Summary of Active Projects - see links for details
and current status |
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Water Quality Study - For
the past several years the Town's Health Office and the
Londonderry Conservation Commission (LCC) has monitored
the West River at several points by taking water samples
and sending these to the state laboratory for analysis.
Year after year the results come back indicating that the
West River in South Londonderry has high e.coli contamination. See
2007 Report and 5 Year Summary* E.coli is
a bacteria usually associated with sewage/fecal matter
and is hazardous and potentially deadly to humans when
ingested. This has resulted in some popular swimming holes
in town being closed. In 2008 the West River Watershed
Alliance came to the LCC to form a partnership to find,
identify and ultimately fix the source of the pollution.
The first phase of the study was completed in the summer
of 2008 with a $500 Grant from the VT Department of Environmental
Conservation and matching funds of the Town. Continued
efforts will need to be made but the source has been narrowed. Click
here to view the full report by the West
River Watershed Alliance. Look for
future events and reports..
*report file is 2.41 Mb
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Wooly Adelgid
- Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (HWA) is a very small,
non-native insect that damages and kills forest and ornamental
hemlock trees. It feeds by inserting a long stylet (tube)
through the base of the needles, into the twig and sucking
food from the tree's storage cells. It has devastated hemlock
forests in our nieghboring state of Massachusetts.This is
a pest whose population has been spreading North since introduction
from Asia to Virginia in the 1950's. It has been found in
towns as close a Jamaica, VT and southward along the West
River Valley. In January the LCC partnered with the Vermont
Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation who are tracking
and keeping an eye on HWA, along with implementing eradication
and control programs, conducting an public education workshop
about HWA. It was well attended and participants were asked
to serve a volunteer spotters for the town. So far HWA has
not been located in Londonderry. Early detection is crucial
in development of a response plan.
In addition to HWA there are a number of introduced non-native
insects that threaten our forests and ecosystem. Both Asian
Longhorn Beetle and Emerald Ash Borer have been found in
neighboring States with devastating consequences for those
communities.For more information go to the VT FPR website
at:
http://www.vtfpr.org/protection/idfrontpage.cfm/
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Invasive Species - Non-native,
invasive plant species have become common in many of Vermont's
forests. Invasive species can out-compete native plants and
often become the dominant vegetation type, threatening the
regeneration of native species important for wildlife habitat,
biodiversity, and timber production as well as having a negative
impact on recreational oppotunities. As a result, the successful,
long-term management of Vermont's forests will increasingly
depend on the ability of land managers to develop and implement
techniques and strategies to control invasive species and
restore native plant communities. In the summer of 2008 the
LCC partnered with the Vermont Chapter of The Nature Conservancy
to put on a public presentation, called Wise On Weeds, addressing
this issue. As a follow-up the LCC plans to do a invasive
plant inventory and eradication program on a parcel of town
owner land in the late summer of 2009. For more information
on Invasive plant species go to;
TNC Wise
on Weeds 2008 workshop or VT FPR http://www.vtfpr.org/protection/idfrontpage.cfm/
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Acquifer Study -The
project to map the Town's ground water resources (aquifer),
was formally approved by the Select Board and the Vermont
Commissioner of the State Agency of Natural Resources
during 2007, and initial geological study was undertaken
in the fall of 2007.This
is a joint program between the Conservation Commission
and the Vermont Geological Survey Office. (The
State provides 75% of the cost and the Town 25%.
Londonderry was awarded this project through competitive
evaluation of proposals during the fall of 2006.)
In addition to the initiation of geological work,
the Geological Survey Office has provided us with
an new and expanded database of drilled wells in
the Town. This will give us a much more accurate
map of existing wells and information about those wells.
The well database will be "overlayed" on
the aquifer map that will be prepared by the geologists.
The resulting information will be of use to the Planning
Commission and others concerned with the effects of
growth on our ground water supply.
A
detailed surficial geology map of the Town has
been completed, and the corrected location of drilled
wells is shown on the map. Current work involves
soil and rock analysis using drilling reports from
these wells; the result of this analysis will be
a geological map showing the location of the Town's
aquifers.
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Shamberg
Property - In
2002 the owners of a one-hundred-acre parcel of land offered
to give it to the town. The Conservation Fund was
used to accept the land in 2004. Following the acquisition
of the Shamberg property, the Conservation Commission decided
that a comprehensive resource survey and management plan was
needed. Fortunately the State of Vermont also expressed interest
in the conservation efforts for this property and agreed to
undertake the long range management plan. Much work was started
and completed on the Shamberg Property during 2007. A forest
resource inventory was completed in July in preparation for
the Long Range Management Plan, drafted in early 2008
. During the inventory process all species of plants and wildlife
found were identified and documented in addition to the typical
evaluation of the timber resource present. Wildlife habitat
type mapping, such as wetlands/swamps and forest type, were
delineated along with a preliminary natural communities map
which outlines basic ecological relationships within the property.
Several wildlife surveys were also conducted both for a presence/absence
baseline and a course filter for rare, threatened or endangered
species.. See
details at Shamberg.
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