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FWC DIVISION OF MARINE FISHERIES
BUREAU OF MARINE FISHERIES MANAGEMENT
ARTIFICIAL REEF PROGRAM SUMMARY OVERVIEW
Jon Dodrill, Artificial Reef Program Administrator
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission September 2007
Introduction
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
(FWC), Division of Marine Fisheries Management, Marine Fisheries
Management Section administers a state artificial reef program that was
legislatively created under s. 370.25 Florida Statutes in 1982.
The program was transferred to the Commission from the Department of
Environmental Protection on July 1, 1999. The primary program objectives
are to provide financial and technical assistance to coastal local
governments, nonprofit corporations, and state universities to develop
artificial reefs and to monitor and evaluate these reefs.
Under the program, reefs have been constructed with one or more of the
following intended objectives: 1) enhance private recreational and
charter fishing and diving opportunities; 2) provide a socio-economic
benefit to local coastal communities; 3) increase reef fish habitat; 4)
reduce user conflicts; 5) facilitate reef related research; and, 6)
while accomplishing objectives 1-5, do no harm to fishery resources,
Essential Fish Habitat (EFH), or human health. Other reef building
objectives undertaken in Florida but outside this agency include
mitigation or restoration reefs to replace hard bottom habitat lost
through such activities as beach re-nourishment, repair of reef system
damage caused by vessel groundings, provide substrate for the
regeneration of oyster reefs and protection of re-planted vegetated
shorelines vulnerable to erosion from wave activity.
Florida has one of the most active artificial reef
programs among the 14 Gulf and Atlantic states involved in this
activity. The Florida artificial reef program is the only state program
besides Maryland that is not exclusively run at a state agency level
where the state holds all the reef area permits. Because of the extent
of coastline and statewide involvement in reef activities, the FWC
program continues as a cooperative partnership started twenty-five years
ago with local coastal county governments. Today some local
coastal cities, universities, and qualified non-profit corporations also
work directly with the FWC in artificial reef development and monitoring
activities.
Thirty-four of 35 Florida coastal counties spread along
8,426 miles of tidal coastline (1,200 miles fronting the Gulf of Mexico
and Atlantic Ocean) are or have been involved in artificial reef
development. Dating back to 1920, as of August 2007, more than
2,400 documented public artificial reefs have been placed in state and
federal waters off these counties. Most of the reef development has
taken place in the last 20 years. Local coastal governments hold
all but one of the more than 300 active artificial reef permits off both
Florida coasts. About half of these sites are in federal waters.
Fishing clubs, non profit corporations, and interested private
individuals work through the local governments as the liable permit
holders to provide input into public reef building activity.
Program Goals
On November 21, 2003 the FWC adopted a state artificial
reef strategic plan developed by an advisory board of interested
stakeholders. The plan has six general goals:
- Assure that long-term social, economic, and quality of life
values of artificial reefs benefit the local and regional economies
of Florida
- Utilize artificial reefs in scientific research to obtain a
mechanistic and predictive understanding of how artificial reefs
function ecologically and physically across spatial and temporal
scales
- Use artificial reefs as a component of fisheries
management
- Identify, procure and maximize new and existing
sources of funding for artificial reefs
- Improve intergovernmental coordination and
public/private cooperation in artificial reef development.
- Foster public and private sector marine
ecosystem stewardship and accurate understanding of artificial reef issues.
Program Funding
Artificial reef development in Florida only began with
any regularity in the late 1970's when more state funded and sponsored
projects were conducted and more dependable funding sources began to be
established. However, consistent annual reef funding at the state
level was unavailable until 1986. Today, approximately 70-100
public artificial reefs are constructed annually off Florida using a
combination of federal, state, local government and private funds.
Approximately 40%-75% of the money used annually from all sources for
artificial reef related development in Florida annually is administered
through the FWC artificial reef program. From 1996 through 2005,
the construction and monitoring project component of the state
artificial reef program was level funded with $300,000 in Federal Aid
and $300,000 in State Saltwater Fishing License revenues. In 2006,
the state artificial reef program funding was increased by an additional
$100,000 in Federal Aid, from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
for a combined total of $700,000 in Federal and State funds available
for artificial reef projects state-wide. In 2007 the state reef program
was again appropriated $400,000 in Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration
from the USFWS that was augmented with $300,000 in state saltwater
license revenues from the Marine Resource Conservation Trust Fund.
The FWC artificial reef program administers grants-in-aid pass through
funding derived from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Federal Aid in Sport
Fish Restoration Program and state salt water fishing license revenues.
