Draft Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances and Application for an Enhancement of Survival Permit for the Lesser Prairie-Chicken in Texas, 49469-49470 [E6-13961]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 23, 2006 / Notices
Dated: August 16, 2006.
R. Thomas Weimer,
Assistant Secretary—Policy, Management
and Budget.
[FR Doc. 06–7096 Filed 8–22–06; 8:45 am]
Drive, Suite 252, Arlington, Texas 76011
(817/277–1100), facsimile 817/277–
1129, or by e-mail at
Tom_Cloud@fws.gov; or Luela Roberts at
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Regional office, P.O. Box 1306, Room
4012, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103
(505/248–6654), facsimile 505/248–
6788, or by e-mail at
Luela_Roberts@fws.gov.
BILLING CODE 4310–RK–M
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability; receipt of
application; request for comment.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department (TPWD) (Applicant) has
applied to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (Service) for an enhancement of
survival permit pursuant to Section
10(a)(1)(A) of the Endangered Species
Act (Act) of 1973, as amended. The
permit application includes a draft 20year Candidate Conservation Agreement
with Assurances (CCAA) between the
Service and TPWD for the Lesser
Prairie-Chicken in 50 Texas counties.
We request public comment.
DATES: To ensure consideration, written
comments must be received on or before
October 23, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review
the application, draft CCAA, or other
related documents may obtain copies by
written or telephone request to the Field
Supervisor, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, 711 Stadium Drive, Suite 252,
Arlington, Texas 76011, or U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Southwest
Regional Office, P.O. Box 1306, Room
4012, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103
(Attn: Luela Roberts, Endangered
Species Permits). The application and
related documents will be available for
public inspection, by appointment only,
during normal business hours (8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.) at the Service’s Arlington
Office. Comments concerning the
application, draft CCAA, or other
related documents should be submitted
in writing to the Field Supervisor
(address above). Please refer to permit
number TE–132658–0 when submitting
comments. All comments received,
including names and addresses, will
become a part of the official
administrative record and may be made
available to the public.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom
Cloud at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service Arlington office, 711 Stadium
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:04 Aug 22, 2006
With the
assistance of the Service, TPWD
proposes to encourage the
implementation of conservation
measures on private lands to increase
lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus
pallidicinctus) (LPC) occupied habitat
and improve LPC population
performance. The proposed CCAA
would be in effect for 20 years in the
following Texas counties: Dallam,
Sherman, Hansford, Ochiltree,
Lipscomb, Hartley, Moore, Hutchinson,
Roberts, Hemphill, Oldham, Potter,
Carson, Gray, Wheeler, Deaf Smith,
Randall, Armstrong, Donley,
Collingsworth, Parmer, Castro, Swisher,
Briscoe, Hall, Childress, Bailey, Lamb,
Hale, Floyd, Motley, Cottle, Cochran,
Hockley, Lubbock, Crosby, Dickens,
King, Knox, Yoakum, Terry, Lynn,
Garza, Kent, Stonewall, Gaines, Dawson,
Borden, Scurry, and Andrews. These
counties constitute the Agreement’s
Planning Area, with Covered Areas
being private lands within this Planning
Area that provide suitable habitat for
LPC or have the potential to provide
suitable LPC habitat with the
implementation of conservation
management practices. We invite the
public to review and comment on the
permit application and the associated
draft CCAA.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Draft Candidate Conservation
Agreement With Assurances and
Application for an Enhancement of
Survival Permit for the Lesser PrairieChicken in Texas
Jkt 208001
Background
The LPC is a distinct species of North
American prairie grouse that inhabits
rangelands dominated primarily by
shinnery oak (Quercus havardii)bluestem and sand sagebrush
(Artemesia filifolia)-bluestem vegetation
types. From the early to mid 1940’s to
the early 1950’s, it is estimated that the
range of the LPC in Texas encompassed
portions of 34 counties. Researchers
considered the occupied range at the
mid 20th century to be a reduction from
the historical range (ca. 1900). In 1989,
TPWD produced an occupied range map
that indicated LPC inhabited portions of
12 counties. In 2005, TPWD reported
that LPC were found in portions of a
minimum of 16 counties. In 1995, the
Service was petitioned to list the LPC
under the Act. The Service ruled that
listing of the LPC was warranted, but
precluded because of limited funding
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
49469
and higher priority species litigations.
