Wetlands Restoration
Volunteers help restore wetlands by planting marsh grasses and other wetland vegetation.
Wetlands provide critical wildlife habitat, improve water quality and protect property from flooding and erosion. Recognizing these values, Bay Program partners have committed to increase both the quality and number of wetland acres in the Bay watershed.
Current Restoration Goal
In 2000, Bay Program signatories agreed to pursue a net gain of 25,000 acres of tidal and non-tidal wetlands in the Bay watershed by 2010. These wetland acres would be gained through voluntary projects. In 2005, Bay Program partners clarified this goal to track only wetland establishment and re-establishment projects, which represent true gains in wetland acreage.
As of 2007, Bay Program partners were about 50 percent of the way towards the 25,000-acre “acreage gain” goal. A separate goal was established in 2005 to track “functional gains” (enhancement and rehabilitation) on 40,000 additional acres of the Bay watershed's existing wetlands.
Types of Wetland Projects
There are five specific definitions scientists use to track wetland gains:
- Establishment is creating a wetland where one did not previously exist.
- Re-establishment is returning a former wetland to its natural, historic state. Usually, former wetlands have been drained for another use, such as agriculture.
- Enhancement is improving one or more of an existing wetland's functions, such as flooding a seasonal wetland to benefit waterfowl.
- Rehabilitation is repairing the historic functions of a degraded, existing wetland, such as removing invasive species like nutria and phragmites.
- Protection is acquiring land or easements of at least 30 years.
Establishment and re-establishment are considered wetland acreage gains, whereas enhancement and rehabilitation only improve the function of existing wetland acres. Protection is not considered to be a gain in acreage or function.