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Overcoming Challenges for Reclamation Success

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Cultivar or variety within a species not adapted. Use of species that have seed dormancy issues ... Select species and cultivars that are adapted to site conditions. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overcoming Challenges for Reclamation Success


1
Overcoming Challenges for Reclamation Success
  • Cindy Pappas
  • Ed Redente, Ph.D.
  • Richard Bell

2
Importance of Reclamation
  • Heightened focus on reclamation and, most
    importantly, reclamation success
  • 1. State and other stakeholders perception
    that wildlife
  • habitat and therefore hunting
    are being adversely
  • impacted by the lack of habitat
    restoration
  • 2. BLMs own assessment and determination that
  • reclamation has not been
    successful is driving the
  • development of a standard
    reclamation planning template
  • 3. BLM is including disturbance cap-based
    alternatives in a
  • number of EISs

3
Reclamation as a Part of NEPA Compliance
  • Key component of mitigation either as
    ACEPMs/Design Features or as COAs
  • Required by 43 CFR 3000 and 36 CFR 228, Onshore
    OG Orders, and Notices to Lessees the Gold
    Book
  • Until recently, reclamation planning for OG
    projects have been proposed and implemented with
    varying levels of commitment of science or
    evaluation for success

4
Successful Reclamation
  • BLM is now including criteria or thresholds for
    success in terms of a percent cover and species
    diversity within a specified period of years
  • Other stakeholders such as WGF are coming up
    with similar guidance on reclamation planning
    including criteria for success
  • Are these criteria for success achievable? Are
    they science based? Do they account for the
    dynamic and variable nature of the environment?

5
Disturbance Cap
  • BLM has included and will likely continue to
    include a Disturbance Cap Alternative, especially
    EISs
  • Applied reclamation that is determined to be
    successful, both interim and final, during the
    life of the project by the BLM/stakeholders
    allows the operator to subtract the
    successfully reclaimed acreage from the project
    total so to keep the acreage of disturbance below
    the cap
  • How can an operator plan and go forward with a
    project whose development over time will be
    subject to accepted success for timely
    reclamation in challenging environments?

6
Reclamation ScienceThe State of the Art
  • The knowledge base for the reclamation of
    disturbed lands in the western U.S. is extensive
  • Reseeding of millions of acres following the dust
    bowl of the 1930s
  • Improvements of millions of acres of arid and
    semiarid rangelands in the 1960s1980s following
    more than a half a century of rangeland
    exploitation

7
Reclamation ScienceThe State of the Art
  • Conversion of millions of acres of marginal farm
    land to perennial grasslands under the USDA
    Conservation Reserve Program beginning in 1985
  • Reclamation of tens of thousands of acres of
    mined lands, especially following SMCRA and
    rigorous state rules and regulations governing
    mine land reclamation

8
Reclamation ScienceThe State of the Art
  • Relevance to Oil and Gas Reclamation
  • The knowledge that has been accumulated from
    decades of reclamation work in the western U.S.
    has direct application to the OG industry
  • No need to reinvent to wheel for OG reclamation

9
Reclamation ScienceThe State of the Art
  • Relevance to Oil and Gas Reclamation (continued)
  • Although some of the knowledge is being applied
    to OG, much of it is not being used
  • In general, reclamation has not been a high
    priority for OG projects
  • The effectiveness of achieving reclamation
    success needs to increase if OG development is
    going to be allowed to continue

10
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Physical Challenges
  • Extremes in Texture
  • Infiltration
  • Hydraulic conductivity
  • Water holding capacity
  • Cation exchange capacity
  • Soil Compaction
  • Too much compaction results in the loss of
    macropores, runoff increases, potential for
    erosion increases, and root growth is restricted.

11
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Physical Challenges (continued)
  • Rock Fragments
  • Reduction in root volume
  • Decline in TWH capacity
  • Reduction in total soil nutrients
  • Elevated surface temperature (higher heat
    capacity than soil)
  • Poor seed soil contact in seedbed

12
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Physical Challenges (continued)
  • Erosion
  • Major limiting factor to restoration success
  • Water (sheet and rill/gully)
  • Wind

13
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Physical Challenges (continued)
  • Precipitation
  • Precipitation is limiting factor for plant
    establishment
  • Plant establishment limited by frequency and
    duration of rainfall events
  • Rainfall often results in successful germination,
    but frequency of events does not support
    long-term establishment

14
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Chemical Challenges
  • Soil pH
  • Extremes in pH are problematic for plant growth
    (lt5.0 or gt9.0)
  • Soil pH is not typically a problem with oil gas
    reclamation
  • Soil salinity (EC gt 4 mmhos/cm)
  • Effects plants ability to take up water
  • Effect is more prevalent during germination and
    early seedling growth

15
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Chemical Challenges
  • Soil sodicity
  • Deterioration of soil structure (defloculation or
    dispersion of soil particles results in
    restricted water movement into soil, lower
    aeration, lower seedling emergence, and lower
    root elongation)

16
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17
Environmental Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Biological Challenges
  • Invasive Species
  • Competition from highly competition invasive
    plants (noxious and non-noxious weeds)
  • Grazing Animals
  • Over utilization by wildlife and domestic
    livestock

18
Other Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Improper Reclamation Techniques
  • Inadequate seedbed preparation
  • Poor seed-soil contact
  • Lack of safe sites for seed germination
    establishment
  • Seed distribution not uniform
  • Planting seed too deep
  • Seeding rates too low
  • Seeding wrong time of the year

19
Other Challenges to Reclamation Success
  • Improper Species Selection and Seed Mixture
    Composition
  • Species not adapted to site conditions
  • Cultivar or variety within a species not adapted
  • Use of species that have seed dormancy issues
  • Use of species that are difficult to establish or
    very slow growing
  • Formulating seed mixtures that over emphasize
    species that are difficult to establish or are
    highly aggressive

20
Overcoming Challenges for Reclamation Success
  • Select species adapted to soil texture
  • Eliminate soil compaction by ripping or
    scarifying
  • Rock fragments are difficult to remove, if
    percent is high, then considering adding
    amendments to increase WHC
  • Control erosion with mulch and reduce slope angle
    and length
  • Cover saline soils or use only salt tolerant
    species
  • Cover sodic soils or use only sodium tolerant
    species
  • Control invasive species

21
Overcoming Challenges for Reclamation Success
  • Use of fencing to exclude large herbivores
  • Rough seedbed is superior to a smooth seedbed
  • Implement quality controls during seeding
  • Seed prior to the period of greatest
    precipitation or period of most reliable
    precipitation (this varies by region)
  • Select species and cultivars that are adapted to
    site conditions.
  • If seed supplies are coming from native
    collections, only use seed to that has been
    collected from environments similar to where
    planting will occur

22
Overcoming Challenges forReclamation Success
  • Avoid or minimize the use of slow growing species
  • Avoid or minimize the use of species with seed
    dormancy issues
  • Formulate seed mixtures based on the ecological
    characteristics of the species
  • Implement monitoring programs to measure
    reclamation success

23
Measuring Reclamation Success
  • Short-term (Interim) Reclamation
  • Difficult to define success by current standards
  • Thresholds based on percent cover and restricted
    timelines fail to address environmental
    variability
  • Proper planning, implementation, and monitoring
    should be basis for determining short-term
    success
  • Final Reclamation
  • Scientifically based standard that accounts for
    the dynamic and variable nature of the
    environment in which the disturbance has occurred

24
Measuring Reclamation Success
Successful reclamation can be achieved!
  • Making intelligent decisions
  • Drawing on knowledge base we already have
  • Establishing realistic goals and thresholds
  • Avoiding costly errors

25
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