Draft Post-Delisting Monitoring Plan for Eggert's Sunflower (Helianthus eggertii, 48577-48579 [05-16275]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 159 / Thursday, August 18, 2005 / Notices
Estimated Cost: The cost to the
respondent is estimated to be a fee of
$200–$500 charged to the applicant by
the private sector professional
completing the Elevation or
Floodproofing Certificate. The annual
cost to 48,300 respondents × an average
cost of $350 is estimated to be
approximately $16,950,500 annually.
Comments: Written comments are
solicited to (a) evaluate whether the
proposed data collection is necessary for
the proper performance of the agency,
including whether the information shall
have practical utility; (b) evaluate the
accuracy of the agency’s estimate of the
burden of the proposed collection of
information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
(c) enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) minimize the burden
of the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including through
the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses. Comments should be
received within 60 days of the date of
this notice.
Interested persons should
submit written comments to George S.
Trotter, Acting Chief, Information
Resources Management Branch,
Information Technology Services
Division, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street, SW.,
Room 316, Washington, DC 20472.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Contact Jhun de la Cruz, Insurance
Examiner, Mitigation Division, (202)
646–2650 for additional information.
You may contact Ms. Anderson for
copies of the proposed collection of
information at telephone number (202)
646–2625 or facsimile number (202)
646–3347 or e-mail
muriel.anderson@dhs.gov.
Dated: August 11, 2005.
George S. Trotter,
Acting Branch Chief, Information Resources
Management Branch, Information
Technology Services Division.
[FR Doc. 05–16382 Filed 8–17–05; 8:45 am]
12:20 Aug 17, 2005
Fish and Wildlife Service
Draft Post-Delisting Monitoring Plan
for Eggert’s Sunflower (Helianthus
eggertii)
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (we) announces the availability
of the Draft Post-delisting Monitoring
Plan for Eggert’s Sunflower (Helianthus
eggertii) (PDM). We propose to monitor
the status of Eggert’s sunflower over a 5year period, from the date of final
delisting under the Endangered Species
Act (Act) in 2005 through 2010.
Monitoring will be through (1) annual
evaluation of information already
routinely being collected by 7 agencies
that have entered into long-term
management agreements with us
covering 27 populations of H. eggertii,
and (2) a total census of these
populations during the 2nd and 5th year
of the monitoring period. We solicit
review and comment on this Monitoring
Plan from local, State and Federal
agencies, and the public.
DATES: We will accept and consider all
public comments received on or before
September 19, 2005.
ADDRESSES: If you wish to comment on
this proposed PDM, you may submit
your comments by any one of several
methods:
1. You may submit written comments
and information to the Field Supervisor,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 446 Neal
Street, Cookeville, TN 38501.
2. You may hand-deliver written
comments to our Tennessee Field Office
at the above address or fax your
comments to 931/528–7075.
Comments and materials received, as
well as supporting documentation used
in preparation of this draft PDM, are
available for public inspection, by
appointment, during normal business
hours at the Tennessee Field Office at
the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Timothy Merritt at the above address
(telephone 931/528–6481, extension
211).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Solicited
We intend that the final PDM for
H. eggertii will be accurate and effective
in helping us assess whether removal of
the protections of the Act leads to a
deterioration of the status, and potential
need for emergency relisting, of
H. eggertii. Therefore, we solicit
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
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comments or suggestions from the
public, other concerned governmental
agencies, the scientific community,
industry, or any other interested parties
concerning this proposed PDM.
Comments may be submitted as
indicated under ADDRESSES. Our
practice is to make comments, including
names and home addresses of
respondents, available for public review
during regular business hours. A
respondent may request that we
withhold their home address from the
rulemaking record, which we will honor
to the extent allowable by law. There
also may be circumstances in which we
would withhold from the rulemaking
record a respondent’s identity, as
allowable by law. If you wish us to
withhold your name and/or address,
you must state this prominently at the
beginning of your comment. However,
we will not consider anonymous
comments. We will make all
submissions from organizations or
businesses available for public
inspection in their entirety.
In making a final decision on the
PDM, we will take into consideration
the comments and any additional
information we receive. Comments and
materials received, as well as supporting
information used to write the PDM, will
be available for public inspection, by
appointment, during normal business
hours at the address indicated in the
ADDRESSES section.
