100804-A-5177B-005
Goose fencing is in place to prevent large birds from entering an area where newly planted spartina alterniflora or salt marsh cordgrass grows along the banks of Scuffletown Creek. The Norfolk District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the City of Chesapeake, Va., restored about one acre of natural wetlands along Scuffletown Creek, a tributary of the Elizabeth River in Chesapeake, Va., in an effort to bring the river system back to a healthy thriving waterway after centuries of industrial activity impaired it. (U.S. Army Photo/Patrick Bloodgood)
100804-A-5177B-005
Goose fencing is in place to prevent large birds from entering an area where newly planted spartina alterniflora or salt marsh cordgrass grows along the banks of Scuffletown Creek. The Norfolk District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the City of Chesapeake, Va., restored about one acre of natural wetlands along Scuffletown Creek, a tributary of the Elizabeth River in Chesapeake, Va., in an effort to bring the river system back to a healthy thriving waterway after centuries of industrial activity impaired it. (U.S. Army Photo/Patrick Bloodgood)