Or. Admin. Code § 635-415-0005 - Definitions
For the purposes of OAR 635-415-0000 through 635-415-0025 only:
(1) "Department" means the Oregon Department
of Fish and Wildlife.
(2)
"Development Action" means any activity subject to regulation by local, state,
or federal agencies that could result in the loss of fish and wildlife habitat.
Development actions may include, but are not limited to, the planning,
construction, and operational activities of local, state, and federal agencies.
Development actions also include subsequent re-permitting for activities with
new impacts or continued impacts that have not been mitigated consistent with
current standards.
(3) "Essential
Habitat" means any habitat condition or set of habitat conditions which, if
diminished in quality or quantity, would result in depletion of a fish or
wildlife species.
(4) "Fish and
Wildlife" means all fish, shellfish, intertidal animals, wild birds,
amphibians, reptiles, and wild mammals over which the Fish and Wildlife
Commission has jurisdiction.
(5)
"Habitat" means the physical and biological conditions within the geographic
range of occurrence of a species, extending over time, that affect the welfare
of the species or any sub-population or members of the species.
(6) "Habitat Quantity" means the amount of a
given habitat type.
(7) "Habitat
Quality" means the relative importance of a habitat with regard to its ability
to influence species presence and support the life-cycle requirements of the
fish and wildlife species that use it.
(8) "Habitat Type" means the classification
of a site or area based on its dominant plant, soil, and water associations or
other salient features (e.g. tidal influence, salinity, substrate, alkalinity,
etc.) of value to the support and use by fish and wildlife.
(9) "Home Range" means the area that a
species traverses in the scope of normal life-cycle activities.
(10) "Impact" means an adverse effect of a
development action upon fish and wildlife habitat.
(11) "Important Habitat" means any habitat
recognized as a contributor to sustaining fish and wildlife populations on a
physiographic province basis over time.
(12) "In-kind Habitat Mitigation" means
habitat mitigation measures which recreate similar habitat structure and
function to that existing prior to the development action.
(13) "In-proximity Habitat Mitigation" means
habitat mitigation measures undertaken within or in proximity to areas affected
by a development action. For the purposes of this policy, "in proximity to"
means within the same home range, or watershed (depending on the species or
population being considered) whichever will have the highest likelihood of
benefiting fish and wildlife populations directly affected by the
development.
(14) "Irreplaceable"
means that successful in-kind habitat mitigation to replace lost habitat
quantity and/or quality is not feasible within an acceptable period of time or
location, or involves an unacceptable level of risk or uncertainty, depending
on the habitat under consideration and the fish and wildlife species or
populations that are affected. "Acceptable", for the purpose of this
definition, means in a reasonable time frame to benefit the affected fish and
wildlife species.
(15) "Limited
habitat" means an amount insufficient or barely sufficient to sustain fish and
wildlife populations over time.
(16)
"Mitigation" means taking one or more of the following actions listed in order
of priority:
(a) Avoiding the impact
altogether by not taking a certain development action or parts of that action;
(b) Minimizing impacts by limiting
the degree or magnitude of the development action and its
implementation;
(c) Rectifying the
impact by repairing, rehabilitating, or restoring the affected
environment;
(d) Reducing or
eliminating the impact over time by preservation and maintenance operations
during the life of the development action and by monitoring and taking
appropriate corrective measures;
(e) Compensating for the impact by replacing
or providing comparable substitute resources or
environments.
(17)
"Mitigation Bank" means fish and/or wildlife habitat that is restored, created,
or enhanced for the purpose of selling habitat credits in exchange for
anticipated unavoidable future habitat loses due to development
actions.
(18) "Mitigation Plan"
means a written plan or statement that thoroughly describes the manner in which
the impact of a development action will be reduced or eliminated over time,
avoided, and/or minimized; and the affected environment, including fish and
wildlife habitat, monitored, restored, rehabilitated, repaired and/or replaced
or otherwise compensated for in accordance with OAR
635-415-0010 of these
rules.
(19) "Native" means fish and
wildlife species, subspecies or populations that occur currently or
historically in Oregon through natural (i.e. nonhuman) colonization or
immigration, rather than by human action or intervention.
(20) "Nonnative" means a fish or wildlife
species not native to Oregon; foreign or introduced.
(21) "Net Benefit" means an increase in
overall in-proximity habitat quality or quantity after a development action and
any subsequent mitigation measures have been completed and monitored.
(22) "Net Loss" means a loss of habitat
quantity and/or habitat quality resulting from a development action despite
mitigation measures having been taken.
(23) "Off-site" means outside the boundary of
the development action.
(24)
"Off-proximity Habitat Mitigation" means habitat mitigation measures undertaken
outside the area that would constitute "in-proximity mitigation" but within the
same physiographic province as the development action.
(25) "Out-of-kind Habitat Mitigation" means
habitat mitigation measures which result in different habitat structure and
function that may benefit fish and wildlife species other than those existing
at the site prior to the development action.
(26) "Physiographic Province" means any one
of ten major geographical areas within the State of Oregon based on differences
in topography, climate, and vegetation as defined in the Oregon Wildlife
Diversity Plan (OAR 635-100-0001 through
0040).
(27) "Project Life" means the
period of time during which a development action is subject to regulation by
local, state, or federal agencies.
(28) "Project Proponent" means any
individual, corporation, association or agency or their delegated
representative that proposes a development action.
(29) "Reliable Method" means a mitigation
method that has been tested in areas with site factors similar to those
affected by a development action and the area in which the mitigation action is
being proposed and that has been found (e.g., through field trials,
demonstration projects or scientific studies) to produce the habitat effects
required to meet the mitigation goal for that action.
(30) "Site Factors" means climate, soil
series, sediments, hydrology, salinity, pH, DO, plant community, fish and
wildlife use, or other characteristics of an area that determine its capacity
to produce vegetation or maintain habitat features valuable to fish and
wildlife.
(31) "Watershed" means a
drainage basin encompassing a stream, its tributaries, and associated uplands
at the USGS 4th Field Hydrologic Unit level.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012, ORS 496.138, ORS 496.171, ORS 506.109 & ORS 506.119
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.012, ORS 496.138, ORS 496.171, ORS 506.109 & ORS 506.119
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