Background
The 1988 amendments to the Act
require us to implement a system, in
cooperation with the States, to monitor
all species that have been delisted, or
removed from the list of endangered and
threatened species listed under the Act,
due to recovery efforts for at least 5
years following delisting (section
4(g)(1)). The purpose of this PDM is to
verify that a species that is delisted, due
to recovery, remains secure from risk of
extinction after it no longer has the
protections of the Act. If the species
does not remain secure, we can use the
emergency listing authorities under
section 4(b)(7) of the Act. Section 4(g) of
the Act explicitly requires cooperation
with the States in development and
implementation of PDM programs.
However, we are responsible for
compliance with section 4(g) and must
remain actively engaged in all phases of
the PDM.
By a separate rulemaking being
published elsewhere in today’s issue of
the Federal Register, the Service is
delisting Eggert’s sunflower, a perennial
herb found in Alabama, Kentucky, and
Tennessee, due to recovery and new
information. The Service has drafted a
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48578
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 159 / Thursday, August 18, 2005 / Notices
PDM for Eggert’s sunflower and, by this
Notice of Availability, we are making it
available for review. Following the end
of the comment period, any comments
will be incorporated as appropriate into
the final PDM.
There are currently 7 populations of
Eggert’s sunflower in Alabama, 18
populations in Kentucky, and 48
populations in Tennessee, for a total of
73, that have more than 100 flower
stems. This encompasses a total of 287
currently known sites, far exceeding the
34 known at the time of the species’
listing, and we continue to find more
sites. As defined by the recovery plan
for this plant, only 20 populations are
required for this plant to be considered
for delisting.
The Federal, State, and private
conservation group landowners
involved in recovery activities for this
species (see the final delisting rule for
H. eggertii elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register) are already monitoring
the status of this species, either through
existing agreements or voluntarily.
Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KTC),
The Nature Conservancy (TNC), and
Mammoth Cave National Park (MCNP)
have signed management agreements
with us, covering 5 populations in
Kentucky, to protect this species and
monitor its status for a period of 7 years
for KTC and 10 years for TNC and
MCNP. We also have Cooperative
Management Agreements with the
Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency
(TWRA), A.G. Beaman Park (AGBP), and
Arnold Air Force Base (AAFB) covering
21 populations in Tennessee, bringing
the total number of populations
managed under long-term conservation
agreements to 27, considerably more
than the 20 populations required for
recovery in the H. eggertii recovery plan.
These landowners will protect these
populations and monitor their status for
a period of 10 years. We will seek active
participation of all the entities that
signed Cooperative Management
Agreements to assist us with the postdelisting responsibilities for H. eggertii.
Given the protection afforded by
landowners, the current range of this
sunflower, and the number of newly
discovered populations, we believe
what is needed for recovery of this plant
has been achieved and that the
landowners involved will continue to
assist us and likely extend their
management agreements to protect this
plant past 7 to 10 years.
Our Tennessee Field Office will
coordinate with AAFB, TWRA, AGBP,
MCNP, KTC, TNC, and State resource
agencies to implement an effective 5year monitoring program to track the
population status of H. eggertii. We will
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13:40 Aug 17, 2005
Jkt 205001
annually evaluate the effectiveness of
the Cooperative Management
Agreements in protecting H. eggertii
populations. To detect any changes in
the status of H. eggertii, we will use, to
the fullest extent possible, information
routinely collected by these agencies on
a yearly basis. In addition, we will
ensure that a total population census
that includes both flowering stems and
total stems will be conducted during the
second and fifth years of the monitoring
period for the 27 populations that are
protected on public lands. Based on the
recovery criteria of needing 20
geographically distinct, self-sustaining
populations that are secure and have
stable or increasing populations for 5
years, we believe that monitoring the 27
populations that occur on public lands
is sufficient to determine if threats have
been reduced or removed to a point at
which listing under the Act is no longer
required.
Monitoring for H. eggertii should
ideally be performed between August 15
and September 15, although the season
may begin as early as August 1 and end
as late as October 15 depending on
environmental conditions (e.g., amount
of rain during the growing season, etc.).
The following protocol will be used to
monitor the 27 populations that are
protected on public lands.
(1) Find the monitoring location using
a combination of directions and a GPS
unit.
(2) Evaluate the location for the
presence/absence of Eggert’s sunflower.
(3) Count to determine if there are
±100 flowering stems.
(4) Count the total stems.
(5) Search for evidence of any
recruitment or juvenile plants and note
the relative abundance.
(6) Take a GPS reading at the center
of each colony and estimate its width
and length.
(7) Draw the general shape of the
colony and other land features.
(8) Take digital pictures of the colony
from a single point such as one corner
looking across the colony.