The LPC was designated as a candidate
for listing in 1997.
The major factors affecting the status
of the LPC are conversion, degradation,
and fragmentation of habitat. The
conversion of habitat from native sand
sagebrush and shinnery oak rangeland
to improved pastures and cropland has
been documented as an important factor
in the decline of the LPC. Although
many acres of former cropland
throughout its range have been enrolled
in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in
the northeastern and southwestern
Texas panhandle, LPC populations have
not exhibited a marked response to the
available vegetation types and structure
created by CRP. Many CRP acres have
been planted using monocultures of
introduced grasses, which do not meet
food, brood-rearing, or thermal habitat
requirements for the LPC. Mixtures of
heavily, moderately, and lightly grazed,
and ungrazed native rangelands are
essential components of LPC habitat,
and should occur in a mosaic pattern on
a landscape scale. However, in most
areas, an insufficient amount of lightly
grazed or ungrazed habitat is available
to support successful LPC nesting.
Overutilization of rangeland by
livestock, to a degree that leaves less
than adequate residual cover remaining
in the spring, is considered detrimental
to LPC populations because grass height
is reduced below that necessary for
nesting cover, and desirable food plants
are markedly reduced.
Since the petition to list the LPC
under the Act was filed in 1995, a
number of management and
conservation efforts have been
implemented by State, Federal, and
private entities throughout Texas.
TPWD has worked to implement
conservation measures through its
Private Lands and Habitat Program
(PLHP). The PLHP includes programs
and tools such as the development of
written Wildlife Management Plans
(WMP), the Technical Guidance
Program, Landowner Incentive Program,
Wildlife Management Tax Valuation
assistance, information on private land
trusts, and the Lone Star Land Steward
Award Program. The PLHP focuses on a
diverse array of programmatic
responsibilities for wildlife habitat
management and development,
technical assistance, incentive
programs, and conservation of private
lands. PLHP biologists and other TPWD
personnel provide technical assistance
to land managers and landowners upon
written request for assistance to develop
plans and recommendations for
voluntary conservation, enhancement,
E:\FR\FM\23AUN1.SGM
23AUN1
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
49470
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 23, 2006 / Notices
and/or development of wildlife habitat.
In particular, at the request of
landowners, TPWD prepares written
WMPs that incorporate
recommendations for specific areas and
address the conservation goals and
objectives of each landowner. In
conjunction with the development of
landowner-specific WMPs, TPWD
proposes to issue Certificates of
Inclusion (CI) that provide coverage to
individual landowners under the terms
of its section 10(a)(1)(A) permit, should
one be issued in the future. Each CI will
be issued with Service oversight, and
will be subject to revocation if the terms
of the WMP are not fulfilled. TPWD and
the Service feel that this process may
preclude or remove any need to list the
lesser prairie-chicken, if it is assumed
that conservation measures were also to
be implemented on other necessary
properties, by encouraging private
landowners to enroll in the WMP
program and undertake the conservation
practices prescribed in the CCAA. The
proposed CCAA represents a significant
milestone in the cooperative
conservation efforts for the LPC and is
consistent with section 2(a)(5) of the
Act, which encourages creative
partnerships among public, private, and
government entities to conserve
imperiled species and their habitats.
Consistent with the Service CCAA
policy, the proposed CCAA is intended
to facilitate conservation actions for the
LPC that will remove or reduce the
threats to the species. The CCAA is also
intended to provide TPWD and those
private landowners receiving CIs, under
the auspices of TPWD’s permit,
regulatory certainty related to normal
agricultural practices should the LPC
become federally listed as threatened or
endangered in the future.
The conservation measures in the
CCAA would be implemented by
individual non-Federal landowners,
under the auspices of a TPWD and
Service-approved WMP. These
measures will generally consist of
prescribed grazing, prescribed burning,
rangeland deferment, brush
management, CRP and cropland
management, range planting, other
upland wildlife habitat management
practices, and population management
techniques. TPWD has committed to
guide the implementation of these
conservation measures and requests
issuance of the permit in order to
address the take prohibitions of Section
9 of the Act should the species become
listed in the future.
