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1055 7th Ave S - Wetland & Stream Determination and Functional AssessmentENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTING WETLAND & STREAM DETERMINATION AND FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT REPORT FOR 1055 77'H A VENUE So UTH EDMONDS, WA Wetland Resources, Inc. Project #20060 Prepared B� Wetland Resources, Inc. 9505 19th Avenue SE, Suite 106 Everett, WA 98208 (425) 337-3174 Prepared For Select Homes, LLC Attn: Kayla Nichols 16531 13,h Ave W, #A107 Lynnwood, WA 98037 April 15, 2020 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK ii TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION.................................................................................................................... 1 2.0 SITE DESCRIPTION................................................................................................................ 1 3.0 REVIEW OF PUBLICLY AVAILABLE DATA................................................................................ 2 4.0 WETLAND AND STREAM DETERMINATION............................................................................ 3 4.1 WETLAND AND STREAM DETERMINATION METHODOLOGY....................................................... 3 4.1.1 Hydrophytic Vegetation Criteria............................................................................................ 3 4.1.2 Soils Criteria........................................................................................................................... 3 4.1.3 Hydrology Criteria................................................................................................................. 4 4.2 WETLAND AND STREAM BOUNDARY DETERMINATION FINDINGS ............................................... 4 4.2.1 Shellabarger Creek................................................................................................................. 4 5.0 WILDLIFE............................................................................................................................. 7 6.0 FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS......................................................................................................... 7 7.0 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION................................................................................................ 9 8.0 USE OF THIS REPORT........................................................................................................... 9 9.0 REFERENCES....................................................................................................................... 10 LIST OF 'FIGURES FIGURE 1 -AERIAL VIEW OF SUBJECT PROPERTY (NOT TO SCALE) ................................................ 1 FIGURE 2-SHELLABARGER CREEK AND PIPED STORMWATER DRAINAGE SYSTEM IN THE VICINITY OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY. P1-P3 INDICATE THE LOCATIONS OF PHOTOS PICTURED IN FIGURE 3. (IMAGE SOURCE: CITY OF EDMONDS GIS INTERACTIVE ONLINE MAP) ..................................... 5 FIGURE 3 -PHOTOGRAPHS OF SHELLABARGER CREEK IN THE VICINITY OF THE SUBJECT SITE. CLOCKWISE FROM THE TOP LEFT, P1-P3 AS SHOWN IN FIGURE 2................................................ 6 FIGURE 4 -SUBJECT SITE NORTHEAST OF THE CORNER OF FIR STREET AND 7TH AVENUE SOUTH WITH SHELLABARGER CREEK TO THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST OF THE INTERSECTION (FACING SOUTH. (IMAGE SOURCE: GOGGLE MAPS STREET VIEW)............................................................. 8 iii 1.0 INTRODUCTION Wetland Resources, Inc. (WRY conducted a site investigation on April 1, 2020 to identify and evaluate jurisdictional wetlands and fish and wildlife habitat conservation areas on and in the vicinity of the 0.34-acre parcel located at 1055 71h Avenue South, in Edmonds, Washington, (parcel #00619400400600). The site is identified as a portion of Section 25, Township 27N, Range 03E, W.M. and is located within the Puget Sound drainage basin in the Cedar- Sammamish Watershed, Water Resources Inventory Area (WRIA) 8. 2.0 SITE DESCRIPTION The subject property is located at the northeast corner of Th Avenue South and Fir Street. The property is developed with a single-family residence and detached garage. The remainder of the site consists of maintained lawn and landscaping. Topography of the site slopes to the west. Soils on the site are mapped by the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) web soil survey as Alderwood-Urban land complex, 8 to 15 percent slopes. Surrounding land use consists of single- family residential use. Shellabarger Creek, a Type F stream, is located to the southwest of the site and a tributary to Shellabarger Creek (also Type F) is located to the west of the site. Prior to conducting the site investigation, public resource information was reviewed to gather background information on the subject property and the surrounding area in regards to wetlands, streams, and other critical areas. These sources included the following: Figure 1 -Aerial view of subject property (Not to scale) 1055 71h Avenue South 1 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 3.0 REVIEW OF PUBLICLY AVAILABLE DATA USDA/NRCS Web Soil Survey Soils on the site are mapped Alderwood-Urban land complex, 8 to 15 percent slopes. This soil map unit is described as moderately well drained and contains inclusions of Norma (5 percent), which is a hydric soil typically found in drainageways. City of Edmonds GIS Interactive