New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 7 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Chapter 7 - COASTAL PERMIT PROGRAM RULES
Subchapter 9 - SPECIAL AREAS
Section 7:7-9.6 - Submerged vegetation habitat
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 6, March 18, 2024
(a) A submerged vegetation habitat special area consists of water areas supporting or documented as previously supporting rooted, submerged vascular plants such as widgeon grass (Ruppia maritima), sago pondweed (Potamogeton pectinatus), horned pondweed (Zannichellia palustris), and eelgrass (Zostera marina). In New Jersey, submerged vegetation is most prevalent in the shallow portions of the Navesink, Shrewsbury, Manasquan, and Metedeconk Rivers, and in Barnegat, Manahawkin, and Little Egg Harbor Bays. Other submerged vegetation species in lesser quantities include, but are not limited to, the following: water weed (Elodea nuttalli), Eriocaulon parkeri, Liaeopsis chinesis, Naja flexilis, Nuphar variegatum, Potamogeton crispus, Potamogeton epihydrus, Potamogeton perfoliatus, Potamogeton pusillus, Scirpus subterminalis, and Vallisneria americana. Detailed maps of the distribution of the above species for New Jersey, and a method for delineation, are available from the Department in the New Jersey Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Distribution Atlas (Final Report), February, 1980, conducted by Earth Satellite Corporation and also on "Eelgrass Inventory" maps prepared by the Division of Fish and Wildlife, Bureau of Shellfisheries, 1983. If the Department is presented with clear and convincing evidence that a part of its mapped habitat lacks the physical characteristics necessary for supporting or continuing to support the documented submerged vegetation species, such a site would be excluded from the habitat definition.
(b) Development in submerged vegetation habitat is prohibited except for the following:
(c) Development in upland or water areas adjacent to submerged vegetation habitat or in submerged vegetation habitat which results in erosion or turbidity increases in the waters supporting submerged vegetation or prop or hull scour through use of the development is prohibited unless mitigating measures are provided.
(d) Compensation for unavoidable, permanent significant impacts to submerged vegetation habitats shall be conducted in accordance with N.J.A.C. 7:7-17.
(e) Rationale: New Jersey's estuarine waters are relatively shallow, rich in nutrients and highly productive. The submerged vegetation of these shallow habitats serve important functions as suspended sediment traps, important winter forage for migratory waterfowl, nursery areas for juvenile fin fish, bay scallops and blue crabs, and by nourishing fishery resources through primary biological productivity (synthesis of basic organic material) through detrital food webs in a similar manner to salt marsh emergent Spartina cord grasses. In addition, seagrasses absorb wave energy and root networks help stabilize silty bay bottoms. The value of seagrasses was dramatically illustrated during the 1930's when a disease epidemic virtually eliminated eelgrass from the eastern U.S. Atlantic ocean coastline. The number of finfish, shellfish, and waterfowl drastically decreased, threatening their survival. The oyster industry of the Atlantic coast was ruined. Bays became choked with silt and new mudflats were formed.
Most of the submerged vegetation species, in particular eelgrass and widgeon grass, grow in patches which often cluster together. This growth pattern forms a vegetative community which migrates from year to year about shoal areas. Disturbances to the substrate such as dredging usually result in permanent habitat destruction and loss. In shallow areas, propeller action may severely damage the roots and churn up the substrate and increase turbidity, damaging or destroying the plants and reducing their productivity. Other activities that can also have a negative impact on the plants and/or habitat include wake actions, upland runoff, and shading from structures.
This rule aims to protect submerged vegetation as a resource. Areas where submerged aquatic vegetation grows or has been known to grow are identified as habitat areas which currently or potentially could support the submerged vegetation plant communities. Dredging of the habitat area is permitted for maintaining the depth of existing State and Federal channels since the navigability of these channels is essential to commerce and navigation. New and maintenance dredging to existing large marinas and public launching facilities provides the greatest number of boaters access to water areas with the least amount of disturbance to the habitat area. Limited boating related uses are also permitted in habitat areas with greater than four feet of water depth, where impacts from boating are not likely to be destructive to the plants or their habitat environment.
New Jersey's coastal environment is dynamic, and shaped by natural forces such as wind, waves, and storms. Shorelines lost due to erosion eliminate intertidal habitat, reduce the amount of sandy beach, and decrease the amount of organic matter necessary to maintain tidal wetlands. This erosion results in the degradation of the coastal environment through impacts to natural habitats, such as tidal wetlands and spawning grounds. Coastal states are seeking natural solutions, such as the creation of living shorelines, to address erosion as an alternative that adds diversity to other shore protection measures. Living shorelines are a shoreline management practice that addresses erosion by providing protection, restoration, or enhancement of vegetated shoreline habitats. The establishment of living shorelines is conditionally acceptable provided the living shoreline activities disturb the minimum amount of special areas necessary to successfully implement the restoration, creation, enhancement, or protection of habitat, water quality functions, and values of wetlands, wetland buffers, and open water areas. This may include a decrease in the existing special area or the conversion of one special area to another where it is determined that such changes are environmentally beneficial.