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Wetland Delineation
Certicate Series
The Wetland Delineation Certicate is awarded to participants who attend and successfully complete assignments for Vegetation Identication and Methodology for Delineating Wetlands.
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Wetlands Training
Fall 2012
You cannot delineate a wetland without experience identifying wetland plants. When you enroll in the series, you should complete Vegetation Identication prior to Methodology for Delineating Wetlands.
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NJAES Ofce of Continuing Professional Education Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 102 Ryders Lane New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8519 Ph: 732.932.9271 Fax: 732.932.8726 Email: ocpe@njaes.rutgers.edu Web: www.cpe.rutgers.edu
Required Textbooks - A Field Guide to Wildowers: Northeastern and North-Central North America (Peterson Field Guides) [ISBN 0395911729] - $25 - The Shrub Identication Book [ISBN 0688050409] G. Symonds - $30
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Required Textbook - Wetland Indicators: A Guide to Wetland Identication, Delineation, Classication, and Mapping [ISBN 0873718925] R. Tiner - $75 Recommended Textbook - Munsell Soil Color Chart - $155
NOTE: The Corps Regional supplements for the Atlantic Coastal Plain and Northeast-Northcentral Regions will not be covered in this class. If you are not familiar with wetlands, hydrology, or vegetation, we strongly recommend that you complete Introduction to Wetland Identication prior to the series. Please see inside for course details.
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Required Textbooks - Newcombs Wildower Guide [ISBN 0316604429] L. Newcomb - $25 - Wildowers and Winter Weeds [ISBN 0393316785] L. Brown - $25 - The Shrub Identication Book [ISBN 0688050409] G. Symonds - $30 - The Tree Identication Book [ISBN 0688050395] G. Symonds - $30
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Additional Wetlands
Training
INTRODUCTION TO WETLAND IDENTIFICATION
October 25, 2012 Course Code: EH0102CA13 $285 before 10/11/12; $295 after; $275 multiple When you delineate wetlands without the proper training or experience, you run the risk of regulatory and career repercussions. Wetlands training can be dicult to grasp if you start your education in an advanced course. Dont make the mistake of jumping into the Methodology for Delineating Wetlands course without rst being exposed to the basic principles of wetland delineation in this course! This one-day combination classroom and eld course, led by wetland expert, Ralph Tiner will teach you the basics of wetland identication and introduce you to the practice of wetland delineation. It will provide the essential background material needed for further study in the eld of wetland delineation. Come review the skills you need to begin to identify freshwater wetlands and their boundaries! FEATURED TOPICS: Wetland denitions and concepts Wetland hydrology indicators Wetland vegetation - hydrophytic plant indicators Wetland Soils - soil colors, hydric soil indicators Wetland Types - wetland classication, wetland maps Review of wetland plant characteristics FIELD EXERCISES: Wetland plant identication Hydric soil recognition Wetland hydrology indicators Wetland delineation
Additional Environmental
Training
WETLAND CONSTRUCTION COURSES
Updated and redesigned -- coming Summer 2013! WETLAND CONSTRUCTION: PRINCIPLES & TECHNIQUES
There are ve basic steps in the process of developing a successful wetland construction plan. 1. Planning Your Project: Account for location, size, physiognomy, basic hydrologic regime, and current/future land use. 2. Selecting Your Construction Model: The hydrogeomorphic model analyzes suitable water supply and landscape position, while the wetland construction model covers basic methods of wetland construction suited to the nature of the water supply. 3. Preparing Your Water Budget: Water inputs and outputs must be used to prepare water budgets. Successful hydrograph preparation is reliant on data collection and interpretation. 4. Determing Proper Vegetation: Vegetation adaptation, selection, and planting are keys to any successful wetland construction plan. You must verify the adaptive modes of plants suitable for your hydrologic regime, and accurately match these plants with your project. 5. Manipulating Soil: Sub-grade soil percolation must be suitable for the hydrogeomorphic model you develop. Substrate soils must prove suitable to support selected vegetation selections both in texture and nutrient composition.
All courses in this brochure have been submitted for recertication credits, as applicable. Visit our website for approval status. www.cpe.rutgers.edu/credits
LAKE MANAGEMENT
November 1 and 2, 2012 Course Code: EW0301CA13 $375 before 10/18/12; $395 after; $275 one-day only Whether you are a lake manager, a lake resident, an ecologist or an engineer, this popular two-day course is for you. From small ponds to large lakes to drinking water reservoirs to shing lakes, if you want your lake and watershed management eorts to be successful, you need a technically sound foundation. This course will give you the training you need to properly investigate and diagnose lake quality problems as well as the tools to develop and implement cost-eective, restoration measures. Led by Dr. Stephen Souza, President, Princeton Hydro, LLC and other industry professionals, you will be guided through the benets and pitfalls of all of the most commonly implemented lake and pond management measures. The new, interactive nature of the course will provide attendees with the opportunity to discuss the specic issues and problems impacting the condition of your own waterbody. The course also provides for hands-on problem solving and in-class application of the featured course topics. FEATURED TOPICS - DAY ONE: Overview of Ecology of Lakes, Ponds and Reservoirs Water Quality Monitoring Implementation of a Lake Restoration Plan Identication of Invasive Aquatic Weeds and Nuisance Algae IPM Strategies FEATURED TOPICS - DAY TWO: Silt and Erosion Problem Solving Design of Aeration System Implementation of a Dredging Project Aquascaping, Shoreline Stabilization and Lakeside Buers Maximizing Your Recreational Fishery Management Strategies for Controlling Canada Geese Interactive Group Problem Solving
ArcGIS: INTRODUCTION
October 4, 11, 18 and 25, 2012 (Thursday evenings) $825 per person; $795 multiple Course Code: EG0914CA13 Test out your GIS knowledge and skill with hands-on GIS software application! This 12-hour evening course oers core functionality, basic display and map querying functions, metadata browsing and le management, basic analysis techniques, and map layout.
Fax: 732.932.8726, 24 Hours. Please include credit card information or copy of your check, money order or purchase order with your fax.
Mail: Registration Desk, NJAES Oce of Continuing Professional Education, Rutgers University, 102 Ryders Lane, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8519. Please make check payable to: Rutgers University Web: Please visit our website at: www.cpe.rutgers.edu for information. Payment Policy - All students must have prearranged for payment to be admitted to the class (purchase order, check, VISA, Mastercard, American Express or money order). Refunds - You may withdraw from these courses with a full refund minus a processing fee provided our oce is notied at least three (3) full working days prior to the start of the course. Beyond that time, registrants may be responsible for the full registration fee. Substitutions are welcomed.
Required Textbook - In Search of Swampland: A Wetland Sourcebook and Field Guide [ISBN 0813536812], Second Edition, R. Tiner, $30
Get a jump start on completing the Wetland Delineation Certicate Series and register for the Vegetation Identication - Winter course upon completion of this program!
You have developed your wetland construction plan, now put it into action! Calculation of the amount of water in constructed wetlands is an increasingly important factor in evaluating wetland construction plans. Federal and state regulatory agencies are more frequently requesting or requiring such calculations. The depth, duration and timing of water are the controlling factors in determining which plant communities will ultimately inhabit a constructed wetland. The single biggest mistake in botched wetland construction projects is failure to understand the amounts of water over time. Learn about the nine dierent ways to build a wetland, and more importantly, how to calculate patterns of depth, duration and timing of water in a wetland before it is constructed.