Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site F142XA001NY
Low Floodplain Frigid
Last updated: 10/03/2024
Accessed: 11/24/2024
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): 142X–St. Lawrence-Champlain Plain
This MLRA is a glaciated area of low relief dominated by broad expanses of nearly level, sandy deltas and shallow lacustrine basins or plains punctuated by low hills of glacial till. Rivers and streams have cut relatively deep but narrow valleys across the plain. Elevation ranges from 80 to 1,000 feet, increasing gradually from the St. Lawrence River southward and from Lake Champlain to the east and west. Local relief generally is less than 30 feet, but glacial till ridges, till plains, and some outwash terraces rise 15 to 80 feet above the adjacent plains.
This area has been glaciated, and a thin mantle of till covers most of the bedrock. Extensive areas of sandy glacial outwash and eolian deposits also occur. Some glacial lake sediments have been deposited above glacial moraines. These deposits are thickest in the valleys and thinnest on the ridges and highlands. During the later stages of the Wisconsin glacial period, seawater entered the Champlain Valley and deposited marine sediments that were later covered by freshwater sediments. The marine deposits are unique to the area.
This area supports hardwoods. The beech-birch-sugar maple forest type is the dominant climax forest type on uplands. Associated with this type are basswood, American elm, maple species, white ash, black cherry, and white pine. The aspen-birch type, earlier in succession, is economically important. Such species as eastern hemlock, red maple, American elm, and spruce are on wet soils.
Some of the major wildlife species in this area are white-tailed deer, red fox, raccoon, beaver, woodchuck, muskrat, cottontail, ruffed grouse, and woodcock.
LRU notes
Land Resource Unit (LRU): Frigid Soil Temperature Regime
The upper St. Lawrence and Champlain Valleys are characterized with soils in the frigid soil temperature regime (mean annual soil temperature greater than 32°F but less than 46°F and with a difference between mean summer and mean winter soil temperatures greater than 41°F at 20 inches below the surface or at a densic, lithic, or paralithic contact, whichever is shallower).
The Frigid Soil Temperature Regime (STR) will have shorter growing season than the lower St. Lawrence and Champlain Valleys which are characterized with soils in the mesic STR. Species more tolerant of colder year round temperatures would also be evident in the Frigid LRU.
Classification relationships
NRCS:
Land Resource Region: R - Northeastern Forage and Forest Region
MLRA: 142 - St. Lawrence-Champlain Plain
LRU: A/02 - Frigid Mean Annual Soil Temperature
USFS:
Domain: 200 - Humid Temperate
Division: 210 - Warm Continental
Province: 211 - Northeastern Mixed Forest
Section: 211E - St. Lawrence and Champlain Valley
Subsections: 211Ea - St. Lawrence Glacial Marine Plain
EPA:
Level I: 8 - Eastern Temperate Forests
Level II: 8.1 - Mixed Wood Plains
Level III: 83 - Eastern Great Lakes Lowlands
Level IV: 83d - St. Lawrence Lowlands
83e - Upper St. Lawrence Valley
Ecological site concept
Landform/Landscape Position:
The site occurs on floodplains adjacent to low gradient streams and rivers. Slopes range from 0 to 3 percent.
Soils:
The site consists of deep, coarse-loamy, and somewhat poorly drained soils that have formed in recent alluvium along streams where the stream gradient is controlled by bedrock. The soils formed in post-glacial alluvium derived predominantly from sandstone, dolomitic limestone, and less commonly gneiss and marble.
Vegetation Dynamics:
The reference community is a hardwood floodplain forest that is quite variable and very diverse depending on flood frequency and duration and depth to water table. Characteristic trees include silver maple, eastern cottonwood, ashes (green, white, black), red maple, box elder, sycamore, elms (American and slippery), hickories (shagbark, bitternut, shellbark), hackberry, sugar maple, tulip tree, and basswood. Characteristic shrubs include spicebush, winterberry, American hornbeam, bladdernut, speckled alder, shrubby dogwoods, viburnums, and sapling canopy trees. Characteristic vines include poison ivy, wild grapes, Virginia creeper, and virgin’s bower. Characteristic herbs include sensitive fern, jewelweeds, white snakeroot, wood nettle, false nettle, goldenrods, skunk cabbage, bluejoint grass, cutgrasses, and sedges (lakeside, bladder sedge, tussock, hop sedge).
Introduced trees such as black locust and white willow have become established in floodplains. Invasive non-native herbs include garlic mustard, moneywort, dame’s-rocket, European stinging nettle, and stiltgrass.
Associated sites
F142XB002VT |
Dry Outwash |
---|---|
F142XB004VT |
Wet Outwash Depression |
Similar sites
F142XA021NY |
Wet Till Depression |
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F142XB013NY |
Moist Till Upland |
Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
Not specified |
---|---|
Shrub |
Not specified |
Herbaceous |
Not specified |
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