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Community <br />Activity <br />Priority <br />Estimated Cost <br />Comments <br />LL-U1 <br />Reintroduce <br />Medium -high <br />$100 — 200 <br />Reintroduce appropriate local origin <br />native woodland <br />depending on <br />plant materials through planting of <br />edge species <br />number of <br />plugs or seed, particularly where <br />species, plants, <br />bare ground is left from brush <br />amount of seed. <br />clearing. Broadcast during growing <br />season and /or dormant season seed <br />(see appendix for spp. list) <br />LL -U1 <br />Recut brush <br />Medium <br />$500 -1,000 <br />Brush will likely continue to persist <br />every 2 -3 years <br />and resprouts or new stems over one <br />or 20 hours <br />inch in diameter should be cut. <br />volunteer time <br />Community LL -U2 <br />Lowland Hardwood Forest <br />Qualitative Rank: C <br />Nonnative Shrub Rank: 15 <br />This forest is found in low areas along the south and east side of Langton Lake. The canopy is <br />patchy and composed of trees that appear to be two to four decades old. The most common of <br />these are black willow and boxelder that average approximately 10 to 12 inches in diameter, as <br />well as American elm and cottonwood. Less common are silver maple, hackberry, quaking <br />aspen, and the nonnative weeping willow. <br />The shrub layer varies from moderate to heavy in thickness with the nonnatives European and <br />glossy buckthorn the most common. Less frequently encountered were the native's common <br />elderberry, black raspberry, and willow. The ground layer includes a mix of wetland edge <br />species and those found in a wide variety of habitats. These include the native's white snakeroot, <br />Canada goldenrod, white vervain, blue flag iris, and the nonnative reed canary grass. Overall, <br />the quality of this forest is moderate. <br />City of Roseville 109 <br />Parks Natural Resource Management <br />