Map The City of Edmonds GIS interactive online map depicts Shellabarger Creek to the southwest of the property. The stream is intermittently piped downgradient of the subject site. Snohomish County PDS Map Portal PDS Map Portal depicts Shellabarger Creek as a Non -Fish Habitat Seasonal Stream to the southwest of the property. Approximately 0.4 miles downstream of the site it is shown as a Fish Habitat stream. Two Snohomish County inventoried wetlands are shown in the vicinity of the site. One is located approximately 365 feet south to the south, and the other is approximately 235 feet to the west. Both of these wetlands are associated with Shellabarger Creek. USFWS National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) NWI depicts a Riverine, Intermittent, Streambed, Seasonally Flooded feature southwest of the subject site. DNR Wetlands of High Conservation Value Interactive Map This resource does not depict any features on or near the subject property. DNR Forest Practices Application Mapping Tool (FPAM7) This resource depicts a stream to the southwest of the subject site. The stream is shown as a Type N stream south of Fir Street, with a stream type break just south of Fir Street. From that location it is shown as a Type F stream to the north. WDFW SalmonScape Interactive Mapping System SalmonScape shows Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) presence in Shellabarger Creek, based on lack of gradient barriers. StreamNet Mapper The StreamNet Mapper interactive online mapping tool depicts migration of Coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii ssp. clarkii) in Shellabarger Creek approximately 0.4 miles downstream of the subject site. WDFW Priority Habitat and Species (PHS) Interactive Map PHS does not depict any features on or in the vicinity of the site. Occurrence/migration of Coho and Resident coastal cutthroat is depicted in Shellabarger Creek approximately 0.4 miles 1055 7th Avenue South 2 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 downstream of the subject site. 4.0 WETLAND AND STREAM DETERMINATION 4.1 WETLAND AND STREAM DETERMINATION METHODOLOGY Ordinary High Water Mark (OHWM) boundaries of lakes, streams, and marine waters are determined through use of methodology presented in The Washington State Department of Ecology document Determining the Ordinary High Water Mark for Shoreline Management Act Compliance in Washington State (Anderson et al 2016). Designation of streams and lakes is consistent with the water typing system established in the Washington Administrative Code MAC) 222-16-030. Wetland boundaries were determined using the routine approach described in the Corps of Engineers Wetlands Delineation Manual (Environmental Laboratory 1987) and the Regional Supplement to the Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual: Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast Region (Version 2.0) (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 2010). Under the routine methodology, the process for making a wetland determination is based on three steps: 1.) Examination of the site for hydrophytic vegetation (species present and percent cover); 2.) Examination of the site for hydric soils; 3.) Determining the presence of wetland hydrology 4.1.1 Hydrophytic Vegetation Criteria The Corps Manual and 2010 Regional Supplement define hydrophytic vegetation as "the assemblage of macrophytes that occurs in areas where inundation or soil saturation is either permanent or of sufficient frequency and duration to influence plant occurrence." Field indicators are used to determine whether the hydrophytic vegetation criteria have been met. Examples of these indicators include, but are not limited to, the rapid test for hydrophytic vegetation, a dominance test result of greater than 50%, and/or a prevalence index score less than or equal to 3.0. 4.1.2 Soils Criteria The 2010 Regional Supplement (per the National Technical Committee for Hydric Soils) defines hydric soils as soils "that formed under conditions of saturation, flooding, or ponding long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part." Field indicators are used to determine whether a given soil meets the definition for hydric soils. Indicators are numerous and include, but are not limited to, presence of a histosol or histic epipedon, a sandy gleyed matrix, depleted matrix, and redoximorphic depressions. 1055 71h Avenue South 3 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 4.1.3 Hydrology Criteria Wetland hydrology encompasses all hydrologic characteristics of areas that are periodically inundated or have soils saturated to the surface for a sufficient duration during the growing season. Areas with evident characteristics of wetland hydrology are those where the presence of water has an overriding influence on the characteristics of vegetation and soils due to anaerobic and chemically reducing conditions, respectively. The strongest indicators include the presence of surface water, a high water table, and/or soil saturation within at least 12 inches of the soil surface. 