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Island Restoration and Habitat Enhancement in Lake Oconee
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This project consists of Island restoration and habitat enhancement in Lake Oconee, Georgia.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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St. Catherine Creek Aquatic Habitat Assessment in support of GCPO LCC
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This project will assess habitat in St. Catherine Creek, Mississippi, in support of GCPO LCC.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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St. Catherine Creek Biological Monitoring in support of Landscape Model Development
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The Pvt. John Allen National Fish Hatchery, the Baton Rouge Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Office and the Gulf Coast Plains/Ozark Landscape Conservation
Cooperative (GCPO LCC) are partnering to develop a proactive approach in identifying problem areas and delivering aquatic habitat restoration actions, on the ground, before the problems reach an irresolvable level. This joint effort is already in the full process of data collection and evaluation to develop a spatially explicit model of aquatic habitats found on the St. Catherine Creek National Wildlife Refuge in MS. The full spectrum of biological needs for both of the alligator gar, paddlefish, and other floodplain dependent species are found in this floodplain. The existing project is already developing remote sensing capacity to characterize all aquatic habitats found in this interior floodplain in terms of the biological needs of aquatic species. In addition, data on bathymetry, water quality parameters, flood frequency and duration periods and vegetative types are being collected in order to accurately portray and verify habitat characteristics in the spatial model. Hydro acoustic and side scan imaging will be utilized in order to deliver the highest quality data available to resource managers at the present. Quantitative biological information is necessary to complete the suite of data for the model. Abundance and distribution of selected fish needs to be collected in conjunction with environmental data in order to adequately characterize the importance of various physicochemical conditions to aquatic life. This project will collect those data on St Catherine Creek NMR. This project is currently on-going.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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NFHAP SARP Lower Bourbeuse Aquatic Conservation Area (LBACA) Landowner Partnership
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This project consists of a landowner partnership within the Lower Bourbeuse Aquatic Conservation Area (LBACA), Missouri.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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Hydrologic restoration of coastal wetlands on North Carolina’s Albemarle- Pamlico Peninsula
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This project, lead by the Nature Conservancy's North Carolina Chapter, will restore hydrology and reverse saltwater intrusion into wetlands by replacing an inadequate water control structure and plug canals in the Albemarle-Pamlico Peninsula.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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Using positive interactions between bivalves and seagrass to reduce habitat fragmentation and restore essential fish habitat
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Lead by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, this project will restore eelgrass cover that had declined by propeller scaring through introducing mussels. A natural fertilization and predator protection interaction study will also take place.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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Oyster and Shoreline Habitat Restoration on Beacon Island in the Outer Banks of North Carolina
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This project will stabilize and rebuild fringing salt marsh habitat to protect Brown Pelican nesting areas and to create approximately two patch oyster reefs for fish habitat on Beacon Island in the Outer Banks of North Carolina.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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Community-based and larger-scale oyster restoration in ACE Basin NERR Phase II
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This project will create and protect intertidal oyster reefs and saltmarsh, essential fish habitat, within the Ashepoo-Combahee-Edisto (ACE) Basin National Estuarine Research Reserve in South Carolina. Organization: South Carolina Department of Natural Resources.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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Creating Oyster Niche Structures through Restoration Using Crab Traps
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Abandoned crab traps are a prevalent form of marine debris on South Carolina and other states’ scenic coastal shorelines, detracting from their natural beauty and posing an ecological threat. This project, lead by a team of researchers with the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR), led by Associate Marine Scientist, Dr. Peter Kingsley-Smith, is a progressive way to use abandoned and unwanted crab traps to create new and thriving oyster reef habitat with funding from the SARP/NOAA Community-based Restoration Program (CRP), SCDNR.
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Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B
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Develop Artificial Estuarine Habitats in SC to Increase Abundance of Recreationally-Important Fish
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This project will develop artificial estuarine habitats to increase abundance of recreationally important fish within South Carolina.
Located in
Funded Projects
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SARP Projects W2B