Receipt of an Application for an Incidental Take Permit for the Key Deer, Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit, and Eastern Indigo Snake Resulting from Limited Additional Development Activities on Big Pine Key and No Name Key, Monroe County, FL, 29532-29533 [05-10205]
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29532
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 98 / Monday, May 23, 2005 / Notices
• What improvements do you
recommend for the Refuge?
The Service has provided the above
questions for optional use only.
Comments received will be used as part
of the planning process. Individual
comments will not be referenced in our
reports or directly responded to. The
Service will continue to solicit
information from the public and other
agencies via open houses, meetings, and
written comments. Special mailings,
newspaper releases, and
announcements will continue to inform
people of the time and place of
opportunities for further input to the
CCP.
Review of this project will be
conducted in accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1968, as amended (42 U.S.C 4321 et
seq.), NEPA Regulations (40 CFR parts
1500–1508) found at https://
www.legal.gsa.gov, other appropriate
Federal laws, and Service policies and
procedures for compliance with those
regulations.
The Service will prepare an
Environmental Assessment (EA) in
accordance with procedures for
implementing NEPA found in the
Department of the Interior Manual (DM
Part 516, Chap 6). The decision to
prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement instead of an EA is contingent
upon the complexity of issues following
the scoping phase of the CCP process.
We estimate that the draft
environmental documents will be
available in fall 2007 for public review
and comment.
Authority: This notice is published under
the authority of the National Wildlife Refuge
System Improvement Act of 1997, Public
Law 105–57.
Dated: May 9, 2005.
Geoffery L. Haskett,
Acting Regional Director, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
[FR Doc. 05–10291 Filed 5–20–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Receipt of an Application for an
Incidental Take Permit for the Key
Deer, Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit, and
Eastern Indigo Snake Resulting from
Limited Additional Development
Activities on Big Pine Key and No
Name Key, Monroe County, FL
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:20 May 20, 2005
Jkt 205001
SUMMARY: The Florida Department of
Transportation (FDOT), Monroe County,
Florida, and the Florida Department of
Community Affairs (DCA) (Applicants)
request an incidental take permit (ITP)
pursuant to section 10(a)(1)(B) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973 (U.S.C.
1531 et seq.), as amended (Act). The
Applicants anticipate taking no more
than 168 acres of occupied Key deer
(Odocoileus virginianus clavium),
breeding, foraging, and sheltering
habitat. This same area is potential
habitat for the eastern indigo snake
(Drymarchon corais couperi). Proposed
activities on this acreage may also
indirectly affect adjacent habitat
occupied by the Lower Keys marsh
rabbit (Sylvilagus palustris hefneri).
Take of these species would be
incidental to development activities on
Big Pine Key and No Name Key (Project
Area) in Monroe County, Florida.
The Applicants’ Habitat Conservation
Plan (HCP) describes the mitigation and
minimization measures proposed to
address the effects of the Project on the
affected species. These measures are
outlined in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below. The Service
announces the availability of the HCP
and the Environmental Assessment for
the incidental take application. Copies
of the HCP and Environmental
Assessment may be obtained by making
a request to the Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES). Requests must be in writing
to be processed. This notice is provided
pursuant to section 10 of the
Endangered Species Act and National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
regulations (40 CFR 1506.6).
DATES: Written comments on the ITP
application and HCP should be sent to
the Service’s Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES) and should be received on
or before July 22, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review
the application, HCP, and EA may
obtain copies by writing the Service’s
Southeast Regional Office, Atlanta,
Georgia. Documents will also be
available for public inspection by
appointment during normal business
hours at the Regional Office, 1875
Century Boulevard, Suite 200, Atlanta,
Georgia 30345 (Attn: Endangered
Species Permits), or Field Supervisor,
South Florida Ecological Services Field
Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
1339 20th Street, Vero Beach, Florida,
32960–3559. Written data or comments
concerning the application, supporting
documentation, EA, or HCP should be
submitted to the Regional Office.
