Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge, Orleans Parish, LA, 18742-18744 [E9-9411]
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mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
18742
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 78 / Friday, April 24, 2009 / Notices
visitor facilities and services in areas of
the National Park System. Concession
authorizations may be assigned, sold,
transferred, or encumbered by the
concessioner subject to prior written
approval of the NPS. The NPS requires
that certain information be submitted
for review prior to the consummation of
any sale, transfer, assignment, or
encumbrance.
The information requested is used to
determine whether or not the proposed
transaction will result in an adverse
impact on the protection, conservation,
or preservation of the resources of the
unit of the National Park System;
decreased services to the public; the
lack of a reasonable opportunity for
profit over the remaining term of the
authorization; or rates in excess of
approved rates to the public. In
addition, pursuant to the regulations at
36 CFR Part 51, the value of rights for
intangible assets such as the concession
contract, right of preference in renewal,
user days, or low fees, belongs to the
Government. If any portion of the
purchase price is attributable either
directly or indirectly to such assets, the
transaction may not be approved. The
amount and type of information to be
submitted varies with the type and
complexity of the proposed transaction.
Without such information, the NPS
would be unable to determine whether
approval of the proposed transaction
would be adequate.
Affected public: Businesses,
individuals, and nonprofit
organizations.
Obligation to respond: Required to
obtain or retain a benefit.
Frequency of response: On occasion.
Estimated total annual responses: 20.
Estimated average completion time
per response: 80 hours.
Estimated annual reporting burden:
1,600 hours.
Estimated annual nonhour cost
burden: $5,000.
Comments are invited on: (1) The
practical utility of the information being
gathered; (2) the accuracy of the burden
hour estimate; (3) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4)
ways to minimize the burden to
respondents, including use of
automated information collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology. Before including your
address, phone number, e-mail address,
or other personal identifying
information in your comment, you
should be aware that your entire
comment—including your personal
identifying information—may be made
publicly available at any time. While
you can ask us in your comment to
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:20 Apr 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that OMB will be able
to do so.
Dated: April 17, 2009.
Cartina Miller,
NPS Information Collection Clearance
Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–9413 Filed 4–23–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–53–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R4–R–2009–N0057; 40136–1265–
0000–S3]
Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife
Refuge, Orleans Parish, LA
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability: draft
comprehensive conservation plan and
environmental assessment; request for
comments.
SUMMARY: We, the Fish and Wildlife
Service (Service) announce the
availability of a draft comprehensive
conservation plan (Draft CCP/EA) for
Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge
(NWR) for public review and comment.
In this Draft CCP/EA, we describe the
alternative we propose to use to manage
this refuge for the 15 years following
approval of the Final CCP.
DATES: To ensure consideration, we
must receive your written comments by
May 26, 2009.
Send comments, questions,
and requests for information to: Mr. Pon
Dixson, Deputy Project Leader,
Southeast Louisiana National Wildlife
Refuge Complex, 61389 Highway 434,
Lacombe, LA 70445. A copy of the Draft
CCP/EA is available on both compact
disc and hard copy, and it may be
accessed and downloaded from the
Service’s Internet Site: https://
southeast.fws.gov/planning/.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Pon Dixson; telephone: 985/882–2014;
fax: 985/882–9133; e-mail:
pon_dixson@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
With this notice we continue the CCP
process for Bayou Sauvage NWR. We
started the process through a notice in
the Federal Register on May 16, 2008
(72 FR 27585).
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Background
The CCP Process
The National Wildlife Refuge System
Improvement Act of 1997 (16 U.S.C.
668dd–668ee) (Improvement Act),
which amended the National Wildlife
Refuge System Administration Act of
1966, requires us to develop a CCP for
each national wildlife refuge. The
purpose for developing a CCP is to
provide refuge managers with a 15-year
plan for achieving refuge purposes and
contributing toward the mission of the
National Wildlife Refuge System,
consistent with sound principles of fish
and wildlife management, conservation,
legal mandates, and our policies. In
addition to outlining broad management
direction on conserving wildlife and
their habitats, CCPs identify wildlifedependent recreational opportunities
available to the public, including
opportunities for hunting, fishing,
wildlife observation, wildlife
photography, and environmental
education and interpretation. We will
review and update the CCP at least
every 15 years in accordance with the
Improvement Act.
