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Stony Creek (VA) Riparian Restoration and Stream Habitat Improvement
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This projected will restore stream and riparian habitat within Stony Creek, located in the state of Virginia.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Restoration of Connectivity to Coal Pile, a Backwater of the Arkansas River
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In order to restore connectivity to Coal Pile, the canals from the Arkansas River into Coal Pile will be dredged with a Mudcat hydraulic dredge, which was recently obtained from federal surplus equipment for use on this project.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Wolf Pen Gap OHV Trail Complex Stream Crossing Improvement
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This project will improve stream crossings and trails at the Wolf Pen Gap OHV Trail Complex in Arkansas. It will also improve connectivity and open stream habitat for fish.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Crabtree Swamp Habitat Restoration
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The restoration of Crabtree Swamp is an innovative, "first of its kind" project, in which a previously channelized drainage basin is being returned to a blackwater hardwood swamp in which the floodplain is being recreated via earthmoving and replanting into functional habitat for fish, invertebrates and other wildlife. To match resources, the restoration project has been subdivided into 10 reaches.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Improved Red Drum Habitat through Community-based Oyster Reef Habitat Restoration
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Little has been attempted to improve the habitat to ensure survival of stocked red drum fingerlings in SC waters This project will create additional oyster reefs in stocking areas. The impact will be many fold as other organisms will utilize the habitat and oyster population and water quality improvements will be recognized. Patches of hard substrate and 3-D reefs will be created in stocking areas, thus establishing quality habitat for red drum at this early life stage.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Living Shoreline - Little St. Simons Island, GA.
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This project removed a failing bulkhead on Little St. Simons Island, GA and installed a living shoreline in its place to provide stream bank stabilization, habitat for eastern oysters, and essential fish habitat.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Deadman's Island Restoration Project
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Lead by the City of Gulf Breeze, this project restored coastal barrier habitat on Deadman's Island.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Pelican Point Shoreline Protection and Habitat Restoration Project
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Led by The Nature Conservancy, the Pelican Point project created of two 56' oyster reefs at Pelican Point, north of the mouth of Weeks Bay on Mobile Bay to protect the shoreline and restore aquatic habitat.
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SARP Projects W2B
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Oyster Reef Restoration Through the Use of Non-shell Cultch Material in the Estarine Areas of the Altamaha River, GA
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Restoration of oysters along southeastern coasts is important for economic and ecological reasons. Oysters enhance waterquality. Their reefs buffer wave action adjacent to marshes, and they are harvested and marketed by commercial fishermen.
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SARP Projects W2B
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FISH Preserve Habitat Restoration Project
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The Florida Institute For Saltwater Heritage (FISH) is restoring the “kitchen”, an important fisheries habitat for the section of shallow Sarasota Bay bottom south of Cortez. For villagers during the Depression, the kitchen provided food for the tables of their struggling families and was critical to their survival. In 1999, FISH raised money through community festivals to purchase 100 acres of environmentally-sensitive waterfront property that was slated for large scale development immediately east of the village. This historically-significant area became known as the FISH Preserve and is one of the last remaining undeveloped parcels on northern Sarasota Bay.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B