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definitions
E.
Definitions
Best management
practices (BMPs): Policies, practices, procedures, or structures implemented
to mitigate the adverse environmental effects on surface water quality
resulting from development. BMPs are categorized as structural or non-structural.
Compensatory mitigation: The restoration, establishment (creation),
enhancement, or preservation of aquatic resources for the purpose of
compensating for unavoidable adverse impacts which remain after all
appropriate and practicable avoidance and minimization has been achieved.
Currently serviceable: Useable as is or with some maintenance, but not
so degraded as to essentially require reconstruction.
Discharge: The term “discharge” means any discharge of dredged or fill
material.
Enhancement: The manipulation of the physical, chemical, or biological
characteristics of an aquatic resource to heighten, intensify, or improve
a specific aquatic resource function(s). Enhancement results in the
gain of selected aquatic resource function(s), but may also lead to
a decline in other aquatic resource function(s). Enhancement does not
result in a gain in aquatic resource area.
Ephemeral stream: An ephemeral stream has flowing water only during,
and for a short duration after, precipitation events in a typical year.
Ephemeral stream beds are located above the water table year-round.
Groundwater is not a source of water for the stream. Runoff from rainfall
is the primary source of water for stream flow.
Establishment (creation): The manipulation of the physical, chemical,
or biological characteristics present to develop an aquatic resource
that did not previously exist at an upland site. Establishment results
in a gain in aquatic resource area.
Historic Property: Any prehistoric or historic district, site (including
archaeological site), building, structure, or other object included
in, or eligible for inclusion in, the National Register of Historic
Places maintained by the Secretary of the Interior. This term includes
artifacts, records, and remains that are related to and located within
such properties. The term includes properties of traditional religious
and cultural importance to an Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization
and that meet the National Register criteria (36 CFR part 60).
Independent utility: A test to determine what constitutes a single and
complete project in the Corps regulatory program. A project is considered
to have independent utility if it would be constructed absent the construction
of other projects in the project area. Portions of a multi-phase project
that depend upon other phases of the project do not have independent
utility. Phases of a project that would be constructed even if the other
phases were not built can be considered as separate single and complete
projects with independent utility.
Intermittent stream: An intermittent stream has flowing water during
certain times of the year, when groundwater provides water for stream
flow. During dry periods, intermittent streams may not have flowing
water. Runoff from rainfall is a supplemental source of water for stream
flow.
Loss of waters of the United States: Waters of the United States that
are permanently adversely affected by filling, flooding, excavation,
or drainage because of the regulated activity. Permanent adverse effects
include permanent discharges of dredged or fill material that change
an aquatic area to dry land, increase the bottom elevation of a waterbody,
or change the use of a waterbody. The acreage of loss of waters of the
United States is a threshold measurement of the impact to jurisdictional
waters for determining whether a project may qualify for an NWP; it
is not a net threshold that is calculated after considering compensatory
mitigation that may be used to offset losses of aquatic functions and
services. The loss of stream bed includes the linear feet of stream
bed that is filled or excavated. Waters of the United States temporarily
filled, flooded, excavated, or drained, but restored to pre-construction
contours and elevations after construction, are not included in the
measurement of loss of waters of the United States. Impacts resulting
from activities eligible for exemptions under Section 404(f) of the
Clean Water Act are not considered when calculating the loss of waters
of the United States.
Non-tidal wetland: A non-tidal wetland is a wetland that is not subject
to the ebb and flow of tidal waters. The definition of a wetland can
be found at 33 CFR 328.3(b). Non-tidal wetlands contiguous to tidal
waters are located landward of the high tide line (i.e., spring high
tide line).
Open water: For purposes of the NWPs, an open water is any area that
in a year with normal patterns of precipitation has water flowing or
standing above ground to the extent that an ordinary high water mark
can be determined. Aquatic vegetation within the area of standing or
flowing water is either non-emergent, sparse, or absent. Vegetated shallows
are considered to be open waters. Examples of “open waters” include
rivers, streams, lakes, and ponds.
Ordinary High Water Mark: An ordinary high water mark is a line on the
shore established by the fluctuations of water and indicated by physical
characteristics, or by other appropriate means that consider the characteristics
of the surrounding areas (see 33 CFR 328.3(e)).
Perennial stream: A perennial stream has flowing water year-round during
a typical year. The water table is located above the stream bed for
most of the year. Groundwater is the primary source of water for stream
flow. Runoff from rainfall is a supplemental source of water for stream
flow.
Practicable: Available and capable of being done after taking into consideration
cost, existing technology, and logistics in light of overall project
purposes.
Pre-construction notification: A request submitted by the project proponent
to the Corps for confirmation that a particular activity is authorized
by nationwide permit. The request may be a permit application, letter,
or similar document that includes information about the proposed work
and its anticipated environmental effects. Pre-construction notification
may be required by the terms and conditions of a nationwide permit,
or by regional conditions. A pre-construction notification may be voluntarily
submitted in cases where pre-construction notification is not required
and the project proponent wants confirmation that the activity is authorized
by nationwide permit.
Preservation: The removal of a threat to, or preventing the decline
of, aquatic resources by an action in or near those aquatic resources.
This term includes activities commonly associated with the protection
and maintenance of aquatic resources through the implementation of appropriate
legal and physical mechanisms. Preservation does not result in a gain
of aquatic resource area or functions.