(9) Perform a visual threats
assessment of each occurrence using the
five following criteria: Invasive pest
plants, habitat modification, succession
of woody species, disease, and
herbivory/insect damage. Assign ranks
for each threat on the following scale: 1
= no current threat, 2 = low current
threat, 3 = moderate threat, 4 = high
threat, 5 = extreme immediate threat. A
rank of ‘‘1’’ indicates that the particular
threat poses no impact at the time of
observation (e.g., there are no invasive
pest plants present in the area). A low
threat rank (2) would indicate that the
site may be impacted in the future, but
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is not presently (e.g., occasional stems
of an invasive pest plant are present). A
moderate threat rank (3) would indicate
that the threat is established at the
occurrence, but does not appear to be
negatively impacting the occurrence at
the time of observation. A high threat
rank (4) should be given when the threat
is established at the site and appears to
be negatively impacting the occurrence.
The extreme rank (5) would be given
when the threat is immediate and likely
to severely negatively impact the
occurrence within the present or next
year’s growing season.
(10) Make qualitative notes on the
general habitat conditions and any land
management. Describe the status of the
occurrence in general.
If we determine at the end of the 5year post-delisting monitoring period
that ‘‘recovered’’ status is still
appropriate and factors that led to the
listing of H. eggertii, or any new factors,
remain sufficiently reduced or
eliminated, monitoring may be reduced
or terminated. If data show that the
species is declining or if one or more
factors that have the potential to cause
a decline are identified, we will
continue monitoring beyond the 5-year
period and may modify the PDM based
on an evaluation of the results of the
initial PDM, or reinitiate listing if
necessary.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) regulations at 5 CFR 1320
implement provisions of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
The OMB regulations at 5 CFR 1320.3
(c) define a ‘‘collection of information’’
as the obtaining of information by or for
an agency by means of identical
questions posed to, or identical
reporting, recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements imposed on, 10 or more
persons. Furthermore, 5 CFR 1320.3
(c)(4) specifies that ‘‘10 or more
persons’’ refers to the persons to whom
a collection of information is addressed
by the agency within any 12-month
period. For purposes of this definition,
employees of the Federal Government
are not included. A Federal agency may
not conduct or sponsor and a person is
not required to respond to a collection
of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
The proposed PDM for Eggert’s
sunflower requests that cooperating
land owners/managers annually provide
the Service with population information
they routinely collect. These
information requirements do not,
however, require OMB approval under
the Paperwork Reduction Act, because
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 159 / Thursday, August 18, 2005 / Notices
there are fewer than 10 non-Federal
respondents.
Author
The primary author of this proposed
rule is Timothy Merritt (see ADDRESSES
section).
Authority
The authority for this action is the
Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.).
Dated: July 5, 2005.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. 05–16275 Filed 8–17–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Notice of Availability of the Recovery
Plan for the Endangered Catesbaea
melanocarpa
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of document availability.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We, the Fish and Wildlife
Service, announce the availability of the
final recovery plan for Catesbaea
melanocarpa (no common name). This
endangered plant species is a small
spiny shrub of the family Rubiacea. It is
extremely rare and is known from
Puerto Rico, St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin
Islands, Barbuda, Antigua, and
Guadeloupe. The recovery plan includes
specific recovery goal/objectives and
criteria to be met to delist Catesbaea
melanocarpa under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended.
ADDRESSES: Copies of this recovery plan
are available on the Internet at https://
endangered.fws.gov/recovery/
index.html#plans or by request from the
Caribbean Field Office, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 491,
´
Boqueron, Puerto Rico 00622 (telephone
787/851–7297).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marelisa Rivera at the above address
(telephone 787/851–7297, ext. 231).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Catesbaea melanocarpa belongs to a
genus that consists of ten or more
species of spiny shrubs. Catesbaea
melanocarpa is extremely rare and is
known from Puerto Rico, St. Croix in
the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI), Barbuda,
Antigua, and Guadeloupe. In the U.S.
Caribbean, it is known from only one
individual in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico,
and approximately 100 individuals in
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12:20 Aug 17, 2005
Jkt 205001
one location in St. Croix, USVI. Little
information is available regarding the
status of the species in Barbuda,
Antigua, and Guadalupe. The two
currently known locations in Puerto
Rico and the USVI are privately-owned,
and are subject to development pressure
for residential and tourism projects. The
risk of extinction is high because so few
individuals of Catesbaea melanocarpa
are known to occur in limited areas.
