Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site F115XA018IL
Wet Clayey Floodplain
Last updated: 12/30/2024
Accessed: 01/10/2025
General information
Provisional. A provisional ecological site description has undergone quality control and quality assurance review. It contains a working state and transition model and enough information to identify the ecological site.
MLRA notes
Major Land Resource Area (MLRA): 115X–Central Mississippi Valley Wooded Slopes
This MLRA is characterized by deeply dissected, loess-covered hills bordering well defined valleys of the Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, and Wabash Rivers and their tributaries. It is used to produce cash crops and livestock. About one-third of the area is forested, mostly on the steeper slopes. This area is in Illinois (50 percent), Missouri (36 percent), Indiana (13 percent), and Iowa (1 percent) in two separate areas. It makes up about 25,084 square miles (64,967 square kilometers).
Most of this area is in the Till Plains section and the Dissected Till Plains section of the Central Lowland province of the Interior Plains. The Springfield-Salem plateaus section of the Ozarks Plateaus province of the Interior Highlands occurs along the Missouri River and the Mississippi River south of the confluence with the Missouri River. The nearly level to very steep uplands are dissected by both large and small tributaries of the Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, and Wabash Rivers. The Ohio River flows along the southernmost boundary of this area in Indiana. Well defined valleys with broad flood plains and numerous stream terraces are along the major streams and rivers. The flood plains along the smaller streams are narrow. Broad summits are nearly level to undulating. Karst topography is common in some parts along the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers and their tributaries. Well-developed karst areas have hundreds of sinkholes, caves, springs, and losing streams. In the St. Louis area, many of the karst features have been obliterated by urban development.
Elevation ranges from 90 feet (20 meters) on the southernmost flood plains to 1,030 feet (320 meters) on the highest ridges. Local relief is mainly 10 to 50 feet (3 to 15 meters) but can be 50 to 150 feet (15 to 45 meters) in the steep, deeply dissected hills bordering rivers and streams. The bluffs along the major rivers are generally 200 to 350 feet (60 to 105 meters) above the valley floor.
The uplands in this MLRA are covered almost entirely with Peoria Loess. The loess can be more than 7 feet (2 meters) thick on stable summits. On the steeper slopes, it is thin or does not occur. In Illinois, the loess is underlain mostly by Illinoian-age till that commonly contains a paleosol. Pre-Illinoian-age till is in parts of this MLRA in Iowa and Missouri and to a minor extent in the western part of Illinois. Wisconsin-age outwash, alluvial deposits, and sandy eolian material are on some of the stream terraces and on dunes along the major tributaries. The loess and glacial deposits are underlain by several bedrock systems. Pennsylvanian and Mississippian bedrock are the most extensive. To a lesser extent are Silurian, Devonian, Cretaceous, and Ordovician bedrock. Karst areas have formed where limestone is near the surface, mostly in the southern part of the MLRA along the Mississippi River and some of its major tributaries. Bedrock outcrops are common on the bluffs along the Mississippi, Ohio, and Wabash Rivers and their major tributaries and at the base of some steep slopes along minor streams and drainageways.
The soils on uplands in this area support natural hardwoods. Oak, hickory, and sugar maple are the dominant species. Big bluestem, little bluestem, and scattered oak and eastern redcedar grow on some sites. The soils on flood plains support mixed forest vegetation, mainly American elm, eastern cottonwood, river birch, green ash, silver maple, sweetgum, American sycamore, pin oak, pecan, and willow. Sedge and grass meadows and scattered trees are on some low-lying sites. (United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service, 2022)
LRU notes
Most of this LRU (Land Resource Unit) is in the glaciated Till Plains Section of the Central Lowland Province of the Interior Plains. The southeast corner is in the Highland Rim Section (locally known as the Shawnee Hills Section) of the Interior Low Plateaus Province of the Interior Plains. The nearly level to very steep uplands in this LRU are dissected by both large and small tributaries of the Wabash and Ohio Rivers. Well defined valleys with broad flood plains and numerous stream terraces are along the major streams and rivers. The flood plains along the smaller streams are narrow. Broad summits are nearly level to gently sloping.
This area is covered almost entirely with Wisconsin loess, also known as Peoria loess. The loess can be more than 7 feet (2 meters) thick on stable summits. On the steeper slopes, it is thin or does not occur. The loess throughout the area is underlain dominantly by glacial till. Wisconsin outwash, alluvial deposits, and sandy eolian material are on some of the stream terraces and on dunes along the major tributaries in the area. The loess and glacial drift are underlain by Pennsylvanian-age bedrock. Bedrock outcrops are common in the walls of the valleys along the Wabash and Ohio Rivers and at the base of some steep slopes along minor streams and drainageways.
The dominant soil orders in this LRU are Alfisols, Entisols, Inceptisols, and Mollisols. The soils in the area have a mesic soil temperature regime, a udic or aquic soil moisture regime, and dominantly mixed or smectitic mineralogy. The soils are very deep, poorly drained to excessively drained, and loamy, silty, or clayey. Nearly level Endoaqualfs (Iva series) and Argiaquolls (Ragsdale series) formed in loess on broad upland summits and flats. Nearly level to steep Hapludalfs (Alford, Iona, Muren, Stoy, and Sylvan series) and Fragiudalfs (Hosmer series) formed in loess on uplands. Hapludalfs (Alvin, Bloomfield, and Princeton series) and Argiudolls (Ade series) formed in sandy eolian material in areas of dunes on uplands and stream terraces. Steep and very steep Hapludalfs (Hickory series) formed in Illinoian till along the major streams and dissected upland drainageways. Hapludalfs (Wellston series) formed in siltstone or sandstone residuum on strongly sloping to steep side slopes underlain by bedrock.
