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EBTJV announces $240,604 in funding for five habitat conservation projects
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FY24 awards announcement
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News & Events
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News Inbox
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Restoration of Riverine Process and Habitat Suitability, Narraguagus River, Beddington, ME
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Project added wood and boulder structures to a 0.4-mile reach of the mainstem Narraguagus River, ME, and constructed off channel habitat features.
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Projects
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2022 Projects
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Wood is Good for Maryland Brook Trout
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Brochure developed by MD DNR and MD Forest Service, to explain the benefits of riparian buffers and woody material to health of streams and brook trout.
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The Story of Wild Brook Trout
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Landowner Resources
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Wood placement in river restoration: fact, fiction, and future direction
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Despite decades of research on wood in rivers, the addition of wood as a river restoration technique remains controversial. We reviewed the literature on natural and placed wood to shed light on areas of continued debate. Research on river ecology demonstrates that large woody debris has always been a natural part of most rivers systems. Although a few studies have reported high structural failure rates (>50%) of placed instream wood structures, most studies have shown relatively low failure rates (<20%) and that placed wood remains stable for several years, though long-term evaluations of placed wood are rare. The vast majority of studies on wood placement have reported improvements in physical habitat (e.g., increased pool frequency, cover, habitat diversity). Studies that have not reported improvements in physical habitat often found that watershed processes (e.g., sediment, hydrology, water quality) had not been addressed. Finally, most evaluations of fish response to wood placement have shown positive responses for salmonids, though few studies have looked at long-term watershed-scale responses or studied a wide range of species.
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Science and Data
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Brook Trout Related Publications
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EBTJV project named in NFHAP's annual Waters to Watch program
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The White River, VT featured in NFHAP's annual Waters to Watch program.
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News & Events
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News Inbox
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Project snapshot - Restoration of Riverine Process and Habitat Suitability, Narraguagus River, Beddington, ME
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This FY22 EBTJV/NFHAP funded project has been successfully completed! Thanks to Project SHARE and partners for continuing to invest in the health and functioning of this watershed.
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News & Events
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News Inbox
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Mill Creek “Chop and Drop”, WV_FY14 Project
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Mostly dead and/or down hemlock trees were utilized to create large woody material inspired habitat structures to increase pool habit, increase thalweg meander length, decrease bankfull width, and introduce overhead fish cover. Cross-vanes, j-hooks, wing-deflectors, toe wood, digger logs, and engineered log jams were constructed. The strategic part of this chop and drop effort was to place and anchor logs to minimize movement in bankfull or high events.
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Projects
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Project Completion Reports
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Wood Additions into the Sheepscot, Narraguagus, Machias Watersheds, Maine
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In 2007, Project SHARE and the Department of Marine Resources Bureau of Sea-Run Fisheries and Habitat and private land owners undertook a "chop and drop" large wood addition project. Wood was added to streams with the intent to increase habitat complexity and salmonid survival. This project expands the large wood treatment locations to include the Sheepscot drainage, along with treatment locations on the Machias, East Machias and Narraguagus River drainages. It adds nine additional large wood treatment sites enhancing approximately 4 miles of stream for brook trout.
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Projects
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2006 - 2018 Projects
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2010 Projects
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Wood Additions into the Sheepscot, Narraguagus, Machias Watersheds, Maine
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In 2007, Project SHARE and the Department of Marine Resources Bureau of Sea-Run Fisheries and Habitat and private land owners undertook a "chop and drop" large wood addition project. Wood was added to streams with the intent to increase habitat complexity and salmonid survival. This project expands the large wood treatment locations to include the Sheepscot drainage, along with treatment locations on the Machias, East Machias and Narraguagus River drainages. It adds nine additional large wood treatment sites enhancing approximately 4 miles of stream for brook trout.
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Funded Projects
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EBTJV Projects