The indicator measures the percentage of land cover dominated by meadow (wet and dry variants) and wetland vegetation in the Tahoe Region in relation to the total amount of undisturbed vegetation. The relative proportion of meadows and wetlands is important because the areas provide flood attenuation, wildlife habitat, ground water recharge, water filtration, and aesthetic and recreation values. The primary factors influencing the extent of meadow and wetland vegetation are the geomorphic setting and the seasonal or permanent presence of surface groundwater, subsurface groundwater, and/or saturated soil. Urbanization has altered the movement of water through some meadow and wetland systems through impoundments, water rerouting, and the creation of impervious surface such as paved roads and building footprints. TRPA has adopted policies and ordinances designed to promote the conservation and protection of existing meadow and wetland vegetation types. In addition, Environmental Improvement Program partners implement meadow and wetland restoration and enhancement projects, which have increased in wetland and meadow vegetation acreage. Programs such as TRPA’s transfer of development rights program provide additional incentives for moving development rights out of environmentally sensitive areas.
Wetland and Meadow Vegetation Types Within the Tahoe Basin.
Data provided by the USDA Forest Service, R5 Remote Sensing Lab. Access detailed datasets on Tahoe Open Data, including, vegetation type summary, vegetation spatial data, and detailed vegetation attributes.
Extent of Wetland and Meadow Vegetation Types Within the Tahoe Basin.
EIP Indicators
Example EIP Projects
This project seeks to restore aspen as the dominant tree in the forest canopy and stimulate regeneration through conifer thinning and prescribed fire.
This 640-acre project restores upland, riparian, aspen, and meadow habitat in Big Meadow Creek watershed and restores fire on the landscape.
This project completed by the USDA Forest Service reduced conifer encroachment into the Baldwin, Freel, Meiss, Benwood, Star, and Hellhole meadows.
Monitoring Programs
No photos available.
No documents available.
April 2017. EcObject Vegetation Map v2.1 Product Guide. USDA Forest Service, R5 Remote Sensing Lab.