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Service Description: Many wetlands support clean water along with providing flood attenuation, stream flow maintenance during dry periods, surface water storage, groundwater recharge, sediment capture and retention, and streambank and shoreline stabilization. Floodplain, or riparian wetlands including beaver pond and meadow complexes may provide all of these functions. CNHP modeled likely water quantity and geomorphic functions by reviewing literature on how wetlands intercept, store, and release water and sediment in the landscape, and crosswalking these processes to wetland landscape positions, landforms, dominant water flow types, and vegetation. Supporting geospatial data layers include statewide floodplains, alluvial aquifers, decreed instream flows and lake levels, historic fire perimeters, irrigated lands, surface water diversions, and groundwater wells.
Map Name: Water Quantity and Geomorphic Functions
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Copyright Text: Colorado Natural Heritage Program, USGS, CDWR, CDWR, FEMA
Spatial Reference:
102100
(3857)
Single Fused Map Cache: false
Initial Extent:
XMin: -1.1901846765200457E7
YMin: 4653906.36068165
XMax: -1.1641349372804703E7
YMax: 4794061.295745282
Spatial Reference: 102100
(3857)
Full Extent:
XMin: -1.99085414953E7
YMin: 377194.8095000014
XMax: -7272853.905099999
YMax: 1.1120718093099996E7
Spatial Reference: 102100
(3857)
Units: esriMeters
Supported Image Format Types: PNG32,PNG24,PNG,JPG,DIB,TIFF,EMF,PS,PDF,GIF,SVG,SVGZ,BMP
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Comments: Many wetlands support clean water along with providing flood attenuation, stream flow maintenance during dry periods, surface water storage, groundwater recharge, sediment capture and retention, and streambank and shoreline stabilization. Floodplain, or riparian wetlands including beaver pond and meadow complexes may provide all of these functions. CNHP modeled likely water quantity and geomorphic functions by reviewing literature on how wetlands intercept, store, and release water and sediment in the landscape, and crosswalking these processes to wetland landscape positions, landforms, dominant water flow types, and vegetation. Supporting geospatial data layers include statewide floodplains, alluvial aquifers, decreed instream flows and lake levels, historic fire perimeters, irrigated lands, surface water diversions, and groundwater wells.
Subject: Water Quantity and Geomorphic Functions Map Service - Watershed Planning Toolbox
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Keywords: water quantity
AntialiasingMode: None
TextAntialiasingMode: Force
Supports Dynamic Layers: false
MaxRecordCount: 1000
MaxImageHeight: 4096
MaxImageWidth: 4096
Supported Query Formats: JSON, AMF, geoJSON
Min Scale: 2311162.217155
Max Scale: 0
Supports Datum Transformation: true
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