Bayou Sauvage NWR is in eastern
Orleans Parish, Louisiana, and is
entirely situated within the corporate
limits of the city of New Orleans. It is
the largest national wildlife refuge in an
urban area of the United States, and is
one of the last remaining marsh areas
adjacent to the south shores of Lakes
Pontchartrain and Borgne. The refuge
consists of 24,000 acres of wetlands and
is bordered on three sides by water:
Lake Pontchartrain on the north, Chef
Menteur Pass on the east, and Lake
Borgne on the south. The western side
of the refuge is bordered by the Maxent
Canal and lands that consist of
bottomland hardwood habitat and
exotic species, such as Chinese tallow
and china berry. Un-leveed portions of
the refuge consist of estuarine tidal
marshes and shallow water. The
Hurricane Protection Levee System,
along with roadbeds, created freshwater
impoundments, which altered the plant
communities as well as the fish
communities within these
impoundments. Small forested areas
exist on the low, natural ridges formed
along natural drainages and along
manmade canals.
CCP Alternatives, Including our
Proposed Alternative
We developed three alternatives for
managing the refuge and chose
Alternative B as the proposed
alternative. A full description is in the
Draft CCP/EA. We summarize each
alternative below.
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 78 / Friday, April 24, 2009 / Notices
Alternative A: Continuation of Current
Refuge Management (No Action)
This alternative represents no change
from current management of the refuge
and provides a baseline. Management
emphasis would continue to be directed
towards accomplishing the refuge’s
primary purposes. Refuge staff would
continue to restore and maintain
emergent marsh—both tidally
influenced and impounded, natural
levee ridges, bottomland hardwood
forests, spoil banks, and shallow open
water bodies, all of which constitute a
wide range of habitats within the refuge
boundaries.
Current refuge management would
continue to provide wintering and
nesting habitats for migratory and
resident waterfowl, wading birds, and
migrating songbirds. The operation and
management of the refuge would
provide for the basic needs of these
species, including feeding, resting, and
breeding. The planting of vegetation
used for food, nesting and cover, and
moist-soil management in eight different
water management units that cater to a
variety of different species would
continue to be priorities. At least two
aerial waterfowl surveys would
continue to be conducted.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Alternative B: Restoring and Improving
Refuge Resources (Proposed Alternative)
This action was selected by the
Service as the alternative that best
signifies the vision, goals, and purposes
of the refuge. Under Alternative B, the
emphasis would be on restoring and
improving refuge resources needed for
wildlife and habitat management, while
providing additional public use
opportunities. This alternative would
also allow the refuge to provide law
enforcement protection that adequately
meets the demands of an urban
environment.
This alternative would focus on
augmenting wildlife and habitat
management to identify, conserve, and
restore populations of native fish and
wildlife species, with an emphasis on
migratory birds and threatened and
endangered species. This would
partially be accomplished by increased
monitoring of waterfowl, other
migratory birds, and endemic species in
order to assess and adapt management
strategies and actions. The restoration of
fresh and brackish marsh systems and
hardwood forests would be a vital part
of this proposed action and would be
crucial to ensuring healthy and viable
ecological communities following
Hurricane Katrina. This restoration
would require increased wetland
vegetation and tree plantings, and the
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16:20 Apr 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
use of beneficial dredge, breakwater
structures, and organic materials to
promote reestablishment of emergent
marsh and to reduce wave energy
erosion along Lakes Pontchartrain and
Borgne. Improving and monitoring
water quality and active moist-soil
management would assist in
reestablishing freshwater marsh habitat.
The refuge would more aggressively
control and, where possible, eliminate
invasive plant species by seeking
funding through the Service’s invasive
species control program. The control of
Chinese tallow trees and cogon grass
along the hardwood ridge would be a
focal point. The control of nuisance
wildlife would increase to include
yearly population evaluations and more
aggressive trapping programs for feral
hogs and nutria.
Alternative B enhances the refuge’s
visitor services opportunities by:
Improving and providing additional
fishing opportunities; considering
providing limited hunting opportunities
on the refuge; providing environmental
education that emphasizes refuge
restoration activities, coastal
conservation issues, and the diversity of
water management regimes in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina;
establishing a visitor center or contact
station on the refuge; developing and
implementing a visitor services
management plan; and enhancing
personal interpretive opportunities.
