Recognizing Wetlands
An Informational Pamphlet
The Electronic Version
What is a wetland?
The US Army Corps of Engineers
(Corps) and the US Environmental Protection
Agency define wetlands as follows:
Those areas that are inundated or saturated
by surface or ground water at a frequency and duration sufficient
to support, and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence
of vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions.
Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, bogs, and similar areas.
Wetlands are areas that are covered by water or have waterlogged soils
for long periods during the growing season. Plants growing in wetlands
are capable of living in saturated soil conditions for at least part
of the growing season. Wetlands such as swamps and marshes are often
obvious, but some wetlands are not easily recognized, often because
they are dry during part of the year or "they just don't look very
wet" from the roadside.
Some of these wetland types include, but are not limited to, many
bottomland forests, pocosins, pine savannahs, bogs, wet meadows,
potholes, and wet tundra. The information presented here usually
will enable you to determine whether you might have a wetland. If
you intend to place dredged or fill material in a wetland or in
an area that might be a wetland, contact the local Corps District
Office for assistance in determining if a permit is required.
Why is it necessary to consider whether
an area is a wetland?
Section 404 of the Clean Water Act requires that anyone interested
in depositing dredged or fill material into "waters of the United
States, including wetlands," must receive
authorization for such activities. The Corps has been assigned responsibility
for administering the Section 404 permitting process. Activities
in wetlands for which permits may be required include, but are not
limited to:
- Placement of fill material.
- Ditching activities when the excavated material is sidecast.
- Levee and dike construction.
- Mechanized land clearing.
- Land leveling.
- Most road construction.
- Dam construction.
The final determination of whether an area is a wetland and whether
the activity requires a permit must be made by the appropriate Corps
District Office.
How can wetlands be recognized?
The Corps uses three characteristics of wetlands when making wetland
determinations: vegetation, soil, and hydrology.
Unless an area has been altered or is a rare natural situation,
wetland indicators of all three characteristics must be present
during some portion of the growing season for an area to be a wetland.
Each characteristic is discussed below.
However, there are some general situations in which an area has
a strong probability of being a wetland. If any of the following
situations occur, you should ask the local Corps office to determine
whether the area is a wetland:
- Area occurs in a floodplain or otherwise has low spots in which
water stands at or above the soil surface during the growing season.
Caution: Most wetlands lack both standing water and
waterlogged soils during at least part of the growing season.
- Area has plant communities that commonly occur in areas having
standing water for part of the growing season (e.g., cypress-gum
swamps, cordgrass marshes, cattail marshes, bulrush and tule marshes,
and sphagnum bogs).
- Area has soils that are called peats or mucks.
- Area is periodically flooded by tides, even if only by strong,
wind-driven, or spring tides.
Many wetlands can be readily identified by the general situation stated
above. For the boundary of these areas and numerous other wetlands,
however, it is unclear whether these situations occur.
In such cases, it is necessary to carefully examine the area for
wetland indicators of the three major characteristics of wetlands:
vegetation, soil, and hydrology. Wetland indicators of these characteristics,
which may indicate that the area is a wetland, are described on
the following pages.
Vegetation indicators
Nearly 5,000 plant types in the United States may occur in wetlands.
These plants, known as hydrophytic vegetation,
are listed in regional publications of the US
Fish and Wildlife Service.
However, you can usually determine if wetland vegetation is present
by knowing a relatively few plant types that commonly occur in your
area. For example, cattails, bulrushes, cordgrass, sphagnum moss,
bald cypress, willows, mangroves, sedges, rushes, arrowheads, and
water plantains usually occur in wetlands.
Other indicators of plants growing in wetlands include trees having
shallow root systems, swollen trunks (e.g., bald cypress, tupelo
gum), or roots found growing from the plant stem or trunk above
the soil surface. Several Corps offices have published pictorial
guides of representative wetland plant types.
If you cannot determine whether the plant types in your area are
those that commonly occur in wetlands, ask the local Corps District
Office or a local botanist for assistance.
Soil indicators
There are approximately 2,000 named soils in the United States
that may occur in wetlands. Such soils, called hydric
soils, have characteristics that indicate they were
developed in conditions where soil oxygen is limited by the presence
of saturated soil for long periods during the growing season. If
the soil in your area is listed as hydric by the Natural
Resources Conservation Service, the area might be a wetland.
If the name of the soil in your area is not known, an examination
of the soil can determine the presence of any hydric soil indicators,
including:
- Soil consists predominantly of decomposed plant material (peats
or mucks).
- Soil has a thick layer of decomposing plant material on the
surface.
- Soil has a bluish gray or gray color below the surface, or the
major color of the soil at this depth is dark (brownish black
or black) and dull.
- Soil has the odor of rotten eggs.
- Soil is sandy and has a layer of decomposing plant material
at the soil surface.
- Soil is sandy and has dark stains or dark streaks of organic
material in the upper layer below the soil surface. These streaks
are decomposed plant material attached to the soil particles.
When soil from these streaks is rubbed between the fingers, a
dark stain is left on the fingers.
Hydrology indicators
Wetland hydrology refers to the presence of water at or above
the soil surface for a sufficient period of the year to significantly
influence the plant types and soils that occur in the area. Although
the most reliable evidence of wetland hydrology may be provided
by gaging station or groundwater well data, such information is
limited for most areas and, when available, requires analysis by
trained individuals. Thus, most hydrologic indicators are those
that can be observed during field inspection. Most do not reveal
either the frequency, timing, or duration of flooding or the soil
saturation.
However, the following indicators provide some evidence of the
periodic presence of flooding or soil saturation:
- Standing or flowing water is observed on the area during the
growing season.
- Soil is waterlogged during the growing season.
- Water marks are present on trees or other erect objet. Such
marks indicate that water periodically covers the area to the
depth shown on the objects.
- Drift lines, which are small piles of debris oriented in the
direction of water movement through an area, are present. These
often occur along contours and represent the approximate extent
of flooding in an area.
- Debris is lodged in trees or piled against other object by water.
- Thin layers of sediments are deposited on leaves or other objects.
Sometimes these become consolidated with small plant parts to
form discernible crust on the soil surface.
Wetland determination
One or more indicators of wetland vegetation, hydric soil, and
wetland hydrology must be present for an area to be a wetland. If
you observe definite indicators of any of the three characteristics,
you should seek assistance from either the local Corps District
Office or someone who is an expert at making wetland determinations.
This brochure is not intended to be used to make a final wetland
determination or delineation; it is intend, however, to provide
some general information concerning wetlands identification.
What to do if your area has wetlands that
you propose to alter?
Contact the Corps District Office that has responsibility for
the Section 404 permitting process in your area. This office will
assist you in defining the boundary of any wetlands on your property,
and will provide instructions for applying for a Section 404 permit,
if necessary.
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