The money is used to reimburse local government and nonprofit
participants for funding transportation and deployment of reef material,
construction of modular reef units, reef monitoring, pre-deployment site
assessments, and special projects, such as planning (socio-economic
studies) and research. Depending on the year approximately 70-80%
of the grant project funding goes to artificial reef construction with
the remainder utilized for monitoring, research, or other reef planning
oriented projects.
The selection process for construction and monitoring projects is
competitive.
Over the last 28 years, the State of Florida has distributed more than
$17,593,888 for artificial reef related activities. From 1979 through
fiscal year 2006-2007 Florida's artificial reef program provided at
least $13,219,608 in state and federal funding to local coastal
governments for public reef construction projects. Another $3,289,259
has gone towards statewide artificial reef research projects, $708,021,
towards reef monitoring, and $377,000 towards four regional reef
socioeconomic studies. Research and monitoring projects have included
studies on reef spacing and design, material stability, storm impacts,
long-term studies of reef community succession, residency of benthic
species on artificial reefs, juvenile fish recruitment, comparison of
artificial reef fish communities with those on adjacent natural reefs,
and the impacts of directed fishing mortality on artificial reef biomass
and species diversity. A 2001 special legislative appropriation of
$550,000 (in addition to the 2001-02 regular $600,000 appropriation)
funded a low profile unpublished patch reef project consisting of over
500 patch reefs utilizing three different material designs. These units
were deployed in permitted large areas in federal waters off Northwest
Florida in the winter and spring of 2003. Some of these units
continue to be used in ongoing research projects. In 2005 the program
received an additional $250,000 appropriation to support monitoring of nearshore
natural and artificial reefs on the east coast using both conventional
sampling and DIDSON sonar. During 2006-07 FWC received a
$1,250,000 grant from the U.S. Maritime Administration to assist the
City of Key West with partial financing of the preparation of the
military vessel General Hoyt Vandenberg to be placed as an artificial
reef off Key West, FL in 2008.
During the current 2007-2008 fiscal year FWC is providing $700,000 in
funding for reef construction projects off five counties (61 patch
reefs) as well as four monitoring projects, one ongoing research
project, and one ongoing (year two of two) multi-county Southwest
Florida socioeconomic benefits of artificial reef study. Participants
in this fiscal year's reef grants in aid program activities include nine
county governments, the West Coast Inland Navigation District, and two
universities. Projects cover the following county areas: Flagler, St.
Lucie, Martin, Miami-Dade, Escambia, Taylor, Pinellas, Hillsborough,
Sarasota, Lee, and Charlotte Counties. The 2007-2008 fiscal year
individual projects range in cost from $10,399-$40,000 (research and
monitoring), from $54,000 to $256,000 (reef construction), and $100,000
(regional socio economic study). The 2007-2008 reef construction
projects will include a mix of fabricated concrete modules, and pre-cast
secondary use concrete materials.
Program Personnel
From 1991 through fiscal year 2006-07 state reef program Tallahassee
based staff consisted of an Environmental Administrator working 3/4 time
on artificial reef issues and 50% federally funded, and two Fishery
Management Biologists funded with state fishing license dollars. In
fiscal year 2007-08, the salaries of the two Fishery Biologists will be
100% funded under a Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Grant applied
for annually. FWC artificial reef program staff provides technical
assistance to local coastal governments, and state and federal
regulatory agencies. Staff disseminates artificial reef related
information to all of these entities and assists the general public by
answering questions related to artificial reefs. Staff carries out
a legislative requirement of maintaining a statewide public artificial
reef database (on the FWC marine web site) and remains in contact with
other state artificial reef program managers.
In addition to administrative duties, staff conducts statewide
compliance and performance monitoring of grant funded reef projects
using SCUBA. The section's assessment dive team conducts fish
censuses, mapping, video, photography, and materials evaluation.
Staff may also inspect materials proposed for deployment, or monitor
actual deployments. Other monitoring techniques such as sidescan sonar
have been used on a contractual pilot study basis. In the course of over
150 staff fish censuses taken statewide at depths from 10-140 feet since
1992, 220 species of fish have been identified on Florida artificial
reefs. The top five fish species most likely to be seen on artificial
reefs during those censuses were 1) tomtate (grunt); 2) gag (grouper);
3) gray snapper 4) white grunt and, 5) gray triggerfish. Fish noted in
the greatest densities when they occurred were 1) scads (cigar minnows);
2) clupeids (herrings); 3) tomtate (grunt) and, 4) vermilion snapper (beeliners).
Approximately $50,000/yr is received through the USFWS under an
artificial reef grant to support reef staff field monitoring operations,
and other operating costs.
