio. The marsh is a lagoon wetland and
swamp forest that has developed behind a narrow barrier beach. It provides
very significant waterfowl and migratory songbird habitat during the spring
and fall migrations.
Slate Run Metropark is a high quality buttonbush
(Cephalanthus occidentalis) swamp located in a mature second-growth,
mixed-mesophytic forest and is a headwater wetland to Slate Run. Slate
Run Metropark is part of the Franklin County Metropolitan Park District
in central Ohio. In early spring, yellow water-cup and eastern manna grass
flourish under the buttonbush and present a beautiful and delicate floral
display.
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Drew Woods State Nature Preserve vernal pool
in late winter. Drew Woods is a relict old-growth oak-hickory forest
located in Darke County (western), Ohio. Depressional vernal pools
with water up to 1.5m deep are common features in many forests and
wood lots in Ohio. They provide critical breeding habitat for salamanders
and frogs. |
Wilson Swamp is a privately owned, high quality
buttonbush and maple-ash swamp located on the flood plain of the St. Marys
River, in Mercer County (western), Ohio. This wetland is located in a
portion of the St. Marys River called "the Thoroughfare," a 1000 acre
complex of buttonbush swamps, swamp forests, and emergent and floating
leaved marshes that is annually flooded by this low-gradient western Ohio
River.
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Leafy Oak wetland is
a privately owned, high quality forested wetland with a very rich
herb and shrub stratum that also supports multiple species of amphibians.
This wetland is located in Hardin County, (northwest central), Ohio.
Ohio EPA found a new population of ravensfoot sedge (Carex crus-corvi)
in this wetland in 1996. |
Large vernal pool in Gahanna Woods State Nature Preserve,
Franklin County (central), Ohio. Gahanna Woods is a mature, mixed mesophytic
forest with a series of interconnected vernal pools, buttonbush swamps,
and wet woods. A robust population of the state's endangered cypress-knee
sedge (Carex decomposita) is found in a buttonbush swamp near
where this picture was taken.
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