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National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) Metadata <br />Description: <br />Abstract: <br />NWI digital data files are records of wetlands location and <br />classification as developed by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. <br />The classification system was adopted as a national <br />classification standard in 1996 by the Federal Geographic Data <br />Committee. This dataset is one of a series available in 7.5 <br />minute by 7.5 minute blocks containing ground planimetric <br />coordinates of wetlands point, line, and polygon features and <br />wetlands attributes. When completed, the series will provide <br />coverage for all of the contiguous United States, Hawaii, <br />Alaska, and U.S. protectorates in the Pacific and Caribbean. <br />Coverage includes both digital data and hardcopy maps. The NWI <br />maps do not show all wetlands since the maps are derived from <br />aerial photointerpretation with varying limitations due to <br />scale, photo quality, inventory techniques, and other factors. <br />Consequently, the maps tend to show wetlands that are readily <br />photointerpreted given consideration of photo and map scale. In <br />general, the older NWI maps prepared from 1970s-era black and <br />white photography (1:80,000 scale) tend to be very conservative, <br />with many forested and drier-end emergent wetlands (e.g., wet <br />meadows) not mapped. Maps derived from color infrared <br />photography tend to yield more accurate results except when this <br />photography was captured during a dry year, making wetland <br />identification equally difficult. Proper use of NWI maps <br />therefore requires knowledge of the inherent limitations of this <br />mapping. It is suggested that users also consult other <br />information to aid in wetland detection, such as U.S. Department <br />of Agriculture soil survey reports and other wetland maps that <br />may have been produced by state and local governments, and not <br />rely solely on NWI maps. See section on "Completeness Report" <br />for more information. Also see an article in the National <br />Wetlands Newsletter (March-April 1997; Vol. 19/2, pp. 5-12) <br />entitled "NWI Maps: What They Tell Us" (a free copy of this <br />article can be ordered from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, <br />ES-NWI, 300 Westgate Center Drive, Hadley, MA 01035, telephone, <br />413-253-8620). <br />Purpose: <br />The data provide consultants, planners, and resource managers <br />with information on wetland location and type. The data were <br />collected to meet U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service's mandate to map <br />the wetland and deepwater habitats of the United States. The <br />purpose of this survey was not to map all wetlands and deepwater <br />habitats of the United States, but rather to use aerial <br />photointerpretation techniques to produce thematic maps that <br />show, in most cases, the larger ones and types that can be <br />identified by such techniques. The objective was to provide <br />better geospatial information on wetlands than found on tr.e <br />U.S. Geological Survey topographic maps. It was not the irtent <br />of the NWI to produce maps that show exact wetland boundaries <br />comparable to boundaries derived from ground surveys. Boundaries <br />are therefore generalized in most cases. Consequently, the <br />quality of the wetland data is variable mainly due to source <br />photography, ease or difficulty of interpreting specific wetland <br />types, and survey methods (e.g., level of field effort and <br />state-of-the-art of wetland delineation). See section on <br />"Completeness Report" for more information. <br />