Artificial Reef Program Stakeholders
Artificial reef stakeholders in Florida include users, interested
parties, and those entities impacted by reef development activities.
Stake holders include recreational anglers and associated businesses,
federal, state, and local governments, tourism and economic development
interests, recreational and commercial SCUBA divers, commercial hook and
line and trawl fishermen, academia, volunteer reef research and
monitoring groups, artificial reef module manufacturers, marine
contractors, environmental organizations and the media.
Permitting
The FWC artificial reef program does not issue permits for artificial
reef sites. This regulatory responsibility is carried out by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (ACOE) for proposed artificial reef areas in
federal waters, and by both the ACOE and the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) in state waters. Both of these
regulatory agencies accept comments from FWC and other interested
parties during the artificial reef application review process. Due to
liability issues, associated with siting and placing materials on the
sea floor, permits are not issued permits directly to private
individuals or clubs for building artificial reefs. The local
coastal governments who are applicants for new reef sites undergo a
rigorous individual permit application process that may span a 6-9 month
period.
A review of all of Florida's permitted artificial reef sites on record,
permitted between the late 1960's and early 2006, identified 448 unique
permitted artificial reef areas, covering a total of 664.13 nm2.
Of the 448 sites permitted to date, approximately 300 are currently
active. The average size of the 448 permit polygons is 1.48 nm2.
The smallest permit polygon is 1.06 x 10-6 nm2 (48.44 ft2), and the
largest permit polygon is 98.09 nm2. 90% of the permit polygons
fall between the sizes of 1.06 x 10-6 nm2 (48.44 ft2) and 1.69 nm2. The
wide range of permit sizes is a result of 8 large area artificial reef
sites (LAARS) located in the Panhandle and Florida Big Bend (off
Escambia, Okaloosa, Bay, and Taylor counties). Each of the LAARS
encompasses significantly more area (60.87 nm2) than the average of all
other permitted sites in Florida (0.39 nm2). The 8 LAARS account for 73%
of Florida's total permitted artificial reef area. As a result, the Gulf
coast of Florida includes more total permitted area than the Atlantic
coast of Florida (539.38 nm2 and 124.74 nm2, respectively).
Reef Materials Use
Allowable materials for artificial reef use are determined by U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers (ACOE) and Florida Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP) permit criteria and tend to emphasize heavy, stable,
durable and non-polluting materials. These criteria are based upon
requirements for the use of non-hazardous material of sufficient
stability and durability to insure that the materials and their
component parts remain within permitted areas and last long enough to
provide the intended habitat enhancement. These criteria are based upon
direction provided by the National Artificial Reef Plan, developed under
the Secretary of Commerce by direction of the National Fishing
Enhancement Act of 1984 and by the Environmental Protection Agency based
upon federal and international law. Also, guidance is provided by
the Guidelines for Marine Artificial Reef Materials, Second Edition
(2004) produced by the Gulf and Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commissions, a copy of which can be found on line at:
http://www.gsmfc.org/pubs/SFRP/Guidelines_for_Marine_Artificial_Reef_Materials_January_2004.pdf.
DEP has specific materials limitations for artificial reef use in state
waters. Under DEP state general artificial reef rules, for example, in
state waters of peninsular Florida (62-341.600 F.A.C.) materials are
limited to clean concrete or rock, clean steel boat hulls, other clean,
heavy gauge steel products with a thickness of 1/4 inch or greater and
prefabricated structures that are a mixture of clean concrete and heavy
gauge steel. In state waters in the Florida Panhandle (62-312.807
F.A.C.), allowable materials under the general permit are limited to
clean concrete materials, rock, or steel boat hulls.
An assessment of material types used in 709 publicly funded Florida
artificial reef deployments (all funding sources) from 1994-2000 showed
that secondary use concrete materials dominate (43%) followed by
concrete modules (24%), military equipment- mainly armored combat tanks
(11%), steel vessels and barges (11%), scrap steel (6%), limestone
(3%) and miscellaneous materials (2%). In the last several years
there has been increasing use of designed modules. Though more expensive
they can be more effectively placed, be designed to resist major storm
events, target specific species or life history stages, and can serve as
standardized units for follow-up monitoring or research.
Additional Information
For more information on Florida's Artificial Reef Program, please
contact:
Jon Dodrill, Environmental Administrator
Division of Marine Fisheries Management - Artificial Reef Program
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
620 South Meridian Street, Box 4B2
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1600
Web:
http://myfwc.com/marine/ar/index.asp
Phone: (850) 922-4340 x207
Fax: (850) 922-0463
Email: Jon.Dodrill@myfwc.com
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