108830 Development of a Vegetative Based LID Suitability Index for Coastal Counties of South Carolina.
Poster Number 1133
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil and Water Management and Conservation
See more from this Session: Soil and Water Management and Conservation General Poster II (includes student competition)
Abstract:
Dhanuska Wijesinghe1, Daniel R. Hitchcock2*, David L. White3, Dara M. Park1
1Department of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, 29634
2Baruch Institute of Coastal Ecology and Forest Science, Box, 596, Georgetown, SC, 29442
3Clemson University Campus Computing and Internet Technology, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, 29634
*Contact: dhitchc@clemson.edu
Low-impact design (LID) attempts to maintain natural hydrologic conditions in urban development. Vegetative based LID practices (stormwater wetlands and bioretention cells) have become popular as a stormwater control measure (SCM) in Coastal South Carolina (SC). A suitability index was developed to identify appropriate sites for wetland (retention-based) versus bioretention (infiltration-based) systems in South Carolina’s four most populated coastal counties (Georgetown, Horry, Charleston, and Beaufort). The index utilized a GIS based model that integrates seven key landscape features (land cover, water table depth, hydrologic soil group, drainage class, slope, percent impervious and parcel data) based on the siting criteria from the Coastal SC LID Manual and South Carolina Department of Health Environmental Control (DHEC) BMP Manual. The index allows the user to make an informed decision on LID practice and placement location within a site under development based on science and not just by visual inspection. The suitability index is available as an online GIS tool (http://bit.ly/clemson-cri ) as well as an online story map (http://bit.ly/clemson-cri-story-map). The model demonstrated that a larger percentage of land is suitable for bioretention systems over wetland based systems. This was prominent in the Charleston city area where there are seasonally high water tables, low relief, and well drained soils. In comparison, a larger percentage of Myrtle Beach city area was suitable for wetland based systems due to presence of shallow water tables, low relief, and poorly drained soils. The Suitability Index can serve as an informational and educational tool for planners, developers, engineers, land managers, regulators, among others. However, the index will need significant ground-truthing and checks for accuracy before it can fully be implemented as a decision-making tool.
Key Words: Low-impact Design, Wetlands, Bioretentions
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil and Water Management and Conservation
See more from this Session: Soil and Water Management and Conservation General Poster II (includes student competition)