Additionally, the species is threatened
by catastrophic natural events, such as
hurricanes, as well as human induced
fires. Catesbaea melanocarpa was listed
as endangered under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (16
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) (Act) on March 17,
1999 (64 FR 13116).
Restoring an endangered or
threatened animal or plant to the point
where it is again a secure, selfsustaining member of its ecosystem is a
primary goal of our endangered species
program. To help guide the recovery
effort, we prepare recovery plans for
most listed species. Recovery plans
describe actions considered necessary
for conservation of the species, establish
criteria for downlisting or delisting
them, and estimate time and cost for
implementing recovery measures.
The Act requires the development of
recovery plans for listed species unless
such a plan would not promote the
conservation of a particular species.
Section 4(f) of the Act requires us to
provide public notice and an
opportunity for public review and
comment during recovery plan
development. A notice of availability of
the technical agency draft recovery plan
for Catesbaea melanocarpa was
published in the Federal Register on
September 27, 2004 (69 FR 57712). A
60-day comment period was opened
with the notice, closing on November
26, 2004. We received comments from
two interested parties and from two
experts on Catesbaea melanocarpa who
served as peer reviewers of the recovery
plan. On April 19, 2005, we published
in the Federal Register a notice of
reopening the comment period for the
agency draft recovery plan to solicit
comments on revised ‘‘Recovery Goal’’
and ‘‘Recovery Criteria’’ sections (70 FR
20396). A 30-day comment period was
opened with the notice, closing on May
19, 2005. We received comments from
two interested parties. Comments and
information submitted were considered
in the preparation of this final plan and,
where appropriate, incorporated.
Recovery Plan
The objective of this recovery plan is
to provide a framework for the recovery
of Catesbaea melanocarpa so that
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48579
protection under the Act is no longer
necessary. As recovery criteria are met,
the status of the species will be
reviewed, and it will be considered for
reclassification to threatened status or
for removal from the Federal List of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants (50 CFR part 17).
The information on the current
number of individuals throughout the
species’ range, and the knowledge of
biology, habitat requirements, and
genetic information is limited. However,
the Service has developed downlisting
and delisting criteria for Catesbaea
melanocarpa. These criteria are
intended to provide long-term
sustainability of the endangered
Catesbaea melanocarpa. Long term
sustainability requires adequate
reproduction for replacement of losses
due to natural mortality factors
(including disease and stochastic
events), sufficient genetic robustness to
avoid inbreeding depression and allow
adaptation, sufficient habitat for long
term population maintenance, and
elimination or control of threats.
Downlisting of the species from
endangered to threatened status will be
considered when: (1) The habitat known
to support the two extant populations
˜
(St. Croix and Penones de Melones) is
enhanced and protected through
landowner conservation agreements or
easements; (2) extant populations are
enhanced through the planting of
additional propagated individuals to
augment the number of adult
individuals to at least 250; (3) at least
one population within each of the
following previously occupied habitat is
´
found and/or established: Guanica
´
Commonwealth Forest (PR), Susua
Commonwealth Forest (PR), Barbuda,
Antigua, and Guadalupe; and (4)
research is conducted on key biological
and genetic issues, including effective
propagation techniques, and number of
individuals within a population and
number of populations needed for the
establishment of self-sustaining
populations and a viable overall
population.
Catesbaea melanocarpa will be
considered for delisting when: (1) A
number of viable populations (to be
determined following the appropriate
studies) are protected by long term
conservation strategies; (2) viable
populations (the number of which
should be determined following the
appropriate studies) are established in
previously unoccupied but suitable
habitat at Sandy Point National Wildlife
Refuge (USVI), Cabo Rojo National
Wildlife Refuge (PR), La Tinaja in Sierra
Bermeja (Laguna Cartagena National
Wildlife Refuge, PR), and any other
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 159 (Thursday, August 18, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48577-48579]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-16275]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Draft Post-Delisting Monitoring Plan for Eggert's Sunflower
(Helianthus eggertii)
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (we) announces the
availability of the Draft Post-delisting Monitoring Plan for Eggert's
Sunflower (Helianthus eggertii) (PDM). We propose to monitor the status
of Eggert's sunflower over a 5-year period, from the date of final
delisting under the Endangered Species Act (Act) in 2005 through 2010.
Monitoring will be through (1) annual evaluation of information already
routinely being collected by 7 agencies that have entered into long-
term management agreements with us covering 27 populations of H.
eggertii, and (2) a total census of these populations during the 2nd
and 5th year of the monitoring period. We solicit review and comment on
this Monitoring Plan from local, State and Federal agencies, and the
public.