The soils in the major stream valleys include Hapludolls (Carmi series), Argiudolls (Elston series), and Hapludalfs (Skelton series), all of which formed in outwash on nearly level to moderately sloping stream terraces and outwash plains. Endoaquolls (Montgomery series), Endoaquepts (Zipp series), Epiaqualfs (McGary series), and Hapludalfs (Shircliff and Markland series) formed in clayey lacustrine sediments on nearly level to strongly sloping lacustrine terraces or lake plains. Endoaquepts (Evansville series), Endoaquolls (Patton series), and Hapludalfs (Henshaw and Uniontown series) formed in silty sediments on terraces and lake plains.
LRU notes (excerpts from Land resource regions and major land resource areas of the United States, the Caribbean, and the Pacific Basin. USDA Handbook 296, 2006)
Classification relationships
Major Land Resource Area (MLRA) 115X–Central Mississippi Valley Wooded Slopes
U.S. Forest Service Ecoregions (Cleland et al. 2007):
Domain: Humid Temperate Domain
Division: Hot Continental Division
Province: Eastern Broadleaf Forest (Continental)
Province Code: 222
Section Code: 222G, 222D
Ecological site concept
This forest community type is found in LRU115XA on low, wet floodplains and backswamps. Soils are poorly drained to very poorly drained and formed in clayey and fine-silty alluvium. Sites have a seasonally high-water table and occasional to frequent flooding.
The reference community is a deciduous floodplain forest with a mixed species canopy. However, species composition will be a continuum from wet forest to more open marshland based on flooding frequency and severity. Some sites may flood so frequently that tree density is reduced, and the site is characterized by emergent herbaceous vegetation adapted to flooded and saturated conditions. Frequently ponded and/or flooded sites will have less trees and an array of bulrushes, sedges, cutgrasses, cattails, and loosestrifes. The duration, frequency, and depth of flooding are the primary disturbance factors that maintain a continuum of vegetative community characteristics on Wet Clayey Floodplain ecological sites. (LANDFIRE 2009).
Tree species include pin oak (Quercus palustris), silver maple (Acer saccharinum), green ash (Fraxinus pensylvanica), American elm (Ulmus americana), sycamore (Platanus occidentalis), cottonwood (Populus deltoides), hackberry (Celtis spp.), and red maple (Acer rubrum). Pin oak (Quercus palustris), swamp chestnut oak (Quercus michauxii) and sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua) are dominant in some areas. Shrub and vine composition and density will be controlled by flooding severity and frequency and often includes possumhaw (Ilex decidua), hawthorn (Crataegus spp.), and swamp rose (Rosa palustris).
The forest understory will contain a variety of grasses, bulrushes, cutgrasses, sedges, and forbs influenced by flooding regime. Common species include sweet woodreed (Cinna arundinacea), eastern woodland sedge (Carex blanda), eastern star sedge (Carex rosea), riverbank wildrye (Elymus riparius), Virginia wildrye (Elymus virginicus), bulbous bittercress (Cardamine bulbosa), Pennsylvania sedge (Cardamine pensylvanica), false nettle (Boehmeria cylindrica), Virginia bugleweed (Lycopus virginicus), fowl mannagrass (Glyceria striata), clearweed (Pilea pumila), and star sedge (Carex intumescens). Ground flora on frequently, long-term flooded sites may be rather sparse with a moderate level of species diversity.
Today, the historic natural flooding regime has been modified on most streams and rivers. Dams, levees, extensive tiling and ditching throughout the watershed, and agricultural, urban and industrial water use have altered the flooding dynamics and natural hydrology of these riparian systems. Disturbed sites with altered flood regimes can exhibit a variety of trees. NRCS has recorded numerous tree species on these sites including pin oak, tulip poplar, white oak, swamp white oak, sweetgum, ash, American sycamore, eastern cottonwood, northern red oak, and red maple. Flooding and ponding frequency will determine the species composition and create a continuum of community characteristics on these sites.
Associated sites
F115XA012IL |
Clayey Floodplain Clayey Floodplain. These floodplain sites are better drained than the Wet Clayey Floodplain and exhibit more mesic species. |
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F115XA013IL |
Silty Floodplain Silty Floodplain. These sites are moderately well drained or well drained and on floodplains and have more mesic species. |
Similar sites
F115XA015IL |
Loamy Floodplain Wet Silty Floodplain. These floodplain sites share some similar tree species but are formed in silty alluvium and are somewhat poorly drained instead of poorly or very poorly drained. |
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Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
(1) Quercus palustris |
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Shrub |
(1) Ilex decidua |
Herbaceous |
(1) Carex |
Click on box and path labels to scroll to the respective text.
T1A | - | Large scale disturbance |
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T1C | - | Clearing of site; agricultural production - forage |
T1B | - | Clearing of site; agricultural production -row crops. |
R2A | - | Restoration inputs such as planting, brush control, prescribed fire, and timber stand improvement. |
T2B | - | Clearing; agricultural production - forage |
T2C | - | Clearing; agricultural production - row crops |
T3B | - | Abandonment of agricultural practices |
T3A | - | Site preparation and tillage, seeding, weed control, cropland management |
T4A | - | Transition site to forage production; seeding; weed/brush control; pasture management |