Requests for the documentation must be
in writing to be processed. Comments
must be submitted in writing to be
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
adequately considered in the Service’s
decision-making process. Please
reference permit number TE083411–0 in
such comments, or in requests for the
documents discussed herein.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
David Dell, Regional HCP Coordinator,
(see ADDRESSES above), telephone: 404/
679–7313, facsimile: 404/679–7081; or
Mr. George Dennis, Fish and Wildlife
Ecologist, South Florida Ecological
Services Office, Vero Beach, Florida (see
ADDRESSES above), telephone: 772/562–
3909, ext. 309.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: If you
wish to comment, you may submit
comments by any one of several
methods. Please reference permit
number TE083411–0 in such comments.
You may mail comments to the
Service’s Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES). You may also comment via
the internet to ‘‘david_dell@fws.gov’’.
Please submit comments over the
internet as an ASCII file avoiding the
use of special characters and any form
of encryption. Please also include your
name and return address in your
internet message. If you do not receive
a confirmation from the Service that we
have received your internet message,
contact us directly at either of the
telephone numbers listed below (see
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Finally, you may hand deliver
comments to either of the Service offices
listed above (see ADDRESSES). Our
practice is to make comments, including
names and home addresses of
respondents, available for public review
during regular business hours.
Individual respondents may request that
we withhold their home address from
the administrative record. We will
honor such requests to the extent
allowable by law. There may also be
other circumstances in which we would
withhold from the administrative record
a respondent’s identity, as allowable by
law. If you wish us to withhold your
name and address, you must state this
prominently at the beginning of your
comments. We will not, however,
consider anonymous comments. We
will make all submissions from
organizations or businesses, and from
individuals identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses, available
for public inspection in their entirety.
The Florida Key deer is the smallest
race of North American white-tailed
deer. Key deer are found only in the
lower Florida Keys from Sugarloaf to
Big Pine Key. More than two-thirds of
the population is supported on Big Pine
Key and No Name Key. The Key deer
population was estimated to be 25 to 80
E:\FR\FM\23MYN1.SGM
23MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 98 / Monday, May 23, 2005 / Notices
animals in 1955. It was federally listed
as endangered in 1967 because of loss
of habitat due to residential and
commercial construction and high
human-related mortality. The current
Key deer population on Big Pine Key
and No Name Key is 453 to 517 animals.
Key deer utilize all local habitat types
including pine rocklands, hardwood
hammocks, buttonwood salt marshes,
mangrove wetlands, freshwater
wetlands, and disturbed and developed
areas. Pine rocklands are especially
important to Key deer conservation
because they hold year-round
freshwater.
The Lower Keys marsh rabbit is a
subspecies of the marsh rabbit and
occurs in many of the larger Lower
Keys, including Sugarloaf,
Saddlebunch, Boca Chica, and Big Pine
Keys, as well as in the small islands
near these keys. Lower Keys marsh
rabbits inhabit saltmarsh and
buttonwood transition areas, freshwater
wetlands, and coastal beach berms.
Suitable habitat for this species is highly
fragmented across all of the Lower Keys.
In the last few decades, development for
residential, commercial, or militaryrelated purposes has reduced the total
area of Lower Keys marsh rabbit habitat
in the Florida Keys. Habitat loss is the
main cause of the marsh rabbit’s
endangered status. Currently, the Lower
Keys marsh rabbit occurs in small,
relatively disjunct populations and has
a low population density because of
predation by domestic cats. Although
predation by domestic cats is the
principal cause of mortality, some road
mortality occurs as rabbits attempt to
move among increasingly isolated
Lower Keys marshes.
The eastern indigo snake is a large,
non-poisonous snake that grows to a
maximum length of eight feet.
Historically, the species ranged
throughout Florida, except in the
Marquesas and Dry Tortugas. The indigo
snake can occur in most types of
hammock in Florida, often near
wetlands. It is also known to occur in
mangrove swamps, seepage swamp,
flowing water swamp, pond swamp, wet
prairie, xeric pinelands and scrub,
flatwoods, dry glades, tropical
hardwood hammocks, beach dune/
coastal strand, pine rockland, and
muckland fields in southern Florida.