DATES: We will accept and consider all public comments received on or
before September 19, 2005.
ADDRESSES: If you wish to comment on this proposed PDM, you may submit
your comments by any one of several methods:
1. You may submit written comments and information to the Field
Supervisor, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 446 Neal Street,
Cookeville, TN 38501.
2. You may hand-deliver written comments to our Tennessee Field
Office at the above address or fax your comments to 931/528-7075.
Comments and materials received, as well as supporting
documentation used in preparation of this draft PDM, are available for
public inspection, by appointment, during normal business hours at the
Tennessee Field Office at the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Timothy Merritt at the above address
(telephone 931/528-6481, extension 211).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Solicited
We intend that the final PDM for H. eggertii will be accurate and
effective in helping us assess whether removal of the protections of
the Act leads to a deterioration of the status, and potential need for
emergency relisting, of H. eggertii. Therefore, we solicit comments or
suggestions from the public, other concerned governmental agencies, the
scientific community, industry, or any other interested parties
concerning this proposed PDM.
Comments may be submitted as indicated under ADDRESSES. Our
practice is to make comments, including names and home addresses of
respondents, available for public review during regular business hours.
A respondent may request that we withhold their home address from the
rulemaking record, which we will honor to the extent allowable by law.
There also may be circumstances in which we would withhold from the
rulemaking record a respondent's identity, as allowable by law. If you
wish us to withhold your name and/or address, you must state this
prominently at the beginning of your comment. However, we will not
consider anonymous comments. We will make all submissions from
organizations or businesses available for public inspection in their
entirety.
In making a final decision on the PDM, we will take into
consideration the comments and any additional information we receive.
Comments and materials received, as well as supporting information used
to write the PDM, will be available for public inspection, by
appointment, during normal business hours at the address indicated in
the ADDRESSES section.
Background
The 1988 amendments to the Act require us to implement a system, in
cooperation with the States, to monitor all species that have been
delisted, or removed from the list of endangered and threatened species
listed under the Act, due to recovery efforts for at least 5 years
following delisting (section 4(g)(1)). The purpose of this PDM is to
verify that a species that is delisted, due to recovery, remains secure
from risk of extinction after it no longer has the protections of the
Act. If the species does not remain secure, we can use the emergency
listing authorities under section 4(b)(7) of the Act. Section 4(g) of
the Act explicitly requires cooperation with the States in development
and implementation of PDM programs. However, we are responsible for
compliance with section 4(g) and must remain actively engaged in all
phases of the PDM.
By a separate rulemaking being published elsewhere in today's issue
of the Federal Register, the Service is delisting Eggert's sunflower, a
perennial herb found in Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee, due to
recovery and new information. The Service has drafted a
[[Page 48578]]
PDM for Eggert's sunflower and, by this Notice of Availability, we are
making it available for review. Following the end of the comment
period, any comments will be incorporated as appropriate into the final
PDM.
There are currently 7 populations of Eggert's sunflower in Alabama,
18 populations in Kentucky, and 48 populations in Tennessee, for a
total of 73, that have more than 100 flower stems. This encompasses a
total of 287 currently known sites, far exceeding the 34 known at the
time of the species' listing, and we continue to find more sites. As
defined by the recovery plan for this plant, only 20 populations are
required for this plant to be considered for delisting.
The Federal, State, and private conservation group landowners
involved in recovery activities for this species (see the final
delisting rule for H. eggertii elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register) are already monitoring the status of this species, either
through existing agreements or voluntarily. Kentucky Transportation
Cabinet (KTC), The Nature Conservancy (TNC), and Mammoth Cave National
Park (MCNP) have signed management agreements with us, covering 5
populations in Kentucky, to protect this species and monitor its status
for a period of 7 years for KTC and 10 years for TNC and MCNP. We also
have Cooperative Management Agreements with the Tennessee Wildlife
Resources Agency (TWRA), A.G. Beaman Park (AGBP), and Arnold Air Force
Base (AAFB) covering 21 populations in Tennessee, bringing the total
number of populations managed under long-term conservation agreements
to 27, considerably more than the 20 populations required for recovery
in the H. eggertii recovery plan. These landowners will protect these
populations and monitor their status for a period of 10 years. We will
seek active participation of all the entities that signed Cooperative
Management Agreements to assist us with the post-delisting
responsibilities for H. eggertii.