Volunteer programs and friends groups
also would be expanded to enhance all
aspects of refuge management and to
increase resource availability.
Land acquisitions within the
approved acquisition boundary would
be based on importance of the habitats
for target management species and for
their public use value. The refuge
headquarters would not only house
administrative offices, but would offer
interpretation of refuge wildlife and
habitats, and would demonstrate habitat
improvements for individual
landowners. The headquarters facilities
would be developed as an urban public
use area with trails; buildings presently
not being used and landscaping would
be refurbished for visitor and
community outreach.
In addition to the enforcement of all
Federal and State laws applicable to the
refuge to protect archaeological and
historical sites, the staff would identify
and develop a cultural resources plan to
protect all known sites. The allocation
of one law enforcement officer to the
refuge would not only provide security
for these resources, but would also
ensure visitor safety and public
compliance with refuge regulations.
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18743
Alternative C: Optimize Public Use
Opportunities
Active management of refuge
resources would be employed to
optimize public use opportunities.
Resources would be dedicated to
increasing the public use activities of
fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife
photography, and environmental
education and interpretation, and a
limited hunting program would be
considered. All purposes of the refuge
and mandated monitoring of Federal
trust species and archaeological
resources would be continued, but other
wildlife management would be
dependent on public interests.
This alternative would utilize a
custodial habitat management strategy.
Moist-soil units would not be actively
managed and would be allowed to
revert back to brackish tidal marsh.
These units would also be maintained
near full pool level to facilitate public
use opportunities, such as fishing and
canoeing. Hardwood forest habitat in
high public use areas would be restored
and all other areas would recover
naturally with no management
intervention.
Increased wildlife observation,
wildlife photography, and interpretation
opportunities would result from the
construction of an on-site visitor’s
center, canoe and birding tours, kiosks,
and trail signs. Additionally, waterfowl
and wildlife monitoring would be
conducted periodically to identify high
use areas for the visiting public to
observe. Environmental education
would be expanded by addressing a
wide range of local and global
environmental concerns and would be
offered to a broader range of student
groups and schools. New information
brochures and tear sheets would be
published to increase public outreach
and to promote public use and
recreational opportunities.
Land acquisitions within the
approved acquisition boundary would
be based on the importance of the
habitat for public use. Administration
plans would stress the need for
increased maintenance of existing
infrastructure and construction of new
facilities that would benefit public use
activities. The refuge would operate
with the current level of staff. Law
enforcement of refuge regulations and
protection of wildlife and visitors would
continue at current levels.
Next Step
After the comment period ends, we
will analyze the comments and address
them.
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18744
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 78 / Friday, April 24, 2009 / Notices
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment, including your
personal identifying information, may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Authority: This notice is published under
the authority of the National Wildlife Refuge
System Improvement Act of 1997, Public
Law 105–57.
Dated: March 16, 2009.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E9–9411 Filed 4–23–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R4–R–2009–N0045; 40136–1265–
0000–S3]
Egmont Key National Wildlife Refuge,
Hillsborough County, FL; Pinellas
National Wildlife Refuge, Pinellas
County, FL; and Passage Key National
Wildlife Refuge, Manatee County, FL
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability: draft
comprehensive conservation plan and
environmental assessment; request for
comments.
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of a draft comprehensive
conservation plan and environmental
assessment (Draft CCP/EA) for Egmont
Key, Pinellas, and Passage Key National
Wildlife Refuges for public review and
comment. These three refuges, known as
the Tampa Bay Refuges, are managed as
part of the Chassahowitzka National
Wildlife Refuge (NWR) Complex. In this
Draft CCP/EA, we describe the
alternative we propose to use to manage
these refuges for the 15 years following
approval of the final CCP.
DATES: To ensure consideration, we
must receive your written comments by
May 26, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Requests for copies of the
Draft CCP/EA should be addressed to:
Mr. Richard J. Meyers, Assistant Refuge
Manager, Chassahowitzka NWR
Complex, 9500 Koger Boulevard North,
Suite 102, St. Petersburg, FL 33702. The
Draft CCP/EA may also be accessed and
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16:20 Apr 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
downloaded from the Service’s Internet
site: https://southeast.fws.gov/planning.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Richard J. Meyers, telephone: 727/570–
5417; e-mail: richard_meyers@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
With this notice, we continue the CCP
process for Egmont Key, Pinellas, and
Passage Key National Wildlife Refuges.