We provide this notice under section
10(c) of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.)
and its implementing regulations (50
CFR 17.22), and the National
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:04 Aug 22, 2006
Jkt 208001
Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C
4371 et seq.) and its implementing
regulations (40 CFR part 1506.6).
Larry G. Bell,
Acting Regional Director, Region 2,
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
[FR Doc. E6–13961 Filed 8–22–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[CO–921–06–1320–EL; COC 70164]
Notice of Invitation for Coal
Exploration License Application,
Colorado
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Invitation for Coal
Exploration License Application, Ark
Land Company, COC 70164, Colorado.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to section 2(b) the
Mineral Leasing Act of February 25,
1920, as amended by Section 4 of the
Federal Coal Leasing Amendments Act
of 1976, 90 Stat. 1083, 30 U.S.C. 201(b),
and to Title 43, Code of Federal
Regulations, (CFR), Subpart 3410, all
interested qualified parties, as provided
in 43 CFR 3472.1 are hereby invited to
participate with Ark Land Company on
a pro rata cost sharing basis in a
program for the exploration of coal
deposits owned by the United States of
America in the following described
lands in Garfield County, Colorado.
T. 7 S., R. 101 W., 6th P.M.
Sec. 20, S1⁄2, and NE1⁄4;
Sec. 21, lot 2, SW1⁄4NW1⁄4, and W1⁄2SW1⁄4;
Sec. 28, W1⁄2W1⁄2;
Sec. 29, all;
Sec. 30, Tr. 44, lots 5 through 10, inclusive,
and E1⁄2NE1⁄4;
Sec. 31, lots 5 through 8, inclusive;
Sec. 32, lots 1 through 4, inclusive, NE1⁄4,
and N1⁄2NW1⁄4.
T. 7 S., 102 W., 6th P.M.
Sec. 23, lot 1, 4, E1⁄2 NW1⁄4 and E1⁄2SW1⁄4;
Sec. 24, lots 1 through 4, inclusive, W1⁄2,
and W1⁄2E1⁄2;
Sec. 25, lots 1 through 4, inclusive, W1⁄2,
and W1⁄2E1⁄2;
Sec. 26, all;
Sec. 35, all;
Sec. 36, lots 1 through 4, inclusive, W1⁄2,
and W1⁄2E1⁄2.
T. 8 S., R. 101 W., 6th P.M.
Sec. 3, lots 5 through 16, inclusive, and
S1⁄2;
Sec. 4, lots 5 through 16, inclusive, and
S1⁄2;
Sec. 5, lots 5 through 20, inclusive, and
S1⁄2;
Sec. 6, lots 8 through 27, inclusive, and
SE1⁄4;
Sec. 7, lots 5 through 8, inclusive, E1⁄2, and
E1⁄2W1⁄2;
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Sec. 8, all;
Sec. 9, all;
Sec. 10, all;
Sec. 15, N1⁄2N1⁄2;
Sec. 16, N1⁄2N1⁄2;
Sec. 17, N1⁄2N1⁄2;
Sec. 18, lot 5, N1⁄2NE1⁄4, and NE1⁄4NW1⁄4.
T. 8 S., R. 102 W., 6th P.M.
Sec. 1, lots 5 through 20, inclusive, and
N1⁄2S1⁄2.
The area described contains 13,178.47
acres.
Written Notice of Intent to
Participate in Exploration License COC
70164 should be addressed to the
attention of both parties whose
addresses are provided in the
ADDRESSES section below and must be
received by them within 30 days after
publication of this Notice of Invitation
in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Karen Zurek, CO–921, Solid
Minerals Staff, Division of Energy,
Lands and Minerals, Colorado State
Office, Bureau of Land Management,
2850 Youngfield Street, Lakewood,
Colorado 80215; and Michael Lincoln,
P.O. Box 460, Hanna, Wyoming 82327.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Karen Zurek at (303) 239–3795.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
application for coal exploration license
is available for public inspection during
normal business hours under serial
number COC 70164 at the Bureau of
Land Management, Colorado State
Office, 2850 Youngfield Street,
Lakewood, Colorado 80215, and at the
Grand Junction Field Office, 2815 H
Road, Grand Junction, Colorado 81506.
The proposed exploration program is
fully described and will be conducted
pursuant to an exploration plan to be
approved by the Bureau of Land
Management. The authority for this
notice is 43 CFR 3410.2–1(c)(1).
