(3) For purposes of
RCW
90.48.366, marine and estuarine habitats of
the state are classified into the following thirty-seven habitat types:
(a) Marine intertidal habitats.
(i) Exposed and semiexposed rocky shores.
Bedrock and boulder habitats exposed to the full range of wave energies of the
Pacific (i.e., on the outer coast), or to extensive wave fetch along the Strait
of Juan de Fuca. Rocky areas on the coast partly protected behind sea stacks or
islands also fall into this category.
(ii) Sand-scoured rocky shores. Rocky
headlands or sea stacks directly adjacent to high energy sandy beaches such
that there is much suspended sand in the water, which scours the rock. Unique
plants and animals are found here.
(iii) Protected rocky shores. Bedrock and
boulder habitats lacking oceanic swell and extensive wave fetch; e.g., inside
waters of the San Juan Islands, headlands in bays off the Strait of Juan de
Fuca or well protected behind islands on the outer coast.
(iv) Semiexposed cobble and mixed-coarse
beaches. Beaches exposed to moderate wave action composed of cobble overlying
sand, or to somewhat less wave action, with a mix of cobble, gravel, and sand
where no one component occupies more than seventy percent of the surface. Algae
may grow on larger cobbles, and animals live both on the surface and in the
sediment. Species vary dramatically with degree of wave exposure and
composition of the sediment. Found inside the San Juan Islands, outside of
Whidbey Island, at semiprotected sites along the Strait, and behind island and
sea stacks on the coast.
(v)
Semiexposed gravel beaches. Unstable beaches, containing some sand in more
protected areas. Many sites along the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
(vi) Exposed sandy beaches. Pure marine sands
found in moderate to high-energy areas, e.g., on the outer coast and along the
Strait of Juan de Fuca. Mouths of bays with some wave action also fall into
this category.
(vii) Semiprotected
mixed-fine beaches. Mixed sand and silt habitats, found in bays and inlets with
some wave action so they are not dominated by the finer sediments (muds).
Patches of gravel may be present high on the shore.
(viii) Protected mud flats. Areas of little
to no wave energy, where fine sediments settle and accumulate organic matter.
Found in calm bays and inlets with little freshwater influx (i.e., not
estuaries).
(b) Marine
subtidal.
(i) Shallow subtidal rock and
boulders. Areas less than 15 m depth with some currents so that sediments do
not totally cover bedrock. Kelp beds are found in these habitats, which are
widespread in the state.
(ii) Deep
subtidal rock and boulders. Areas deeper than 15 m and thus lacking in
significant algal cover, but still with enough currents to keep the substrate
exposed. Common in the San Juans and the Strait.
(iii) Deep subtidal cobble and mixed-coarse
areas. "Scoured" areas in channels or passes with high currents, composed
entirely of cobbles or with gravel and sand mixed in.
(iv) Shallow subtidal mixed-coarse to
mixed-fine areas (low energy). Areas ranging from cobbles lying over a matrix
of sand and gravel to mixed sand and silt, in waters less than 15 m. Bays and
inlets commonly have this range of substrate types. Plants and animals exist
both on the cobbles and in the sediment.
(v) Shallow subtidal gravel or mixed-fine
areas (high energy). Areas just offshore of sand or gravel beaches, where
swells or wave action keep fine sediments from accumulating. Substrates range
from pure gravel to gravel mixed with sand and shells. Common in the
Strait.
(vi) Deep subtidal sand.
Areas deeper than 15 m in the Strait or on the coast where swells keep the
substratum fairly coarse.
(vii)
Deep subtidal mixed-fine areas. Areas of sand, shells, and pebbles with some
currents removing finer particles.
(viii) Deep subtidal muddy areas. Areas with
no swell and few currents, where fine silts settle out and accumulate organic
matter.
(ix) Open water. Areas
deeper than 20 m.
(c)
Estuarine intertidal.
(i) Open rocky shores.
Rocky intertidal areas (including hardpan and riprap) in areas exposed to
moderate waves or currents, e.g., on headlands in Puget Sound.
(ii) Open mixed-coarse beaches. One of the
most common beach types in Puget Sound, composed of a mix of cobble, gravel,
and sand in areas with some wave action that keeps finer silts suspended.
Sparse salt marsh vegetation may occur at the tops of these beaches, especially
in quieter areas.
(iii) Open gravel
beaches. Areas of gravel or pebbles, often overlying sand, in areas of moderate
wave action.
(iv) Open sandy
beaches. Common habitats of gently sloping beaches but moderate wave action.
May have gravel on the upper shore. Found in Puget Sound and in some areas of
other estuaries, including Grays Harbor.