We started the process through a notice
in the Federal Register on December 3,
2004 (69 FR 70276).
Background
The National Wildlife Refuge System
Improvement Act of 1997 (16 U.S.C.
668dd–668ee) (Improvement Act),
which amended the National Wildlife
Refuge System Administration Act of
1966, requires us to develop a CCP for
each national wildlife refuge. The
purpose for developing a CCP is to
provide refuge managers with a 15-year
plan for achieving refuge purposes and
contributing toward the mission of the
National Wildlife Refuge System,
consistent with sound principles of fish
and wildlife management, conservation,
legal mandates, and our policies. In
addition to outlining broad management
direction on conserving wildlife and
their habitats, CCPs identify wildlifedependent recreational opportunities
available to the public, including
opportunities for hunting, fishing,
wildlife observation, wildlife
photography, and environmental
education and interpretation. We will
review and update the CCP at least
every 15 years in accordance with the
Improvement Act and the National
Environmental Policy Act.
Significant issues addressed in the
Draft CCP/EA include: erosion;
predatory/exotic/invasive species;
human disturbance of wildlife,
particularly with respect to illegal
access to closed areas; fishing line and
trash disposal; threatened and
endangered species; bird and other
wildlife surveys; environmental
education and interpretation issues; and
staffing, equipment, and facility needs.
Egmont Key National Wildlife Refuge
(NWR) includes 392 acres and was
established in 1974 to protect its
significant natural, historical, and
cultural resources from the impending
threats of development. Egmont Key
NWR is the only refuge island open to
the public and has been traditionally
visited for many years as a primary
recreation destination. Egmont Key
NWR seeks to provide nesting habitat
for brown pelicans and other
waterbirds, as well as to conserve and
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Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
protect barrier island habitat and to
preserve historical structures of national
significance (i.e., historic lighthouse,
guard house, gun batteries, and brick
roads). Presently, the island’s
approximately 244 acres of beach and
coastal berm support more than 110
species of nesting, migrating, and
wintering birds. The island is listed as
critical habitat for endangered piping
plovers and provides habitat and
protection for endangered manatees and
sea turtles. Egmont Key NWR has an
unusually high population of gopher
tortoises and box turtles. Two wildlife
sanctuaries, one on the east side of the
island and one at the south end of the
island, comprise about 97 acres and are
closed to public use. Cooperative
management agreements between the
Service, the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG),
and the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection entrust daily
management activities of Egmont Key
NWR to the Florida Park Service (FPS),
which manages the island to protect and
restore the historic structures and for
swimming, sunbathing, shelling, and
picnicking.
Pinellas National Wildlife Refuge
(NWR) was established in 1951 as a
breeding ground for colonial bird
species. It contains seven mangrove
islands encompassing about 394 acres.
The refuge is comprised of Little Bird,
Mule, Jackass, Listen, and Whale Island
Keys and leases Tarpon and Indian Keys
from Pinellas County. A Pinellas County
seagrass sanctuary is located around
Tarpon and Indian Keys and the use of
internal combustion engines within this
zone is prohibited to protect seagrass
beds. Hundreds of brown pelicans and
double-crested cormorants and dozens
of herons, egrets, and roseate spoonbills
nest within Tarpon and Little Bird Keys.
Pinellas NWR provides important
mangrove habitat for most long-legged
wading species, especially for reddish
egrets. All of the mangrove islands of
Pinellas NWR are closed to public use
year-round to protect migratory birds.
Passage Key National Wildlife Refuge
(NWR) was originally designated as a
Federal bird reservation by President
Roosevelt in 1905, which then consisted
of a 60-acre island with a freshwater
lake and lush vegetation. However,
erosion and hurricanes have virtually
destroyed the key, and it is now a
meandering sand bar varying in size
from 0.5 to 10 acres, depending on
weather. In 1970, Passage Key NWR was
designated a Wilderness Area. The
refuge’s objective is to provide habitat
for colonial waterbirds. Hundreds of
brown pelicans, laughing gulls, black
skimmer, and royal terns, and small
numbers of herons and egrets, nested
E:\FR\FM\24APN1.SGM
24APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 78 (Friday, April 24, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 18742-18744]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-9411]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R4-R-2009-N0057; 40136-1265-0000-S3]
Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge, Orleans Parish, LA
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability: draft comprehensive conservation plan
and environmental assessment; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) announce the
availability of a draft comprehensive conservation plan (Draft CCP/EA)
for Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) for public review and
comment. In this Draft CCP/EA, we describe the alternative we propose
to use to manage this refuge for the 15 years following approval of the
Final CCP.
