diver

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The Western Aquatic Plant Management Society


Description of Method

Diver dredging is a method whereby SCUBA divers use hoses attached to small dredges (often dredges used by miners for mining gold from streams) to vacuum plant material out of the sediment. The purpose of diver dredging is to remove all parts of the plant including the roots. A good operator can accurately remove target plants, like Eurasian watermilfoil, while leaving native species untouched.  The suction hoses pump the plant material and the sediments to the surface where they are deposited into a screened basket. The water and sediment are returned back to the water column and the plant material is retained. The turbid water is generally discharged to an area curtained off from the rest of the lake by a silt curtain. The plants are disposed of on shore. Removal rates vary from approximately 0.25 acres per day to one acre per day.  

Diver dredging has been used in British Columbia and Washington to remove early infestations of Eurasian watermilfoil. In a large scale operation in western Washington, two years of diver dredging reduced the population of milfoil by 80 percent. Diver dredging is less effective on plants where seeds, turions, or tubers remain in the sediments to sprout the next growing season. For that reason, Eurasian watermilfoil is generally the target plant for removal during diver dredging operations.

Advantages

  • Diver dredging is a very selective technique for removing pioneer colonies of Eurasian watermilfoil.
  • Divers can remove plants around docks and in other difficult to reach areas.
  • Diver dredging can be used in situations where herbicide use is not an option for aquatic plant management.

Disadvantages

  • Diver dredging is very expensive.
  • Dredging stirs up sediments. This may lead to the release of nutrients or long-buried toxic materials into the water column.
  • The tops of plants growing in rocky or hard sediments may removed leaving a viable root crown behind to initiate growth. 
  • In some states, acquisition of permits can take years. 

Permits

Permits are required for many types of projects in lakes and streams. Check with your state and local jurisdictions before proceeding with a diver dredging project. Also diver dredging may require a Section 404 permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Costs

Depending on the density of the plants, specific equipment used, and disposal requirements, costs can range from a minimum of $1,500 to $2,000 per day.


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This page was last updated 06/16/2004