VEGETATION CLASSIFICATION
AND MAPPING AT
GEORGE WASHINGTON BIRTHPLACE
NATIONAL MONUMENT
Technical Report NPS/NER/NRTR2008/099
Karen D. Patterson
Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation
Division of Natural Heritage
217 Governor Street, 3rd Floor
Richmond, VA 23219
June 2008
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Park Service
Northeast Region
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
________________________________
Summary
Accurate and
up-to-date vegetation maps are recognized by the National Park Service
(NPS) Inventory and Monitoring Program as one of twelve basic data sets
for every national park with significant natural resources. The National
Park Service (NPS) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) have put forth
standards and protocols for classification and mapping of vegetation
communities on NPS lands. The USGS-NPS Vegetation Mapping Program recognizes
the United States National Vegetation Classification (USNVC) as the
standard vegetation classification to be used in these mapping projects.
Vegetation data collected from seven national parks in Virginia were
combined with over 2,000 existing plot samples from throughout the Mid-Atlantic
Piedmont and Coastal Plain and used to refine the USNVC for the mid-Atlantic
region. This classification was used to map and describe the vegetation
in those seven national parks.
This report documents the classification and mapping of vegetation and
other land-use classes at George Washington Birthplace National Monument.
Nineteen map classes representing 16 USNVC associations, two nonstandard
park-specific vegetation classes, and four Anderson Level II land-use
categories were used to map the 223 ha (551 ac) park. Vegetation map
classes were determined through extensive field reconnaissance, data
collection, and analysis. The map was based on 2002 aerial photography
and field sampling conducted in 2002 and 2003. Spatial data were digitized
onscreen over digital orthophoto mosaics created from scanned color
infrared, stereo pair 1:6,000 scale aerial photography using a 0.5 ha
minimum mapping unit.
Four cultural map classes cover 49% (113 ha [279 ac]) of the park: Cultural
Meadow; Other Urban or Built-Up Land; Transportation, Communications,
and Utilities; and Semipermanent Impoundment. Early successional or
transitional vegetation covers approximately 19% (44 ha [109 ac]) of
park land: Loblolly Pine Plantation / Early-Successional Loblolly Pine
Forest, Disturbed Calcareous Forest, Disturbed Acidic Slope Forest,
Successional Red-cedar Forest, Successional Sweetgum Forest, and Successional
Black Locust Forest. Tidal wetlands account for approximately 7% (16.5
ha [40.7 ac]) of the park: Beaches, Tidal Oligohaline Marsh, Tidal Mesohaline
and Polyhaline Marsh (Low Salt Marsh), and Tidal Shrub Swamp (Iva Type).
Nontidal forested wetlands cover just 3% (7.5 ha [18.5 ac]) of the park
land: Coastal Plain / Piedmont Acidic Seepage Swamp and Non-Riverine
Saturated Forest. The remaining 16% (35.8 ha [88.5 ac]) of the park
land is mapped as later successional forests: Coastal Plain Dry Calcareous
Forest and Loblolly Pine - Hardwood Forest.
A vegetation map of George Washington Birthplace National Monument was
created following the USGS-NPS Vegetation Mapping Program protocols.
Vegetation map classes were crosswalked to the Natural Communities of
Virginia and to the USNVC in order to provide a regional and global
context for the parks vegetation. A field key to the map classes
and detailed descriptions for map classes or vegetation associations
within a map class were developed to assist with field recognition and
classification. Additional products associated with this project include:
leaf-on and leaf-off orthophoto mosaics, database of vegetation plot
data, digital photos of vegetation associations, and spatial data files
for the vegetation map and plot sample points with associated Federal
Geographic Data Committee (FGDC)-compliant metadata.
Products for George Washington Birthplace National Monument and similar
national park vegetation mapping projects can be accessed at the USGS-NPS
Vegetation Mapping Program website: http://biology.usgs.gov/npsveg/.
Keywords: vegetation association, vegetation classification, vegetation
mapping, George Washington Birthplace National Monument
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Appendix A through Appendix H: Successional Black Locust Forest
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Appendix H: Non-Riverine Saturated Forest to end of the report