4.2 WETLAND AND STREAM BOUNDARY DETERMINATION FINDINGS No wetlands or streams were identified on the subject property. Shellabarger Creek is located approximately 60 feet southwest of the property. Shellabarger Creek flows from the south, on the south side of Fir Street, enters the piped stormwater drainage system where it is directed to the west paralleling Fir Street for approximately 177 feet, and then to the north under Fir Street, emerging into an open channel and continuing to the north. Approximately 48 feet west of the property there is also a small tributary to Shellabarger Creek that emerges from the piped stormwater system at the northwest corner of Fir Street and 7th Avenue South and flows west in an open channel for approximately 108 feet before entering another stormwater pipe. It emerges again approximately 98 feet to the west and merges with Shellabarger Creek. Downstream, Shellabarger Creek continues to be intermittently piped. 4.2.1 Shellabarger Creek Cowardin Classificiation: Riverine, Upper Perennial, Unconsolidated Bottom, Mud City of Edmonds Classification: Type F City of Edmonds Buffer: 100 Shellabarger Creek and its tributary are approximately 4 to 6 feet in width in the vicinity of the subject site. These channels have a mud substrate and a gradient of approximately 5 percent. Some publicly available resources depict the stream as seasonally flowing. At the time of the April 1, 2020 site investigation, the stream was flowing. Per Edmonds Community Development Code (ECDC) 23.90.010(A)(1), Shellabarger Creek is identified as an anadromous fish -bearing (Type F) stream in the City of Edmonds. Pursuant to ECDC 23.90.040(D)(1), Type F anadromous fish - bearing streams adjacent to reaches with anadromous fish access receive 100-foot standard protective buffers. 1055 71h Avenue South 4 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 Figure 2-Shellabarger Creek and piped stormwater drainage system in the vicinity of the subject property. PI-P3 indicate the locations of photos pictured in Figure 3. (Image source: City of Edmonds GIS interactive online map) 1055 71h Avenue South 5 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 Figure 3 -Photographs of Shellabarger Creek in the vicinity of the subject site. Clockwise from the top left, P1-P3 as shown in Figure 2. 1055 71h Avenue South 6 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 5.0 WILDLIFE The subject property is developed with a single-family residence, detached garage, and maintained lawn and landscaping. The site provides minimal habitat for wildlife. Mammalian species expected to occur on or near the site include gray squirrel (Sciurus spp.) and raccoon (Procyon lotor). Given the habitat available, it is expected that the following avian species may use the area: American Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos), American Robin (Turdus migratorius), Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia), Black -capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapilla), and Dark -eyed Junco (junco hyemalis). Publicly available online resources depict Coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and Resident coastal cutthroat (Oncorhynchus clarkii ssp. clarkii) in Shellabarger Creek approximately 0.4 miles downstream of the subject site with no gradient barriers to preclude fish from reaching the portion of the stream in the vicinity of the site. As the stream is intermittently piped downstream of the site, it is unknown whether anadromous fish can access the stream channels in the vicinity of the subject property. 6.0 FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS The standard prescribed 100-foot protective buffers of Shellabarger Creek and its tributary to the southwest and west of the subject site would extend onto the southwestern corner of the property. However, the on -site portion of the buffer is physically and functionally isolated from the stream channels by existing paved roads (Fir Street and 71h Avenue South). The basis of this assessment comes from review and analysis of Best Available Science on the topic of buffer functions. Chapter 5 of the Washington State Department of Ecology guidance document entitled "Freshwater Wetlands in Washington State Volume 1: A Synthesis of the Science" provides a comprehensive analysis of buffer functions. The following, taken directly from the aforementioned document, is a list of the functions provided by buffers: 1.) removing sediment; 2.) removing excess nutrients; 3.) removing toxics; 4.) influencing microclimate, 5.) maintaining adjacent habitat; 6.) screening adjacent disturbances; and 7.) maintaining habitat connectivity. Functions numbered 1-3 relate to water quality improvement. Stormwater from the subject property flows into the piped stormwater drainage system via catch basins located at the northeast corner of Fir Street and 7th Avenue South (See Figure 2). No surface water from the site flows directly into the stream channels. Therefore, the water quality improvement function provided by the on -site portion of the prescribed buffer is physically interrupted from the open stream channels. Function 4 relates to the influence of the buffer on microclimate. The presence of Fir Street and 71h Avenue South interrupts the microclimate created by vegetation adjacent to the streams, disconnecting it from the microclimate occurring on the subject site. Therefore, the on -site 1055 71h Avenue South 7 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 portion of the prescribed buffer does not influence the microclimate of Shellabarger Creek and its tributary. Functions numbered 5-7 relate to wildlife habitat. Buffer isolation created by the roads eliminates connectivity of the subject property to the streams for all but avian species. Due to the disconnection, the on -site portion of the prescribed buffer does not provide a significant influence on wildlife habitat functions of the streams. Pursuant to ECDC 23.40.220, adjacent