DATES: To ensure consideration, we must receive your written comments
by May 26, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Send comments, questions, and requests for information to:
Mr. Pon Dixson, Deputy Project Leader, Southeast Louisiana National
Wildlife Refuge Complex, 61389 Highway 434, Lacombe, LA 70445. A copy
of the Draft CCP/EA is available on both compact disc and hard copy,
and it may be accessed and downloaded from the Service's Internet Site:
https://southeast.fws.gov/planning/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Pon Dixson; telephone: 985/882-
2014; fax: 985/882-9133; e-mail: pon_dixson@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
With this notice we continue the CCP process for Bayou Sauvage NWR.
We started the process through a notice in the Federal Register on May
16, 2008 (72 FR 27585).
Background
The CCP Process
The National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997 (16
U.S.C. 668dd-668ee) (Improvement Act), which amended the National
Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966, requires us to
develop a CCP for each national wildlife refuge. The purpose for
developing a CCP is to provide refuge managers with a 15-year plan for
achieving refuge purposes and contributing toward the mission of the
National Wildlife Refuge System, consistent with sound principles of
fish and wildlife management, conservation, legal mandates, and our
policies. In addition to outlining broad management direction on
conserving wildlife and their habitats, CCPs identify wildlife-
dependent recreational opportunities available to the public, including
opportunities for hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife
photography, and environmental education and interpretation. We will
review and update the CCP at least every 15 years in accordance with
the Improvement Act.
Bayou Sauvage NWR is in eastern Orleans Parish, Louisiana, and is
entirely situated within the corporate limits of the city of New
Orleans. It is the largest national wildlife refuge in an urban area of
the United States, and is one of the last remaining marsh areas
adjacent to the south shores of Lakes Pontchartrain and Borgne. The
refuge consists of 24,000 acres of wetlands and is bordered on three
sides by water: Lake Pontchartrain on the north, Chef Menteur Pass on
the east, and Lake Borgne on the south. The western side of the refuge
is bordered by the Maxent Canal and lands that consist of bottomland
hardwood habitat and exotic species, such as Chinese tallow and china
berry. Un-leveed portions of the refuge consist of estuarine tidal
marshes and shallow water. The Hurricane Protection Levee System, along
with roadbeds, created freshwater impoundments, which altered the plant
communities as well as the fish communities within these impoundments.
Small forested areas exist on the low, natural ridges formed along
natural drainages and along manmade canals.
CCP Alternatives, Including our Proposed Alternative
We developed three alternatives for managing the refuge and chose
Alternative B as the proposed alternative. A full description is in the
Draft CCP/EA. We summarize each alternative below.
[[Page 18743]]
Alternative A: Continuation of Current Refuge Management (No Action)
This alternative represents no change from current management of
the refuge and provides a baseline. Management emphasis would continue
to be directed towards accomplishing the refuge's primary purposes.
Refuge staff would continue to restore and maintain emergent marsh--
both tidally influenced and impounded, natural levee ridges, bottomland
hardwood forests, spoil banks, and shallow open water bodies, all of
which constitute a wide range of habitats within the refuge boundaries.
Current refuge management would continue to provide wintering and
nesting habitats for migratory and resident waterfowl, wading birds,
and migrating songbirds. The operation and management of the refuge
would provide for the basic needs of these species, including feeding,
resting, and breeding. The planting of vegetation used for food,
nesting and cover, and moist-soil management in eight different water
management units that cater to a variety of different species would
continue to be priorities. At least two aerial waterfowl surveys would
continue to be conducted.
Alternative B: Restoring and Improving Refuge Resources (Proposed
Alternative)
This action was selected by the Service as the alternative that
best signifies the vision, goals, and purposes of the refuge. Under
Alternative B, the emphasis would be on restoring and improving refuge
resources needed for wildlife and habitat management, while providing
additional public use opportunities. This alternative would also allow
the refuge to provide law enforcement protection that adequately meets
the demands of an urban environment.