Gopher tortoise burrows, tree stumps,
piles of debris, land crab burrows, and
other subterranean cavities are
commonly used as dens and for egg
laying. The species has declined
throughout its range and has been
extirpated from some areas due to
habitat fragmentation, decline in the
gopher tortoise populations, and other
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:20 May 20, 2005
Jkt 205001
factors. Indigo snakes have not been
documented in the Project Area for
several years, despite the presence of
suitable habitat throughout Big Pine and
No Name Keys.
There has been a building moratorium
on Big Pine Key since 1995 due to direct
and indirect impacts to the Key deer.
The HCP describes a plan for limited
development activities that is intended
to satisfy safety, functional, and
recreational needs of the community,
while maintaining the long-term
viability of Key deer and its habitat.
Activities covered under this HCP
include residential and commercial
development, as well as transportation
improvements to meet the community
needs of the Project area. The proposed
activities will result in harm to Key
deer, incidental to the carrying out of
these otherwise lawful activities.
Habitat alteration associated with the
proposed development activities will
impact no more than 168 acres and
reduce the availability of breeding,
foraging, and sheltering habitat for Key
deer. The Applicants propose to
minimize take of Key deer by classifying
all lands within the Project area and
directing development activities to the
lowest quality habitat. The impacts to
Lower Keys rabbit and eastern indigo
snake will be minimized by buffering
occupied habitat from development and
implementation of standard
construction practices, respectively.
Impacts to Key deer will be mitigated by
acquiring lands for conservation within
the Project area at a ratio of three to one
based on habitat quality and area. These
same conservation lands will also
provide protection for the Lower Keys
rabbit and eastern indigo snake.
The Service has made a preliminary
determination that issuance of the ITP is
not a major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human
environment within the meaning of
section 102(2)(C) of NEPA. This
preliminary information may be revised
due to public comment received in
response to this notice and is based on
information contained in the EA and
HCP.
The Service will evaluate the HCP
and comments submitted thereon to
determine whether the application
meets the issuance criteria requirements
of section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Act. By
conducting an intra-Service section 7
consultation, the Service will also
evaluate whether issuance of the section
10(a)(1)(B) ITP would comply with
section 7 of the Act. The results of this
consultation, in combination with the
above findings, will be used in the final
analysis to determine whether or not to
issue the ITP for the Key deer, Lower
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
29533
Keys marsh rabbit, and eastern indigo
snake.
Dated: May 5, 2005.
Jacquelyn B. Parrish,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. 05–10205 Filed 5–20–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[AK–961–1410–HY–P; F–14838–A, F–14838–
A2; CAA–9]
Alaska Native Claims Selection
AGENCY:
Bureau of Land Management,
DOI.
Notice of decision approving
lands for conveyance.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: As required by 43 CFR
2650.7(d), notice is hereby given that an
appealable decision approving lands for
conveyance pursuant to the Alaska
Native Claims Settlement Act will be
issued to Bethel Native Corporation.
The lands are located within Townships
2, 3, and 4 N., Ranges 80 and 81 W.,
Seward Meridian, Alaska, in the vicinity
of Dall Lake, Alaska, and contain
86,453.75 acres. Notice of the decision
will also be published four times in The
Tundra Drums.
DATES: The time limits for filing an
appeal are:
1. Any party claiming a property
interest which is adversely affected by
the decision shall have until June 22,
2005 to file an appeal.
2. Parties receiving service of the
decision by certified mail shall have 30
days from the date of receipt to file an
appeal.
Parties who do not file an appeal in
accordance with the requirements of 43
CFR part 4, subpart E, shall be deemed
to have waived their rights.
ADDRESSES: A copy of the decision may
be obtained from: Bureau of Land
Management, Alaska State Office, 222
West Seventh Avenue, #13, Anchorage,
Alaska 99513–7599.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ron
Royer by phone at (907) 271–5677, or by
e-mail at Ron_Royer@ak.blm.gov.
Persons who use a telecommunication
device (TTD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–
800–877–8330, 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, to contact Mr. Royer.
Ronald E. Royer,
Land Law Examiner, Branch of Land Transfer
Services.
