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Dragon Run watershed

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The Dragon Run watershed in the U.S. state of Virginia encompasses 140 square miles (360 km2) and is home to many flora and fauna species. The brackish water stream, labeled on topographic maps as Dragon Swamp,[1] is fed by underground springs, surface runoff, and numerous feeding swamps.[2] In a study of 232 rivers and streams in the Chesapeake Bay, the Nature Conservancy and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation found the Dragon Run to rank second in terms of ecological significance.[3] Efforts are being made to preserve the Dragon Run, including Governor Tim Kaine’s large purchase of land in order to maintain and protect the watershed’s original state.

History

The earliest record of the Dragon Run is by Captain John Smith in 1607. While on his way to meet with the Powhatan and Pocahontas, he crossed the stream and marked it on a map. Later, many settlers came from England to settle in Virginia. Some settled in the Dragon Run watershed, and descendents of those original settlers still own land there today.

The first time the area was noted as “Dragon Swamp” was in 1673 by cartographer Augustine Herman. It is believed that the Pamunkeys used the swamp as a hiding spot during Bacon's Rebellion. John Clayton (botanist) studied the area in 1773 and found over 800 species of native plant species and discovered 2 new species: Claytonia virginica and Osmunda claytoniana. The John Clayton Herbarium can still be found in London’s Natural History Museum, including plants from the Dragon Run.

During the American Civil War, County Clerk P.T. Woodward reportedly prevented important Confederate documents from falling into Union hands by hiding them on an island in the Dragon Run.

More recently, brothers James V. Morgan and Harvey B. Morgan have taken a stand in preserving the watershed by organizing the Friends of the Dragon Run. Morgan took the lead in preservation by buying some of the land and building canoe trails for people to explore.[3]

Geography

Dragon Run Swamp is located in four counties in the Virginia Middle Peninsula encompassing a total of 140 square miles (90,000 acres). These counties are Essex, King & Queen, Middlesex, and Gloucester. The Dragon Run flows into the Piankatank River.[2]

Flora and fauna

The Dragon Run Swamp is home to many fish species. Near the source the Dragon Run there are chain pickerel, warmouth sunfish, bowfin, redbreast sunfish, and white catfish. The lower river is filled with migratory fish that only come into the area in the spring to spawn such as American shad, hickory shad, alewife herring, blueback herring, and striped bass. Other fish that reside in the lower section are channel catfish, white catfish, chain pickerel, largemouth bass, several varieties of sunfish, yellow perch, and white perch.[4] The Dragon Run also houses rookeries for egrets and herons.[5] Beavers, white tail deer, otters, muskrats, raccoons, wood ducks, bald eagles, ospreys, hawks, herons, owls, and prothonotary warblers all call the Dragon Run home.

The Dragon run is also abundant with flora. This masterpiece created by nature boasts violets (Viola sp.), turtlehead, mountain laurel, wild Iris (plant), cardinal flowers (Lobelia cardinalis), royal ferns (Osmunda spectabilis), pawpaw, shad bushes (Amelanchier sp.), wild plum, mistletoe, old man’s beard (Usnea sp.), bullhead lilies, pickerel weeds (Pontederia sp.), wild rice, duck potatoes (Sagittaria sp.), and cattails. The swamp is a heavily timbered area with pumpkin ash, gum, sycamore, river birch, red maple, dogwood, and huge bald cypress trees adorning every twist and turn the river takes.

Preservation

Many efforts have been put into place to preserve and protect the Dragon Run watershed. Under Governor Tim Kaine, Virginia and The Nature Conservancy purchased 4,188 acres (16.95 km2) of the Dragon Run in order to conserve it and protect its wildlife. Preservation must be a collective effort in order for the Dragon Run to remain a natural conservatory to be enjoyed by many in the coming decades.

Friends of the Dragon Run are local citizens who donate money and time to help preserve the natural state of the swamp. They have purchased a 203-acre (0.82 km2) tract of the swampland and work to manage the area and keep its natural beauty. Through example, the organization hopes to protect and preserve the watershed for public enjoyment and education. Friends of the Dragon Run emphasize practices including the use of no-till farming, filter strips, reforestation, contour plowing, and sensitive timbering techniques in and around the Dragon Run.

See also

References

  1. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Dragon Swamp
  2. ^ a b "Virginia’s Most Pristine Water Body." Web. 30 Oct. 2009. <http://virginiaplaces.org/watersheds/dragonrun.html>.
  3. ^ a b Landon, Carolyne D. "The Dragon Run Story." Landonstudios home. The Nature Conservancy 2007. Web. 30 Oct. 2009. <http://www.landonstudios.com/The_Dragon_Run_Story.html> Archived November 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ "Dragon Run / Piankatank River." Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. 2009. Web. 02 Nov. 2009. <http://www.dgif.virginia.gov/fishing/waterbodies/display.asp?id=168>.
  5. ^ http://www.mppdc.com/dragon/docs/StateofDragon_brochure.pdf