This alternative would focus on augmenting wildlife and habitat
management to identify, conserve, and restore populations of native
fish and wildlife species, with an emphasis on migratory birds and
threatened and endangered species. This would partially be accomplished
by increased monitoring of waterfowl, other migratory birds, and
endemic species in order to assess and adapt management strategies and
actions. The restoration of fresh and brackish marsh systems and
hardwood forests would be a vital part of this proposed action and
would be crucial to ensuring healthy and viable ecological communities
following Hurricane Katrina. This restoration would require increased
wetland vegetation and tree plantings, and the use of beneficial
dredge, breakwater structures, and organic materials to promote
reestablishment of emergent marsh and to reduce wave energy erosion
along Lakes Pontchartrain and Borgne. Improving and monitoring water
quality and active moist-soil management would assist in reestablishing
freshwater marsh habitat.
The refuge would more aggressively control and, where possible,
eliminate invasive plant species by seeking funding through the
Service's invasive species control program. The control of Chinese
tallow trees and cogon grass along the hardwood ridge would be a focal
point. The control of nuisance wildlife would increase to include
yearly population evaluations and more aggressive trapping programs for
feral hogs and nutria.
Alternative B enhances the refuge's visitor services opportunities
by: Improving and providing additional fishing opportunities;
considering providing limited hunting opportunities on the refuge;
providing environmental education that emphasizes refuge restoration
activities, coastal conservation issues, and the diversity of water
management regimes in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina; establishing
a visitor center or contact station on the refuge; developing and
implementing a visitor services management plan; and enhancing personal
interpretive opportunities. Volunteer programs and friends groups also
would be expanded to enhance all aspects of refuge management and to
increase resource availability.
Land acquisitions within the approved acquisition boundary would be
based on importance of the habitats for target management species and
for their public use value. The refuge headquarters would not only
house administrative offices, but would offer interpretation of refuge
wildlife and habitats, and would demonstrate habitat improvements for
individual landowners. The headquarters facilities would be developed
as an urban public use area with trails; buildings presently not being
used and landscaping would be refurbished for visitor and community
outreach.
In addition to the enforcement of all Federal and State laws
applicable to the refuge to protect archaeological and historical
sites, the staff would identify and develop a cultural resources plan
to protect all known sites. The allocation of one law enforcement
officer to the refuge would not only provide security for these
resources, but would also ensure visitor safety and public compliance
with refuge regulations.
Alternative C: Optimize Public Use Opportunities
Active management of refuge resources would be employed to optimize
public use opportunities. Resources would be dedicated to increasing
the public use activities of fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife
photography, and environmental education and interpretation, and a
limited hunting program would be considered. All purposes of the refuge
and mandated monitoring of Federal trust species and archaeological
resources would be continued, but other wildlife management would be
dependent on public interests.
This alternative would utilize a custodial habitat management
strategy. Moist-soil units would not be actively managed and would be
allowed to revert back to brackish tidal marsh. These units would also
be maintained near full pool level to facilitate public use
opportunities, such as fishing and canoeing. Hardwood forest habitat in
high public use areas would be restored and all other areas would
recover naturally with no management intervention.
Increased wildlife observation, wildlife photography, and
interpretation opportunities would result from the construction of an
on-site visitor's center, canoe and birding tours, kiosks, and trail
signs. Additionally, waterfowl and wildlife monitoring would be
conducted periodically to identify high use areas for the visiting
public to observe. Environmental education would be expanded by
addressing a wide range of local and global environmental concerns and
would be offered to a broader range of student groups and schools. New
information brochures and tear sheets would be published to increase
public outreach and to promote public use and recreational
opportunities.
Land acquisitions within the approved acquisition boundary would be
based on the importance of the habitat for public use. Administration
plans would stress the need for increased maintenance of existing
infrastructure and construction of new facilities that would benefit
public use activities. The refuge would operate with the current level
of staff. Law enforcement of refuge regulations and protection of
wildlife and visitors would continue at current levels.
Next Step
After the comment period ends, we will analyze the comments and
address them.
[[Page 18744]]
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment, including your personal identifying
information, may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
Authority: This notice is published under the authority of the
National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, Public Law
105-57.
Dated: March 16, 2009.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E9-9411 Filed 4-23-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P