areas that are physically separated from a stream or wetland due to existing, legally established structures or paved areas may be exempt from the prescribed buffer widths when it is demonstrated that the interrupted buffer area is functionally isolated. Because there is no biological habitat connection nor a surface water connection between the stream features and the subject property as discussed above, WRI has determined that the on -site portion of the stream buffer is physically and functionally isolated from the stream channels. The functional buffer adjacent to the stream channels terminates at the edge of the pavement of Fir Street and 7th Avenue South and does not extend onto the subject property. Figure 4 shows the location of the stream channels relative to the subject property, physically separated by Fir Street and 71h Avenue South. Figure 4 -Subject site northcast of the corner of Fir Street and Th Avenue South with Shellabarger Creek to the west and southwest of the intersection (facing south). (Image source: Google Maps street view). 1055 71h Avenue South 8 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 7.0 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION Shellabarger Creek and a tributary are located to the southwest and west of the subject property. They are Type F streams and receive standard 100-foot protective buffers. The functional buffers on these streams is interrupted by Fir Street and 7th Avenue South and therefore does not extend onto the subject property. No other wetlands or streams occur in the vicinity of the subject property. Therefore, no stream or buffer impacts will result from the proposed project. S.O USE OF THIS REPORT This Wetland and Stream Determination and Functional Assessment Report is supplied to Select Homes, Inc. as a means of evaluating the off -site wetland and associated buffer as required by the City of Edmonds during the permitting process. This report is based largely on readily observable conditions and, to a lesser extent, on readily ascertainable conditions. No attempt has been made to determine hidden or concealed conditions. The laws applicable to environmentally critical areas are subject to varying interpretations and may be changed at any time by the courts or legislative bodies. This report is intended to provide information deemed relevant in the applicant's attempt to comply with the laws now in effect. The work for this report has conformed to the standard of care employed by wetland ecologists. No other representation or warranty is made concerning the work or this report, and any implied representation or warranty is disclaimed. Wetland Resources, Inc. Joie Goodman Associate Ecologist 1055 71h Avenue South 9 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 9.0 REFERENCES Anderson, P.S., Meyer, S., Olson, P., and E. Stockdale. 2016. Determining the Ordinary High Water Mark for Shoreline Management Act Compliance in Washington State. Washington State Department of Ecology. Publication # 16-06-029. Cowardin, et al., 1979. Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats of the United States. U.S. Department of the Interior. FWS/OBS-79/31. December 1979. Edmonds, City of. 2020a. Edmonds Community Development Code, Title 23 Natural Resources. Ordinance 4175, passed February 25, 2020. Edmonds, City of. 2020b. City of Edmonds GIS Webmap. http://www.edmondswa.gov/gls-text.html. Lichvar, R.W., D.L. Banks, W.N. Kirchner, and N.0 Melvin. 2016. Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast 2016Regional Wetland Plant List. Phytoneuron 2016-30: 1-17. Munsell Color. 2012. Munsell Soil Color Book. Munsell Color, Grand Rapids, MI. Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission PSMC). 2020. StreamNet Mapper. http://www.streamnet.org/data/interactive-maps-and-gis-data/. Sheldon, D., T. Hruby, P. Johnson, K. Harper, A. McMillan, T. Granger, S. Stanley, and E. Stockdale. March 2005. Wetlands in Washington State - Volume 1: A Synthesis of the Science. Washington State Department of Ecology. Publication #05-06-006. Olympia, WA. Snohomish County. 2020. PDS Map Portal online interactive mapping tool. https://snohorm*shcountywa.gov/3752/PDS-Map-Portal US Army Corps of Engineers. 2010. Regional Supplement to the Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual: Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast Region (Version 2. 0). Vicksburg, MS US Department of Agriculture -Natural Resources Conservation Service. Web Soil Survey. http://websollsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/app/HomePage.htm. US Fish and Wildlife Service. 2020. National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) Online Mapper. http://www.fws.gov/wetlands/Data/Mapper.html. Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2020a. Priority Habitat and Species (PHS) Interactive Map. http://apps.wdfw.wa.gov/phsontheweb/. Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2020b. SalmonScape Online Mapping Application. http://apps.wdfw.wa.gov/salmonscape/map.html. 1055 71h Avenue South 10 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020 Washington Department of Natural Resources. 2020a. Forest Practices Application Mapping Tool (FPAM7). https://fortress.wa.gov/dnr/protectiongis/fpamt/index.html#. Washington Department of Natural Resources. 2020b. WA Wetlands of High Conservation Value online mapping tool. https://www.dnr.wa.gov/NHPwetlandviewer. 1055 71h Avenue South 11 Wetland & Stream Determination and WRI #20060 Functional Assessment Report April15, 2020