[FR Doc. 05–10258 Filed 5–20–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–$$–P
E:\FR\FM\23MYN1.SGM
23MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 98 (Monday, May 23, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29532-29533]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-10205]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Receipt of an Application for an Incidental Take Permit for the
Key Deer, Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit, and Eastern Indigo Snake Resulting
from Limited Additional Development Activities on Big Pine Key and No
Name Key, Monroe County, FL
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), Monroe
County, Florida, and the Florida Department of Community Affairs (DCA)
(Applicants) request an incidental take permit (ITP) pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (U.S.C. 1531
et seq.), as amended (Act). The Applicants anticipate taking no more
than 168 acres of occupied Key deer (Odocoileus virginianus clavium),
breeding, foraging, and sheltering habitat. This same area is potential
habitat for the eastern indigo snake (Drymarchon corais couperi).
Proposed activities on this acreage may also indirectly affect adjacent
habitat occupied by the Lower Keys marsh rabbit (Sylvilagus palustris
hefneri). Take of these species would be incidental to development
activities on Big Pine Key and No Name Key (Project Area) in Monroe
County, Florida.
The Applicants' Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) describes the
mitigation and minimization measures proposed to address the effects of
the Project on the affected species. These measures are outlined in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below. The Service announces the
availability of the HCP and the Environmental Assessment for the
incidental take application. Copies of the HCP and Environmental
Assessment may be obtained by making a request to the Regional Office
(see ADDRESSES). Requests must be in writing to be processed. This
notice is provided pursuant to section 10 of the Endangered Species Act
and National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) regulations (40 CFR
1506.6).
DATES: Written comments on the ITP application and HCP should be sent
to the Service's Regional Office (see ADDRESSES) and should be received
on or before July 22, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review the application, HCP, and EA may
obtain copies by writing the Service's Southeast Regional Office,
Atlanta, Georgia. Documents will also be available for public
inspection by appointment during normal business hours at the Regional
Office, 1875 Century Boulevard, Suite 200, Atlanta, Georgia 30345
(Attn: Endangered Species Permits), or Field Supervisor, South Florida
Ecological Services Field Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1339
20th Street, Vero Beach, Florida, 32960-3559. Written data or comments
concerning the application, supporting documentation, EA, or HCP should
be submitted to the Regional Office. Requests for the documentation
must be in writing to be processed. Comments must be submitted in
writing to be adequately considered in the Service's decision-making
process. Please reference permit number TE083411-0 in such comments, or
in requests for the documents discussed herein.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. David Dell, Regional HCP
Coordinator, (see ADDRESSES above), telephone: 404/679-7313, facsimile:
404/679-7081; or Mr. George Dennis, Fish and Wildlife Ecologist, South
Florida Ecological Services Office, Vero Beach, Florida (see ADDRESSES
above), telephone: 772/562-3909, ext. 309.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: If you wish to comment, you may submit
comments by any one of several methods. Please reference permit number
TE083411-0 in such comments. You may mail comments to the Service's
Regional Office (see ADDRESSES). You may also comment via the internet
to ``david_dell@fws.gov''. Please submit comments over the internet as
an ASCII file avoiding the use of special characters and any form of
encryption. Please also include your name and return address in your
internet message. If you do not receive a confirmation from the Service
that we have received your internet message, contact us directly at
either of the telephone numbers listed below (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT). Finally, you may hand deliver comments to either
of the Service offices listed above (see ADDRESSES). Our practice is to
make comments, including names and home addresses of respondents,
available for public review during regular business hours. Individual
respondents may request that we withhold their home address from the
administrative record. We will honor such requests to the extent
allowable by law. There may also be other circumstances in which we
would withhold from the administrative record a respondent's identity,
as allowable by law. If you wish us to withhold your name and address,
you must state this prominently at the beginning of your comments. We
will not, however, consider anonymous comments. We will make all
submissions from organizations or businesses, and from individuals
identifying themselves as representatives or officials of organizations
or businesses, available for public inspection in their entirety.
The Florida Key deer is the smallest race of North American white-
tailed deer. Key deer are found only in the lower Florida Keys from
Sugarloaf to Big Pine Key. More than two-thirds of the population is
supported on Big Pine Key and No Name Key. The Key deer population was
estimated to be 25 to 80
[[Page 29533]]
animals in 1955. It was federally listed as endangered in 1967 because
of loss of habitat due to residential and commercial construction and
high human-related mortality. The current Key deer population on Big
Pine Key and No Name Key is 453 to 517 animals. Key deer utilize all
local habitat types including pine rocklands, hardwood hammocks,
buttonwood salt marshes, mangrove wetlands, freshwater wetlands, and
disturbed and developed areas. Pine rocklands are especially important
to Key deer conservation because they hold year-round freshwater.
