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A hydrogeomorphic inventory of coastal wetlands of the Manitoba Great Lakes : Lakes Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Winnipegosis / K. Elise Watchorn, L. Gordon Goldsborough, Dale A. Wrubleski, and Bairn G. Mooney.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Journal of Great Lakes Research. 38 (Supplement 3) 115-122 Publication details: 2012.Description: colour illustrations ; 28 cmLOC classification:
  • WAT
Online resources: Summary: We compiled an GIS-based inventory of coastal wetlands associated with the Manitoba Great Lakes—Lakes Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Winnipegosis—using a hydrogeomorphic classification system, orthophotography, satellite imagery, and digital habitat maps. The lakes have six times more wetlands per km of shoreline than the Laurentian Great Lakes: Lake Winnipeg has 1404 km2 (0.8 km2/km), Lake Manitoba has 564 km2 (0.6 km2/km), and Lake Winnipegosis has 742 km2 (0.8 km2/km). Riverine wetlands are the most common class on Lakes Winnipeg and Winnipegosis whereas barrier-protected wetlands are the most common class on Lake Manitoba. The totals for Lakes Winnipeg and Winnipegosis are greater by 548% and 273%, respectively, if Treed Muskeg habitat in the northern regions of the watersheds is included in the inventory, whereas the total for more southerly Lake Manitoba is greater by only 18%. Netley-Libau Marsh (222 km2) on Lake Winnipeg and Delta Marsh (139 km2) on Lake Manitoba are among the largest coastal wetlands on the North American continent. These baseline data can be used to identify ecologically important wetlands warranting further study or remediation.
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Electronic Journal Electronic Journal IWWR Supported Research Non-fiction WAT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 16805

Includes bibliographical references (pages 121-122).

We compiled an GIS-based inventory of coastal wetlands associated with the Manitoba Great Lakes—Lakes
Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Winnipegosis—using a hydrogeomorphic classification system, orthophotography,
satellite imagery, and digital habitat maps. The lakes have six times more wetlands per km of shoreline than
the Laurentian Great Lakes: Lake Winnipeg has 1404 km2 (0.8 km2/km), Lake Manitoba has 564 km2
(0.6 km2/km), and Lake Winnipegosis has 742 km2 (0.8 km2/km). Riverine wetlands are the most common
class on Lakes Winnipeg and Winnipegosis whereas barrier-protected wetlands are the most common class
on Lake Manitoba. The totals for Lakes Winnipeg and Winnipegosis are greater by 548% and 273%,
respectively, if Treed Muskeg habitat in the northern regions of the watersheds is included in the inventory,
whereas the total for more southerly Lake Manitoba is greater by only 18%. Netley-Libau Marsh (222 km2) on
Lake Winnipeg and Delta Marsh (139 km2) on Lake Manitoba are among the largest coastal wetlands on the
North American continent. These baseline data can be used to identify ecologically important wetlands
warranting further study or remediation.

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