(v) Sandy low marshes. Found on spits, berms,
and deltas where sand collects. Areas of different salinities are dominated by
different marsh plant communities. Widespread (although disturbed) throughout
the Puget Trough.
(vi) Mixed-fine
beaches and low marshes. Found in backwaters or deltas away from large
channels, where the substrate is mixed sand and mud, sometimes with patches of
gravel or peat. Substrate is stable and organic-rich. Marsh communities vary
with salinity.
(vii) Saline
lagoons. Areas where water-borne sediments are deposited into a spit closing
off an embayment, which is flushed regularly or irregularly. Salinities vary
with evaporation and runoff but are generally high.
(viii) Low-salinity lagoons. Lagoons that are
nearly separated from tidal/salt influence by a berm, and where there is a
source of freshwater. Substrate is usually soft silt. This habitat is rare in
the state.
(ix) Mud flats. Areas
lacking in gravel or significant amounts of sand due to limited wave action,
usually found in the heads of bays and inlets. Includes undisturbed channels
and sloughs which drain slowly through a tidal cycle, and which may contain
some sand.
(x) High salt marshes.
Areas above normal high water but salt influenced, with organic/peat substrata.
Salinities vary, and plant communities with them.
(xi) Transition zone wetland. Areas
transitional between salt marshes and uplands, where salt water only rarely
inundates. Substrata are peat or fine silts.
(d) Estuarine subtidal.
(i) Shallow subtidal rock and boulders. Areas
less than 15 m deep with moderate currents or wave action that remove silt.
Kelp beds develop here.
(ii) Deep
subtidal rock and boulders. Areas in narrow channels or around headlands where
currents remove sediment that otherwise would settle in these deeper areas.
These habitats are essentially marine, since freshwater tends to stay layered
in shallow water.
(iii) Shallow
subtidal cobble and mixed-coarse areas. Mixed cobble, gravel, and sand remain
in shallow areas fairly open to wave action or currents.
(iv) Deep subtidal cobble and mixed-coarse
areas. Tidal currents running through deep channels in Puget Sound keep fine
silts from settling and create areas of mixed cobbles, sand, and
gravel.
(v) Shallow subtidal sandy
or mixed-fine areas. High-current areas with little debris and some gravel, or
less current-swept with more debris. Both are common outside of enclosed bays
in Puget Sound.
(vi) Deep subtidal
sandy or mixed-fine areas. Current-swept areas below 15 m. Organic debris and
gravel tend to accumulate deeper (below 30 m), leading to different assemblages
there.
(vii) Shallow subtidal muddy
bays. Common habitats in open to partly enclosed bays in Puget Sound, where
limited water movement allows fine sediments to accumulate. Organic enrichment
is high, especially in more enclosed bays.
(viii) Deep subtidal muddy bays. Habitats in
the heads and centers of inlets in Puget Sound where there is little motion and
the substrate is soft mud and sand. Assemblages vary with depth and amount of
organic debris accumulated.
(ix)
Open water. Areas deeper than twenty meters.
TABLE 2. Habitat Vulnerability for a Single Habitat Type and
Oil Effect (hv)
(7) The habitat vulnerability score for a
particular spill and oil effect (HVS) shall be determined as follows:
(a) For spills of 1,000 gallons or more. Sum
the weighted habitat vulnerability scores for each habitat type exposed to the
spill as described by the formula provided in (c) of this subsection, where
weighting is defined by percent coverage of each habitat type within the area
of spill exposure.
(b) For spills
of less than 1,000 gallons. Sum the weighted habitat vulnerability scores for
each habitat type present in the subregion(s) exposed to the spill as described
by the formula provided in (c) of this subsection, where weighting is defined
by percent coverage of each habitat type present in the subregion(s) exposed to
the spill.
(c) The formula to
calculate the raw habitat vulnerability score for a particular spill and oil
effect (HVSi) is as follows:
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HVSi =
|nj=1
(hvij x PCj)
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where
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PCj = Percent-coverage of
habitat-type j expressed as a decimal;
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hvij = habitat vulnerability
for a particular habitat type & oil effect;
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j = habitat type;
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i = acute toxicity (AT), mechanical injury (MI) and
persistence (PER); and
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n = number of habitats to be considered as
determined under (a) and (b) of this subsection.
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(d)
The final HVSAT, HVSMI, and
HVSPER scores are found by rounding the raw scores
calculated from the formula in (c) of this subsection to the nearest 0.01 as
follows: Decimals less than 0.005 shall be rounded down and decimals equal to
or greater than 0.005 shall be rounded up.