The Lower Keys marsh rabbit is a subspecies of the marsh rabbit and
occurs in many of the larger Lower Keys, including Sugarloaf,
Saddlebunch, Boca Chica, and Big Pine Keys, as well as in the small
islands near these keys. Lower Keys marsh rabbits inhabit saltmarsh and
buttonwood transition areas, freshwater wetlands, and coastal beach
berms. Suitable habitat for this species is highly fragmented across
all of the Lower Keys. In the last few decades, development for
residential, commercial, or military-related purposes has reduced the
total area of Lower Keys marsh rabbit habitat in the Florida Keys.
Habitat loss is the main cause of the marsh rabbit's endangered status.
Currently, the Lower Keys marsh rabbit occurs in small, relatively
disjunct populations and has a low population density because of
predation by domestic cats. Although predation by domestic cats is the
principal cause of mortality, some road mortality occurs as rabbits
attempt to move among increasingly isolated Lower Keys marshes.
The eastern indigo snake is a large, non-poisonous snake that grows
to a maximum length of eight feet. Historically, the species ranged
throughout Florida, except in the Marquesas and Dry Tortugas. The
indigo snake can occur in most types of hammock in Florida, often near
wetlands. It is also known to occur in mangrove swamps, seepage swamp,
flowing water swamp, pond swamp, wet prairie, xeric pinelands and
scrub, flatwoods, dry glades, tropical hardwood hammocks, beach dune/
coastal strand, pine rockland, and muckland fields in southern Florida.
Gopher tortoise burrows, tree stumps, piles of debris, land crab
burrows, and other subterranean cavities are commonly used as dens and
for egg laying. The species has declined throughout its range and has
been extirpated from some areas due to habitat fragmentation, decline
in the gopher tortoise populations, and other factors. Indigo snakes
have not been documented in the Project Area for several years, despite
the presence of suitable habitat throughout Big Pine and No Name Keys.
There has been a building moratorium on Big Pine Key since 1995 due
to direct and indirect impacts to the Key deer. The HCP describes a
plan for limited development activities that is intended to satisfy
safety, functional, and recreational needs of the community, while
maintaining the long-term viability of Key deer and its habitat.
Activities covered under this HCP include residential and commercial
development, as well as transportation improvements to meet the
community needs of the Project area. The proposed activities will
result in harm to Key deer, incidental to the carrying out of these
otherwise lawful activities. Habitat alteration associated with the
proposed development activities will impact no more than 168 acres and
reduce the availability of breeding, foraging, and sheltering habitat
for Key deer. The Applicants propose to minimize take of Key deer by
classifying all lands within the Project area and directing development
activities to the lowest quality habitat. The impacts to Lower Keys
rabbit and eastern indigo snake will be minimized by buffering occupied
habitat from development and implementation of standard construction
practices, respectively. Impacts to Key deer will be mitigated by
acquiring lands for conservation within the Project area at a ratio of
three to one based on habitat quality and area. These same conservation
lands will also provide protection for the Lower Keys rabbit and
eastern indigo snake.
The Service has made a preliminary determination that issuance of
the ITP is not a major Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment within the meaning of section
102(2)(C) of NEPA. This preliminary information may be revised due to
public comment received in response to this notice and is based on
information contained in the EA and HCP.
The Service will evaluate the HCP and comments submitted thereon to
determine whether the application meets the issuance criteria
requirements of section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Act. By conducting an intra-
Service section 7 consultation, the Service will also evaluate whether
issuance of the section 10(a)(1)(B) ITP would comply with section 7 of
the Act. The results of this consultation, in combination with the
above findings, will be used in the final analysis to determine whether
or not to issue the ITP for the Key deer, Lower Keys marsh rabbit, and
eastern indigo snake.
Dated: May 5, 2005.
Jacquelyn B. Parrish,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. 05-10205 Filed 5-20-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P