DATES:
Dated: July 19, 2006.
Karen Zurek,
Solid Minerals Staff, Division of Energy,
Lands and Minerals.
[FR Doc. E6–13928 Filed 8–22–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–JB–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[ID–400–1150–CB]
Notice of Public Meeting, Coeur
d’Alene District Resource Advisory
Council Meeting; Idaho
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Public Meeting.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
Federal Land Policy and Management
E:\FR\FM\23AUN1.SGM
23AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 163 (Wednesday, August 23, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 49469-49470]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-13961]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Draft Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances and
Application for an Enhancement of Survival Permit for the Lesser
Prairie-Chicken in Texas
AGENCY: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability; receipt of application; request for
comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) (Applicant) has
applied to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) for an
enhancement of survival permit pursuant to Section 10(a)(1)(A) of the
Endangered Species Act (Act) of 1973, as amended. The permit
application includes a draft 20-year Candidate Conservation Agreement
with Assurances (CCAA) between the Service and TPWD for the Lesser
Prairie-Chicken in 50 Texas counties. We request public comment.
DATES: To ensure consideration, written comments must be received on or
before October 23, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review the application, draft CCAA, or
other related documents may obtain copies by written or telephone
request to the Field Supervisor, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 711
Stadium Drive, Suite 252, Arlington, Texas 76011, or U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Southwest Regional Office, P.O. Box 1306, Room 4012,
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103 (Attn: Luela Roberts, Endangered Species
Permits). The application and related documents will be available for
public inspection, by appointment only, during normal business hours (8
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) at the Service's Arlington Office. Comments
concerning the application, draft CCAA, or other related documents
should be submitted in writing to the Field Supervisor (address above).
Please refer to permit number TE-132658-0 when submitting comments. All
comments received, including names and addresses, will become a part of
the official administrative record and may be made available to the
public.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom Cloud at the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service Arlington office, 711 Stadium Drive, Suite 252,
Arlington, Texas 76011 (817/277-1100), facsimile 817/277-1129, or by e-
mail at Tom--Cloud@fws.gov; or Luela Roberts at the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service Regional office, P.O. Box 1306, Room 4012,
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103 (505/248-6654), facsimile 505/248-6788,
or by e-mail at Luela--Roberts@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: With the assistance of the Service, TPWD
proposes to encourage the implementation of conservation measures on
private lands to increase lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus
pallidicinctus) (LPC) occupied habitat and improve LPC population
performance. The proposed CCAA would be in effect for 20 years in the
following Texas counties: Dallam, Sherman, Hansford, Ochiltree,
Lipscomb, Hartley, Moore, Hutchinson, Roberts, Hemphill, Oldham,
Potter, Carson, Gray, Wheeler, Deaf Smith, Randall, Armstrong, Donley,
Collingsworth, Parmer, Castro, Swisher, Briscoe, Hall, Childress,
Bailey, Lamb, Hale, Floyd, Motley, Cottle, Cochran, Hockley, Lubbock,
Crosby, Dickens, King, Knox, Yoakum, Terry, Lynn, Garza, Kent,
Stonewall, Gaines, Dawson, Borden, Scurry, and Andrews. These counties
constitute the Agreement's Planning Area, with Covered Areas being
private lands within this Planning Area that provide suitable habitat
for LPC or have the potential to provide suitable LPC habitat with the
implementation of conservation management practices. We invite the
public to review and comment on the permit application and the
associated draft CCAA.
Background
The LPC is a distinct species of North American prairie grouse that
inhabits rangelands dominated primarily by shinnery oak (Quercus
havardii)-bluestem and sand sagebrush (Artemesia filifolia)-bluestem
vegetation types. From the early to mid 1940's to the early 1950's, it
is estimated that the range of the LPC in Texas encompassed portions of
34 counties. Researchers considered the occupied range at the mid 20th
century to be a reduction from the historical range (ca. 1900). In
1989, TPWD produced an occupied range map that indicated LPC inhabited
portions of 12 counties. In 2005, TPWD reported that LPC were found in
portions of a minimum of 16 counties. In 1995, the Service was
petitioned to list the LPC under the Act. The Service ruled that
listing of the LPC was warranted, but precluded because of limited
funding and higher priority species litigations. The LPC was designated
as a candidate for listing in 1997.
