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Technical Manual for Dam Owners - Impacts of Animals on Earthen Dams (FEMA 473 / September 2005) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R562
Discovery Miles 5 620
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Technical Manual for Dam Owners - Impacts of Animals on Earthen Dams (FEMA 473 / September 2005) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R562
Discovery Miles 5 620
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In 1999, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the
Association of State Dam Safety Officials (ASDSO) jointly conducted
research and a workshop to shed light on the national problem of
animal intrusion damage to earthen dams and the resulting safety
issues. The FEMA/ASDSO survey and workshop united dam owners,
engineers, state and federal regulators, wildlife managers,
foresters, and academia to form an educated and experienced front
against the growing problem of earthen dam damage and failures due
to animal intrusion. The infor-mation generated by roundtable
discussions and survey answers indicates that while most states
recognize animal intrusion as a problem, only a handful know of
guidance on dams and wildlife management practices available to the
dam professionals and owners. Based on input from the dam
communities, FEMA/ASDSO's mission to develop a guidance manual on
the proper management of nuisance wildlife in the earthen dam
environment became clear. To determine the information needs of the
dam community-and therefore the most appropriate focus of this
manual-FEMA/ASDSO issued a survey in 1999 and used the survey input
from the 48 state dam safety officials representatives and 11
federal agencies representing the Interagency Committee on Dam
Safety (ICODS). Additionally, a second survey was issued in 2003 to
identify the current needs of each state, determine what nuisance
wildlife and damages the states encounter, and understand which
miti-gation methods are being used with success or failure. This
manual provides technical guidance to dam specialists (including
dam owners, operators, inspectors, state dam officials, and
consulting engineers) in areas of focus identified through the two
survey efforts and workshop. The purposes of this manual are to:
Assist dam specialists in understanding the impacts wildlife can
have on earthen dams; Provide dam specialists with basic
information on habitat, range, description, and behavior of common
nuisance wildlife to aid in their proper identification at the dam;
Describe state-of-practice methods to prevent and mitigate adverse
wildlife impacts on earthen dams. Provide state-of-practice design
guidance for repair and preventive design associated with nuisance
wildlife intrusion. It is envisioned that the entire dam specialist
community will use this manual to augment their routine duties in
earthen dam management. This manual is presented as a process
toward dam inspection and management that includes wildlife damage
identification and control. This manual provides technical
information and guidance on: How wildlife damage adversely affects
the safe operation of earthen dams; specifically, hydraulic
alteration, internal and external erosion, and structural integrity
losses (Chapter 2.0); Dam inspections that incorporate a biological
component to sensitize dam specialists to the aspects of their dams
that attract wildlife and to understand where nuisance wildlife are
likely to occur on the dam (Chapter 3.0); Biological data for
specific nuisance wildlife to assist the dam specialist in
identifying which nuisance wildlife inhabits the dam. Biological
data will also assist in controlling nuisance wildlife (e.g.,
listed food sources can be removed to encourage the animal to leave
the area) (Chapter 4.0); Dam design specifications and methods that
can be incorporated into repair of existing dams or new dam designs
to prevent wildlife intrusions (Chapter 5.0); Guidelines to
determine when wildlife management should occur at a dam (beyond
dam repair and prevention actions) and wildlife management methods
that can be implemented when control of specific nuisance wild-life
populations is deemed necessary. Specific methods discussed include
habitat modification, use of toxicants and fumigants, trapping, and
shooting (Chapter 6.0); The fiscal issues related to appropriate
and timely wildlife management at earthen dams (Chapter 7.0).
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