Salt marshes of the Northeastern United States (Maine to Virginia) are vulnerable to loss given their history of intensive human alteration. One direct human modification – ditching – was common across the Northeast for salt hay farming since European Colonization and for mosquito control in the first half of the 20th century. We hand-digitized linear ditches across Northeastern intertidal emergent wetlands from contemporary aerial imagery within the bounds of the National Wetland Inventory's Estuarine Intertidal Emergent Wetland areas.
Categories: Data;
Types: Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: Connecticut,
Delaware,
Maine,
Maryland,
Massachusetts, All tags...
New Hampshire,
New Jersey,
New York,
Northeast Coast,
Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island,
USGS Science Data Catalog (SDC),
United States,
Virginia,
biota,
coastal ecosystems,
coastal processes,
ecosystem resilience,
geospatial datasets,
marsh health,
marsh stress,
salt marsh,
vulnerability,
wetland ecosystems,
wetland functions, Fewer tags
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