40B-8.121. Minimum Surface Water Levels for Lakes


Effective on Sunday, March 12, 2023
  • 1(1) The following terms, as used in this rule, shall have the following meanings:

    15(a) “17High Minimum Lake Level” means the surface water level the lake must meet or exceed ten percent of the time on a long-term basis to ensure it reaches higher levels on a periodic basis.

    51(b) “Minimum Average” means 55the surface water level or flow necessary over a long period to maintain the integrity of hydric soils and wetland plant communities.

    77(c) “Minimum Frequent High” means a chronically high surface water level or flow with an associated frequency and duration that allows for inundation of the floodplain at a depth and duration sufficient to maintain wetland functions.

    113(d) “Minimum Frequent Low” means a chronically low surface water level or flow that generally occurs only during periods of reduced rainfall. This level is intended to prevent deleterious effects to the composition and structure of floodplain soils, the species composition and structure of floodplain and instream biotic communities, and the linkage of aquatic and floodplain food webs.

    171(e) 172“Minimum Lake Level” means 176the surface water level the lake must meet or exceed fifty percent of the time on a long-term basis to maintain average conditions.

    199(f) “Seasonally Flooded” means a hydroperiod category where surface water is typically present for extended periods (30 days or more) during the growing season, resulting in a predominance of submerged or submerged and transitional wetland species. During extended periods of normal or above normal rainfall, lake levels causing inundation are expected to occur several weeks to several months every one to two years.

    262(g) “Semi-Permanently Flooded” means a hydroperiod category where surface water inundation persists in most years. When surface water is absent the water table is usually near the land surface. In many lakes with emergent marshes this water level is near the lower elevation that supports emergent marsh or floating vegetation and peat substrates, or other highly organic hydric substrates. This characterization may not be true for herbaceous wetlands around sandhill type lakes, which often have emergent vegetation that follows declining water levels to below the lower elevation of peat substrate. Water levels causing inundation are expected to occur approximately eighty percent of the time over a long-term period of record. Exposure of these ground elevations is expected to re-occur, on average, about every five to ten years for extended periods (several or more months) during moderate droughts.

    399(h) “Typically Saturated” means 403a hydroperiod category where, for extended periods of the year, the water level should saturate or inundate. This condition results in saturated substrates for periods of one-half year or more during non-flooding periods of typical years. Water levels causing inundation are expected to occur fifty to sixty per cent of the time over a long-term period of record. This water level is expected to have a recurrence interval, on the average, of one or two years over a long-term period of record. Obligate wetland plant species are expected to be predominate near this water level.

    498(2) The following minimum surface water levels are established:

    507Water Body Name

    510County

    511(Latitude/ Longitude)

    513Minimum Level

    515Level

    516(Feet NAVD)

    518Event

    519Hydroperiod Category

    521Duration (Days)

    523Return Interval (Interval Measurement Period)

    528Lake Butler

    530Union

    531(30º02532ꞌ00ꞌꞌN/ 082º2053453512536ꞌꞌ537W)

    538Minimum Frequent High

    541129.55

    542Flooding

    543Seasonally flooded

    54530

    5462 years (June 1 to May 31)

    553Minimum Frequent Low

    556127.30

    557Exposure

    558Semi-permanently flooded

    560120

    5615 years (October 1 to September 30)

    568Lake Hampton

    570Bradford (29º51ꞌ42ꞌꞌN/ 082º10ꞌ10ꞌꞌW)

    573High Minimum Lake Level

    577128.86

     

     

     

     

    578Minimum Lake Level

    581128.15

     

     

     

     

    582Lake Santa Fe

    585Alachua (29587o58844ꞌ45ꞌꞌN/082589o59004ꞌ45ꞌꞌW)

    591Minimum Frequent High

    594139.10

    595Flooding

    596Seasonally flooded

    59830

    5992 years (June 1 to May 31)

    606Minimum Average

    608137.89

    609Exposure

    610Typical611ly saturated

    613180

    6141.7 years 616(October 1 to September 30)

    621Minimum Frequent Low

    624136.52

    625Exposure

    626Semi-permanently flooded

    628120

    6295 years 631(October 1 to September 30)

    636Rulemaking Authority 638373.044, 639373.113 FS. 641Law Implemented 643373.042, 644373.0421, 645373.103 FS. 647History–New 6488-9-21, Amended 3-12-23651.