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Riparia
wetland photo

Published Article/Report

Abstract

The adjacency of agriculture and water resources is, perhaps, nowhere more
prevalent than it is in Appalachia, USA. Agricultural activities have documented impacts on
the ability of wetlands and other aquatic systems to provide ecosystem services; in order to
diminish and/or mitigate these impacts, the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)
carries out resource assessment and place-based conservation planning on agricultural lands.
We contend that a comprehensive assessment of the effectiveness of restoration of wetland
ecosystem services within an agricultural landscape should include both ecological and
socioeconomic metrics, as follows: (1) the amount and type of ecosystem services most at risk,
and restored by NRCS conservation program investment; (2) a spatially based assessment of
the replacement/addition of ecosystem services from both an ecological and a socioeconomic
perspective; and (3) consideration of ecosystem service replacement in context with adjacent
land use and population dynamics as a preliminary consideration of differential value. We
utilize the Appalachian Region as a demonstration of these necessary elements in assessing the
effectiveness of the conservation/restoration investments made over the period of 2000–2006.
We identified a total of 1.7 million ha (4.2 million acres) of wetland polygons, with ;17%
located in an agricultural setting. We developed a classification crosswalk and utilize
Hydrogeomorphic Functional Assessment models to demonstrate the relative investment of
the 522 583 ha (1 291 330 acres) of wetland-relevant practices across a suite of ecosystem
services, with a heavy investment in the nutrient-cycling functions. We examined conservation
program implementation in a classification scheme that allocates counties into Urban, Rural,
Mixed-Urban, and Mixed-Rural categories based on population characteristics, and assessed
the relationship between wetland conservation program application and population dynamics.
We found Mixed-Urban and Mixed-Rural counties to have the most wetland in agricultural
settings that could be targeted for conservation measures. However, conservation practices
have been applied mostly in the Mixed-Rural and Rural counties, indicating a potential
overinvestment in the latter. When total acres of conservation measures are examined over a
gradient of both urban and total population growth rates, we do not see a concomitant
increase in the application of wetland conservation practices, and program investment appears
relatively random.