Given the protection afforded by landowners, the current range of
this sunflower, and the number of newly discovered populations, we
believe what is needed for recovery of this plant has been achieved and
that the landowners involved will continue to assist us and likely
extend their management agreements to protect this plant past 7 to 10
years.
Our Tennessee Field Office will coordinate with AAFB, TWRA, AGBP,
MCNP, KTC, TNC, and State resource agencies to implement an effective
5-year monitoring program to track the population status of H.
eggertii. We will annually evaluate the effectiveness of the
Cooperative Management Agreements in protecting H. eggertii
populations. To detect any changes in the status of H. eggertii, we
will use, to the fullest extent possible, information routinely
collected by these agencies on a yearly basis. In addition, we will
ensure that a total population census that includes both flowering
stems and total stems will be conducted during the second and fifth
years of the monitoring period for the 27 populations that are
protected on public lands. Based on the recovery criteria of needing 20
geographically distinct, self-sustaining populations that are secure
and have stable or increasing populations for 5 years, we believe that
monitoring the 27 populations that occur on public lands is sufficient
to determine if threats have been reduced or removed to a point at
which listing under the Act is no longer required.
Monitoring for H. eggertii should ideally be performed between
August 15 and September 15, although the season may begin as early as
August 1 and end as late as October 15 depending on environmental
conditions (e.g., amount of rain during the growing season, etc.). The
following protocol will be used to monitor the 27 populations that are
protected on public lands.
(1) Find the monitoring location using a combination of directions
and a GPS unit.
(2) Evaluate the location for the presence/absence of Eggert's
sunflower.
(3) Count to determine if there are 100 flowering
stems.
(4) Count the total stems.
(5) Search for evidence of any recruitment or juvenile plants and
note the relative abundance.
(6) Take a GPS reading at the center of each colony and estimate
its width and length.
(7) Draw the general shape of the colony and other land features.
(8) Take digital pictures of the colony from a single point such as
one corner looking across the colony.
(9) Perform a visual threats assessment of each occurrence using
the five following criteria: Invasive pest plants, habitat
modification, succession of woody species, disease, and herbivory/
insect damage. Assign ranks for each threat on the following scale: 1 =
no current threat, 2 = low current threat, 3 = moderate threat, 4 =
high threat, 5 = extreme immediate threat. A rank of ``1'' indicates
that the particular threat poses no impact at the time of observation
(e.g., there are no invasive pest plants present in the area). A low
threat rank (2) would indicate that the site may be impacted in the
future, but is not presently (e.g., occasional stems of an invasive
pest plant are present). A moderate threat rank (3) would indicate that
the threat is established at the occurrence, but does not appear to be
negatively impacting the occurrence at the time of observation. A high
threat rank (4) should be given when the threat is established at the
site and appears to be negatively impacting the occurrence. The extreme
rank (5) would be given when the threat is immediate and likely to
severely negatively impact the occurrence within the present or next
year's growing season.
(10) Make qualitative notes on the general habitat conditions and
any land management. Describe the status of the occurrence in general.
If we determine at the end of the 5-year post-delisting monitoring
period that ``recovered'' status is still appropriate and factors that
led to the listing of H. eggertii, or any new factors, remain
sufficiently reduced or eliminated, monitoring may be reduced or
terminated. If data show that the species is declining or if one or
more factors that have the potential to cause a decline are identified,
we will continue monitoring beyond the 5-year period and may modify the
PDM based on an evaluation of the results of the initial PDM, or
reinitiate listing if necessary.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regulations at 5 CFR 1320
implement provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.). The OMB regulations at 5 CFR 1320.3 (c) define a ``collection of
information'' as the obtaining of information by or for an agency by
means of identical questions posed to, or identical reporting,
recordkeeping, or disclosure requirements imposed on, 10 or more
persons. Furthermore, 5 CFR 1320.3 (c)(4) specifies that ``10 or more
persons'' refers to the persons to whom a collection of information is
addressed by the agency within any 12-month period. For purposes of
this definition, employees of the Federal Government are not included.
A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor and a person is not
required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number. The proposed PDM for Eggert's
sunflower requests that cooperating land owners/managers annually
provide the Service with population information they routinely collect.
These information requirements do not, however, require OMB approval
under the Paperwork Reduction Act, because
[[Page 48579]]
there are fewer than 10 non-Federal respondents.
Author
The primary author of this proposed rule is Timothy Merritt (see
ADDRESSES section).
Authority
The authority for this action is the Endangered Species Act of
1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
Dated: July 5, 2005.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. 05-16275 Filed 8-17-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P