Re-establishment: The manipulation of the physical, chemical, or biological
characteristics of a site with the goal of returning natural/historic
functions to a former aquatic resource. Re-establishment results in
rebuilding a former aquatic resource and results in a gain in aquatic
resource area.
Rehabilitation: The manipulation of the physical, chemical, or biological
characteristics of a site with the goal of repairing natural/historic
functions to a degraded aquatic resource. Rehabilitation results in
a gain in aquatic resource function, but does not result in a gain in
aquatic resource area.
Restoration: The manipulation of the physical, chemical, or biological
characteristics of a site with the goal of returning natural/historic
functions to a former or degraded aquatic resource. For the purpose
of tracking net gains in aquatic resource area, restoration is divided
into two categories: re-establishment and rehabilitation.
Riffle and pool complex: Riffle and pool complexes are special aquatic
sites under the 404(b)(1) Guidelines. Riffle and pool complexes sometimes
characterize steep gradient sections of streams. Such stream sections
are recognizable by their hydraulic characteristics. The rapid movement
of water over a course substrate in riffles results in a rough flow,
a turbulent surface, and high dissolved oxygen levels in the water.
Pools are deeper areas associated with riffles. A slower stream velocity,
a streaming flow, a smooth surface, and a finer substrate characterize
pools.
Riparian areas: Riparian areas are lands adjacent to streams, lakes,
and estuarine-marine shorelines. Riparian areas are transitional between
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, through which surface and subsurface
hydrology connects waterbodies with their adjacent uplands. Riparian
areas provide a variety of ecological functions and services and help
improve or maintain local water quality. (See general condition 20.)
Shellfish seeding: The placement of shellfish seed and/or suitable substrate
to increase shellfish production. Shellfish seed consists of immature
individual shellfish or individual shellfish attached to shells or shell
fragments (i.e., spat on shell). Suitable substrate may consist of shellfish
shells, shell fragments, or other appropriate materials placed into
waters for shellfish habitat.
Single and complete project: The term “single and complete project”
is defined at 33 CFR 330.2(i) as the total project proposed or accomplished
by one owner/developer or partnership or other association of owners/developers.
A single and complete project must have independent utility (see definition).
For linear projects, a “single and complete project” is all crossings
of a single water of the United States (i.e., a single waterbody) at
a specific location. For linear projects crossing a single waterbody
several times at separate and distant locations, each crossing is considered
a single and complete project. However, individual channels in a braided
stream or river, or individual arms of a large, irregularly shaped wetland
or lake, etc., are not separate waterbodies, and crossings of such features
cannot be considered separately.
Stormwater management: Stormwater management is the mechanism for controlling
stormwater runoff for the purposes of reducing downstream erosion, water
quality degradation, and flooding and mitigating the adverse effects
of changes in land use on the aquatic environment.
Stormwater management facilities: Stormwater management facilities are
those facilities, including but not limited to, stormwater retention
and detention ponds and best management practices, which retain water
for a period of time to control runoff and/or improve the quality (i.e.,
by reducing the concentration of nutrients, sediments, hazardous substances
and other pollutants) of stormwater runoff.
Stream bed: The substrate of the stream channel between the ordinary
high water marks. The substrate may be bedrock or inorganic particles
that range in size from clay to boulders. Wetlands contiguous to the
stream bed, but outside of the ordinary high water marks, are not considered
part of the stream bed.
Stream channelization: The manipulation of a stream’s course, condition,
capacity, or location that causes more than minimal interruption of
normal stream processes. A channelized stream remains a water of the
United States.
Structure: An object that is arranged in a definite pattern of organization.
Examples of structures include, without limitation, any pier, boat dock,
boat ramp, wharf, dolphin, weir, boom, breakwater, bulkhead, revetment,
riprap, jetty, artificial island, artificial reef, permanent mooring
structure, power transmission line, permanently moored floating vessel,
piling, aid to navigation, or any other manmade obstacle or obstruction.
Tidal wetland: A tidal wetland is a wetland (i.e., water of the United
States) that is inundated by tidal waters. The definitions of a wetland
and tidal waters can be found at 33 CFR 328.3(b) and 33 CFR 328.3(f),
respectively. Tidal waters rise and fall in a predictable and measurable
rhythm or cycle due to the gravitational pulls of the moon and sun.
Tidal waters end where the rise and fall of the water surface can no
longer be practically measured in a predictable rhythm due to masking
by other waters, wind, or other effects. Tidal wetlands are located
channelward of the high tide line, which is defined at 33 CFR 328.3(d).
Vegetated shallows: Vegetated shallows are special aquatic sites under
the 404(b)(1) Guidelines. They are areas that are permanently inundated
and under normal circumstances have rooted aquatic vegetation, such
as seagrasses in marine and estuarine systems and a variety of vascular
rooted plants in freshwater systems.
Waterbody: For purposes of the NWPs, a waterbody is a jurisdictional
water of the United States that, during a year with normal patterns
of precipitation, has water flowing or standing above ground to the
extent that an ordinary high water mark (OHWM) or other indicators of
jurisdiction can be determined, as well as any wetland area (see 33
CFR 328.3(b)). If a jurisdictional wetland is adjacent--meaning bordering,
contiguous, or neighboring--to a jurisdictional waterbody displaying
an OHWM or other indicators of jurisdiction, that waterbody and its
adjacent wetlands are considered together as a single aquatic unit (see
33 CFR 328.4(c)(2)). Examples of “waterbodies” include streams, rivers,
lakes, ponds, and wetlands.
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