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Effects of power-line construction on wetland vegetation in Massachusetts, USA

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Abstract

Utility rights-of-way corridors through wetland areas generate long-term impacts from construction activities to these valuable ecosystems. Changes to and recovery of the vegetation communities of a cattail marsh, wooded swamp, and shrub/bog wetland were documented through measurements made each growing season for two years prior, five years following, and again on the tenth year after construction of a 345-kV transmission line. While both the cattail marsh and wooded swamp recovered within a few years, measures of plant community composition in the shrub/bog wetland were still lower, compared to controls, after ten years. Long-term investigations such as the one reported here help decrease uncertainty and provide valuable information for future decision making regarding construction of power utility lines through valuable and dwindling wetland resources.

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Nickerson, N.H., Dobberteen, R.A. & Jarman, N.M. Effects of power-line construction on wetland vegetation in Massachusetts, USA. Environmental Management 13, 477–483 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01867681

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