The major factors affecting the status of the LPC are conversion,
degradation, and fragmentation of habitat. The conversion of habitat
from native sand sagebrush and shinnery oak rangeland to improved
pastures and cropland has been documented as an important factor in the
decline of the LPC. Although many acres of former cropland throughout
its range have been enrolled in the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in the northeastern and southwestern
Texas panhandle, LPC populations have not exhibited a marked response
to the available vegetation types and structure created by CRP. Many
CRP acres have been planted using monocultures of introduced grasses,
which do not meet food, brood-rearing, or thermal habitat requirements
for the LPC. Mixtures of heavily, moderately, and lightly grazed, and
ungrazed native rangelands are essential components of LPC habitat, and
should occur in a mosaic pattern on a landscape scale. However, in most
areas, an insufficient amount of lightly grazed or ungrazed habitat is
available to support successful LPC nesting. Overutilization of
rangeland by livestock, to a degree that leaves less than adequate
residual cover remaining in the spring, is considered detrimental to
LPC populations because grass height is reduced below that necessary
for nesting cover, and desirable food plants are markedly reduced.
Since the petition to list the LPC under the Act was filed in 1995,
a number of management and conservation efforts have been implemented
by State, Federal, and private entities throughout Texas. TPWD has
worked to implement conservation measures through its Private Lands and
Habitat Program (PLHP). The PLHP includes programs and tools such as
the development of written Wildlife Management Plans (WMP), the
Technical Guidance Program, Landowner Incentive Program, Wildlife
Management Tax Valuation assistance, information on private land
trusts, and the Lone Star Land Steward Award Program. The PLHP focuses
on a diverse array of programmatic responsibilities for wildlife
habitat management and development, technical assistance, incentive
programs, and conservation of private lands. PLHP biologists and other
TPWD personnel provide technical assistance to land managers and
landowners upon written request for assistance to develop plans and
recommendations for voluntary conservation, enhancement,
[[Page 49470]]
and/or development of wildlife habitat. In particular, at the request
of landowners, TPWD prepares written WMPs that incorporate
recommendations for specific areas and address the conservation goals
and objectives of each landowner. In conjunction with the development
of landowner-specific WMPs, TPWD proposes to issue Certificates of
Inclusion (CI) that provide coverage to individual landowners under the
terms of its section 10(a)(1)(A) permit, should one be issued in the
future. Each CI will be issued with Service oversight, and will be
subject to revocation if the terms of the WMP are not fulfilled. TPWD
and the Service feel that this process may preclude or remove any need
to list the lesser prairie-chicken, if it is assumed that conservation
measures were also to be implemented on other necessary properties, by
encouraging private landowners to enroll in the WMP program and
undertake the conservation practices prescribed in the CCAA. The
proposed CCAA represents a significant milestone in the cooperative
conservation efforts for the LPC and is consistent with section 2(a)(5)
of the Act, which encourages creative partnerships among public,
private, and government entities to conserve imperiled species and
their habitats. Consistent with the Service CCAA policy, the proposed
CCAA is intended to facilitate conservation actions for the LPC that
will remove or reduce the threats to the species. The CCAA is also
intended to provide TPWD and those private landowners receiving CIs,
under the auspices of TPWD's permit, regulatory certainty related to
normal agricultural practices should the LPC become federally listed as
threatened or endangered in the future.
The conservation measures in the CCAA would be implemented by
individual non-Federal landowners, under the auspices of a TPWD and
Service-approved WMP. These measures will generally consist of
prescribed grazing, prescribed burning, rangeland deferment, brush
management, CRP and cropland management, range planting, other upland
wildlife habitat management practices, and population management
techniques. TPWD has committed to guide the implementation of these
conservation measures and requests issuance of the permit in order to
address the take prohibitions of Section 9 of the Act should the
species become listed in the future.
We provide this notice under section 10(c) of the Act (16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.) and its implementing regulations (50 CFR 17.22), and the
National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C 4371 et seq.) and its
implementing regulations (40 CFR part 1506.6).
Larry G. Bell,
Acting Regional Director, Region 2, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
[FR Doc. E6-13961 Filed 8-22-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P