Washington Administrative Code
Title 220 - Fish and Wildlife, Department of
ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS AND CONSERVATION
Chapter 220-660 - Hydraulic code rules
Section 220-660-230 - Beaver dam management
Universal Citation: WA Admin Code 220-660-230
Current through Register Vol. 24-18, September 15, 2024
(1) Description:
(a) A person may
need to remove, breach, or modify a beaver dam to prevent damage to private and
public land, structures, or other improvements of value from flooding. Beaver
dams are normally removed using hand tools or equipment such as
backhoes.
(b) An alternative to
frequent dam removal is installing a beaver exclusion device. These devices
prevent beavers from building a dam that blocks water flow at the mouth or
inside of culverts.
(c) Installing
a water level (flow) control device may be a preferred alternative to removing
or breaching an established dam that maintains a beaver wetland; however, fish
passage must be maintained. A person can install a water level control device
to maintain a desirable beaver wetland. These devices are installed at the
intended depth, extending upstream and downstream of the dam. This preserves
the pond's habitat benefits.
(2) Fish life concerns:
(a) Beavers play an important ecological role
in creating and maintaining ponds and wetlands for fish and wildlife habitat.
Ponds also provide surface water storage that improves summer flows, as well as
improving water quality through retaining sediment.
(b) Breaching, notching, or removing a dam
can negatively affect fish life and the habitat that supports fish life by
dewatering the upstream pond, stranding fish life, and releasing large volumes
of water (that can be devoid of oxygen) and sediment downstream. Releasing
sediment can affect downstream spawning areas. Breaching or removing a beaver
dam may not prevent future beaver activity in the area. Persistent breaching or
removing a beaver dam can increase the risk of negative impacts to habitat. In
these instances, the department may recommend that a person consider other
beaver management techniques.
(c)
Beaver exclusion devices and water level control devices can create a design
challenge for fish passage and the devices can decrease the likelihood for
long-term fish passage.
(3) Removal or breaching a beaver dam:
(a) Beaver dams may be removed or
modified without compensatory mitigation only when:
(i) The continued existence of the beaver dam
poses an imminent threat to the integrity of water crossing structures, other
structures or improvements of value, private and public land, or in some rare
cases, the environment; and
(ii)
The beaver dam has been in existence for less than one year. Removal of older
dams will be considered on a site-specific basis.
(b) The department will decide if
compensatory mitigation is required to offset habitat loss caused by removing
or breaching any beaver dam older than one year.
(c) The department may allow the use of
explosives to remove a beaver dam if the department determines that the use of
explosives has fewer impacts than other alternatives.
(d) Beaver dam management activities must
take place when the work will cause the least impact to fish life. Except for
an emergency or imminent danger, all work must occur when spawning or
incubating fish are less likely to be present.
(e) Whenever feasible, remove or notch beaver
dams by hand or with hand-held tools and hand-operated or motorized
winches.
(4) Removal or breaching a beaver dam construction:
(a) Before starting work, install effective
sediment and erosion control measures to prevent sediment from entering waters
of the state. Inspect the sediment and erosion control measures regularly
during construction and make all needed repairs if any damage occurs.
(b) Remove the dam gradually to allow the
water to release slowly and prevent the downstream release of accumulated
sediment at the bottom of the pond, or cause damage or erosion to the stream
bed and banks. The department may specify in the HPA the rate water can be
released.
(c) When notching, the
notch must not extend below the height of the accumulated sediment.
(d) To prevent bank erosion and flooding of
adjacent properties, the breach in the beaver dam must not be wider than the
original stream channel as measured by the department. The department may
approve larger breaches on a case-by-case basis.
(e) The department will specify the sequence
in which to breach or remove a series of dams to avoid severe flooding and
damage to habitat.
(f) Leave large
woody material embedded in the stream bed or banks undisturbed.
(g) During and immediately after removal,
monitor upstream and downstream for stranded fish in isolated pools. Capture
and safely move all stranded or isolated fish to the nearest free-flowing
water.
(5) Water level control device installation design and construction:
(a) Design and install water level control
devices so that during low flows (when beavers are more actively increasing dam
height), the flow passes through the device and maintains fish
passage.
(b) Design and install
water level control devices so that during low flows, the device will convey
enough flow over and around the dam to pass fish; or design and install a water
control device that also functions as a fish ladder.
(c) Install water level control devices in
beaver ponds with pool depth of four feet or more. If the water level control
device is installed in water shallower than four feet, the design must have an
enclosure to protect the water intake from beaver activity.
(d) Maintain the water level control device
to ensure it functions as designed.
(6) Beaver exclusion devices design and construction: Design, install, and maintain guards, grates, grills, fences, and other beaver exclusion devices to provide unimpeded fish passage and to prevent beavers from plugging a culvert or other water crossing structures such as low bridge crossings.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Washington may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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