cover
This issue in PDF format
(1.29MB)

Louisiana Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and Restoration News
September 2008, Number 38

Cheniers and Ridges Provide Habitat and Protection
Bones of the Coastal Landscape

For more information about Louisiana’s coastal wetlands and the efforts planned and under way to ensure their survival, check out these sites on the World Wide Web:

www.lacoast.gov www.btnep.org
www.lacpra.org www.crcl.org

Subscribe

To receive WaterMarks, e-mail lacoast@nwrccom.cr.usgs.gov

Moving? The post office will not forward WaterMarks. To continue delivery, send your change of address to lacoast@nwrccom.cr.usgs.gov

For current meetings, events, and other news concerning Louisiana’s coastal wetlands, subscribe to the Breaux Act Newsflash, our e-mail newsletter, at
www.lacoast.gov/newsletter.htm


WaterMarks is published three times a year by the Louisiana Coastal Wetlands Conservation and Restoration Task Force to communicate news and issues of interest related to the Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and Restoration Act of 1990. This legislation funds wetlands restoration and enhancement projects nationwide, designating approximately $60 million annually for work in Louisiana. The state contributes 15 percent of total project costs.

CWPPRA logo


WaterMarks Editor
Stuart Lee

3737 Government Street
Alexandria, LA 71302
(318) 473-7762

About This Issue’s Cover . . .

Cheniers and natural levees rise out of the wetlands and provide upland habitat for flora, fauna and human populations. Only a few feet of elevation distinguish much of the high ground in coastal Louisiana, but even modest heights are sufficient to host vegetation different from that in surrounding marshes and to support agriculture, buildings, highways and other development.
Photo of Hackberry Ridge, courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey