Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 90-Day Finding on a Petition To List the White-Sided Jackrabbit (Lepus callotis, 36152-36158 [E9-17449]
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36152
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 139 / Wednesday, July 22, 2009 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Parts 229, 234, 235, and 236
[Docket No. FRA–2008–0132, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130–AC03
Positive Train Control Systems
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SUMMARY: By notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) published on July
21, 2009 ([CITE]), FRA proposed
regulations implementing a requirement
of the Rail Safety Improvement Act of
2008 that certain passenger and freight
railroads install positive train control
systems. The proposal includes required
functionalities of the technology and the
means by which it would be certified.
The proposal also describes the contents
of the positive train control
implementation plans required by the
statute and contains the proposed
process for submission of those plans
for review and approval by FRA. These
proposed regulations could also be
voluntarily complied with by entities
not mandated to install positive train
control systems. This document
announces a public hearing being
conducted in connection with this
proceeding.
DATES: A public hearing will be held on
August 13, 2009, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
at the location listed below to provide
interested parties the opportunity to
comment on the proposals contained in
the NPRM.
ADDRESSES: (1) Public Hearing. A public
hearing to provide interested parties the
opportunity to comment on the
proposals contained in the NPRM will
be held at the Washington Plaza Hotel,
10 Thomas Circle, NW., Washington, DC
20005.
(2) Docket Clerk. Written notification
of a party’s intent to provide oral
testimony at the public hearing should
identify the docket number and should
be submitted to the FRA Docket Clerk,
Office of Chief Counsel, Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Ave., SE., RCC–10, Stop 10,
Washington, DC 20590 or fax to (202)
493–6068.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thomas McFarlin, Office of Safety
Assurance and Compliance, Staff
Director, Signal & Train Control
Division, Federal Railroad
Administration, Mail Stop 25, West
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Interested
parties are invited to present oral
statements and proffer information and
views at the hearing. The hearing will
be informal and will be conducted by a
representative designated by FRA in
accordance with FRA’s Rules of Practice
(49 CFR 211.25). The hearing will be
non-adversarial proceedings; therefore,
there will be no cross examination of
persons presenting statements or
proffering evidence. An FRA
representative will make an opening
statement outlining the scope of the
hearing. After all initial statements have
been completed, those persons wishing
to make a brief rebuttal will be given the
opportunity to do so in the same order
in which the initial statements were
made. Additional procedures, as
necessary for the conduct of the hearing,
will be announced at the hearing. The
purpose of the hearing is to receive oral
comments regarding the specific
provisions contained in the proposed
rule. A transcript of the discussions will
be made part of the public docket in this
proceeding.
Public Participation Procedures. Any
person wishing to participate in the
public hearing should notify the Docket
Clerk by mail or at the address or fax
number provided in the ADDRESSES
section at least five working days prior
to the date of the hearing and submit
three copies of the oral statement that he
or she intends to make at the
proceeding. The notification should
identify the party the person represents,
the particular subject(s) the person
plans to address, and the time
requested. The notification should also
provide the Docket Clerk with the
participant’s mailing address and other
contact information. FRA reserves the
right to limit participation in the
hearings of persons who fail to provide
such notification. FRA reserves the right
to limit the duration of presentations if
necessary to afford all persons with the
opportunity to speak.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of public hearing.
AGENCY:
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Building 3rd Floor West, Room W35–
332, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone: 202–
493–6203); or Jason Schlosberg, Trial
Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, RCC–
10, Mail Stop 10, West Building 3rd
Floor, Room W31–217, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590
(telephone: 202–493–6032).
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 17,
2009.
Jo Strang,
Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety/
Chief Safety Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–17391 Filed 7–21–09; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS–R2–ES–2009–0039; MO
922105 0082–B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; 90-Day Finding on a
Petition To List the White-Sided
Jackrabbit (Lepus callotis) as
Threatened or Endangered
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 90–day petition
finding and initiation of status and
critical habitat review.
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce a
90–day finding on a petition to list the
white-sided jackrabbit (Lepus callotis)
as an endangered species and designate
critical habitat under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended.
Following a review of the petition, we
find the petition provides substantial
scientific or commercial information
indicating that listing this species may
be warranted. Therefore, with the
publication of this notice, we are
initiating a status review to determine if
listing this species is warranted. To
ensure that the status review is
comprehensive, we are requesting the
public to submit scientific and
commercial data and other information
regarding the white-sided jackrabbit. We
will make a determination on critical
habitat if and when we initiate a listing
action for this species.
DATES: We made the finding announced
in this document on July 22, 2009. To
allow us adequate time to conduct this
review, we request that we receive
information on or before September 21,
2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit
information by one of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Search for docket
FWS-R2-ES-2009-0039 and then follow
the instructions for submitting
comments.
• U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public
Comments Processing, Attn: FWS-R2ES-2009-0039; Division of Policy and
Directives Management; U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive,
Suite 222; Arlington, VA 22203.
We will post all information we
receive on https://www.regulations.gov.
This generally means that we will post
any personal information you provide
us (see the Information Requested
section below for more details).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 139 / Wednesday, July 22, 2009 / Proposed Rules
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wally ‘‘J’’ Murphy, Field Supervisor,
New Mexico Ecological Services Office,
2105 Osuna NE, Albuquerque, NM
87113; by telephone (505-346-2525) or
by facsimile (505-346-2542). Persons
who use a telecommunications device
for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Information Requested
When we make a finding that a
petition presents substantial
information indicating that listing a
species may be warranted, we are
required to promptly commence a
review of the status of the species. To
ensure that the status review is
complete and based on the best
available scientific and commercial
information, we are soliciting
information on the status of the whitesided jackrabbit. We request information
from the public, other governmental
agencies, Native American Tribes, the
scientific community, industry, or any
other interested parties concerning the
status of the white-sided jackrabbit. We
are seeking information regarding:
(1) The historical and current status
and distribution of the white-sided
jackrabbit, its biology and ecology, and
ongoing conservation measures for the
species and its habitat in the United
States and Mexico; and
(2) Information relevant to the factors
that are the basis for making a listing
determination for a species under
section 4(a) of the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended (Act) (16
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), which are:
(a) The present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of the species’ habitat or
range;
(b) Overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes;
(c) Disease or predation;
(d) The inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms; or
(e) Other natural or manmade factors
affecting the species’ continued
existence and threats to it or its habitat.
If we determine that listing the whitesided jackrabbit is warranted, we intend
to propose critical habitat to the
maximum extent prudent and
determinable at the time we propose to
list the species. Therefore, with regard
to areas within the geographical range
currently occupied by the white-sided
jackrabbit, we also request data and
information on what may constitute
physical or biological features essential
to the conservation of the species, where
these features are currently found, and
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whether any of these features may
require special management
considerations or protection. In
addition, we request data and
information regarding whether there are
areas outside the geographical area
occupied by the white-sided jackrabbit
that are essential to the conservation of
the species. Please provide specific
comments and information as to what,
if any, critical habitat should be
proposed for designation if the species
is proposed for listing, and why that
proposed habitat meets the
requirements of the Act.
Please note that submissions merely
stating support for or opposition to the
action under consideration without
providing supporting information,
although noted, will not be considered
in making a determination, as section
4(b)(1)(A) of the Act directs that
determinations as to whether any
species is a threatened or endangered
species must be made ‘‘solely on the
basis of the best scientific and
commercial data available.’’ Based on
the status review, we will issue a 12–
month finding on the petition, as
provided in section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Act.
You may submit your information
concerning this status review by one of
the methods listed in the ADDRESSES
section.
If you submit information via https://
www.regulations.gov, your entire
submission—including any personal
identifying information—will be posted
on the website. If your submission is
made via a hardcopy that includes
personal identifying information, you
may request at the top of your document
that we withhold this information from
public review. However, we cannot
guarantee that we will be able to do so.
We will post all hardcopy submissions
on https://www.regulations.gov. Please
include sufficient information with your
comments to allow us to verify any
scientific or commercial information
you include.
Information and materials we receive,
as well as supporting documentation we
used in preparing this finding, will be
available for public inspection on https://
www.regulations.gov, or by
appointment, during normal business
hours, at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, New Mexico Ecological
Services Office (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT).
Background
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act requires
that we make a finding on whether a
petition to list, delist, or reclassify a
species presents substantial scientific or
commercial information indicating that
the petitioned action may be warranted.
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We are to base this finding on
information provided in the petition,
supporting information submitted with
the petition, and information otherwise
available in our files. To the maximum
extent practicable, we are to make this
finding within 90 days of our receipt of
the petition and publish our notice of
this finding promptly in the Federal
Register.
Our standard for substantial scientific
or commercial information within the
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) with
regard to a 90–day petition finding is
‘‘that amount of information that would
lead a reasonable person to believe that
the measure proposed in the petition
may be warranted’’ (50 CFR 424.14(b)).
If we find that substantial scientific or
commercial information was presented,
we are required to promptly commence
a review of the status of the species.
On October 15, 2008, we received a
petition dated October 9, 2008, from the
WildEarth Guardians requesting that the
white-sided jackrabbit (Lepus callotis)
(jackrabbit) be listed as threatened or
endangered under the Act. The
petitioner requested that we evaluate
three potentially listable entities of the
jackrabbit: (1) the northern population
of the subspecies L. callotis gaillardia as
a distinct population segment (DPS); (2)
the full species L. callotis throughout its
range; and (3) each of the subspecies of
the jackrabbit, which they identified as
L. callotis gaillardia and L. callotis
callotis. Additionally, the petition
requested that critical habitat be
designated concurrent with listing of L.
callotis, its subspecies, and the northern
DPS. The petition clearly identified
itself as such and included the requisite
identification information for the
petitioner, as required by 50 CFR
424.14(a). In a November 26, 2008, letter
to the petitioner, we responded that we
had reviewed the petition and
determined that an emergency listing
was not necessary. In that letter, we
advised the petitioner that, to the
maximum extent practicable, we would
address the petition within 90 days.
During our review of the petition, we
found that the majority of information
cited in the petition was not readily
available to us. Therefore, on January
13, 2009, we requested that the
petitioner provide references. On
February 13, 2009, the petitioner
provided references. We received a 60–
day notice of intent to sue from the
petitioner dated January 28, 2009, and
on April 15, 2009, the petitioner brought
a lawsuit against us for failure to make
a decision on the Petition within 90
days of its receipt.
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 139 / Wednesday, July 22, 2009 / Proposed Rules
Previous Federal Actions
The white-sided jackrabbit was first
listed as a candidate (Category 2) for
Federal listing as either a threatened or
endangered species under the Act, in
the 1982 Candidate Notice of Review
(47 FR 58454, December 30, 1982).
Category 2 status included those taxa for
which information in the Service’s
possession indicated that a proposed
listing rule was possibly appropriate,
but for which sufficient data on
biological vulnerability and threats were
not available to support a proposed rule.
In the Candidate Notice of Review
published on February 28, 1996, we
announced a revised list of animal and
plant taxa that were regarded as
candidates for possible addition to the
Lists of Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife and Plants (61 FR 7595). The
revised candidate list included only
former Category 1 species. All former
Category 2 species were dropped from
the list to reduce confusion about the
conservation status of these species, and
to clarify that the Service no longer
regarded these species as candidates for
listing. Because the white-sided
jackrabbit was a Category 2 species, it
was no longer recognized as a candidate
species.
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Species Information
The white-sided jackrabbit is one of
four species of hares (Family Leporidae)
occurring in New Mexico, including the
black-tailed jackrabbit (Lepus
californicus), which co-occurs with the
white-sided jackrabbit (Findley et al.
1975). The white-sided jackrabbit can be
distinguished from the black-tailed
jackrabbit by its extensive white sides
and inconspicuous or absent black ear
tips (Findley et al. 1975, pp. 92, 96; Best
and Henry 1993, p. 1).
One of the primary issues presented
by the petitioner is related to the
taxonomy of the jackrabbit. The
petitioner presents information that
morphological and genetic data have
caused some to question the uniqueness
of the subspecies Lepus callotis callotis
and the subspecies L. callotis gaillardi
(e.g., InfoNatura 2008). They request
that we consider each recognized
subspecies for listing, if we find them to
be taxonomically valid. Under section
3(16) of the Act, we may consider for
listing any species or subspecies of fish,
wildlife, or plants, or any distinct
population segment of vertebrate fish or
wildlife which interbreeds when
mature. Thus, in our 12–month finding,
should we determine that the species as
a whole does not warrant listing, we
will evaluate whether any valid
subspecies warrants listing. If we
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conclude that the subspecies L. callotis
gaillardia is valid, but does not warrant
listing, we will consider whether the
northern populations of the subspecies
is a valid DPS under our policy (61 FR
4722, February 7, 1996) and, if so,
whether it warrants listing. If we
conclude that the subspecies L. callotis
gaillardia is not valid, we will consider
whether the northern populations of the
full species is a valid DPS and, if so,
whether it warrants listing.
The core distribution of the whitesided jackrabbit lies within Mexico
(New Mexico Department of Game and
Fish (NMDGF) 2006, p. 114). The
species historically occurred from
southern New Mexico to northern
Oaxaca, Mexico, within two distinct
geographic areas (Best and Henry 1993,
p. 2). One area was located in the
southern Animas and Playas valleys of
Hidalgo County, south to west-central
Chihuahua and north-central Durango,
Mexico (Bednarz and Cook 1984, p. 358;
Reynolds 1988, p. 1). The other area was
from central Durango south across the
open plains of the Mexican Plateau to
the State of Oaxaca, Mexico (Hall 1981,
p. 330). The geographic separation of
the two areas occurs on either side of
the Rio Nazas, Durango, Mexico; that
river marks the dividing line for many
subspecies of mammals (Peterson 1976,
pp. 496-498). The jackrabbit’s range in
New Mexico was restricted to about 121
square kilometers (47 square miles)
(Bednarz 1977, p. 6; Bednarz and Cook
1984, p. 359). We are unaware of any
similar estimate for Mexico. There is no
recent information on the amount of
habitat occupied by the jackrabbit in
either country. Moreover, the whitesided jackrabbit has not been confirmed
as extant in Arizona (Cahalane 1939, p.
436), although in 1954, Hoffmeister and
Goodpaster reportedly observed what
they believed to be white-sided
jackrabbits along the west base of the
Huachuca Mountains, Cochise County,
Arizona (Hoffmeister 1986). Therefore,
New Mexico is the only confirmed place
in the United States where the species
has been documented to occur.
This species is highly elusive. It
inhabits predominately well-developed
open grasslands that have low shrub
density and level terrain, avoiding hills
or mountains (Bednarz and Cook 1984,
p. 359; Cook 1986, p. 15; Desmond
2004, p. 416). It was reported only a few
times after the species was discovered
in 1892 along the International Border
between the United States and Mexico
(Mearns 1895). For example, two
animals were collected in the Playas
Valley in 1931 and one animal was
collected in the Animas Valley in 1974
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(Anderson and Gaunt 1962; Bogan and
Jones 1975, p. 47; Bednarz 1977, p. 1).
The petitioner provides information
indicating that white-sided jackrabbit
populations are declining (Bednarz and
Cook 1984, p. 360; Mehlhop 1995, pp.
3-10; Traphagen 2002, pp. 4-5). The
information in our files is consistent
with the population numbers reported
in the petition. We judge the
information regarding a possible decline
in jackrabbit numbers to be substantial
and reliable. In 1976, the white-sided
jackrabbit was found in New Mexico
only in the Animas Valley on the
Diamond A Ranch (the Diamond A
Ranch includes the lands formerly
called Gray Ranch in southwestern New
Mexico) and in limited parts of the
southern Playas Valley east of the
Diamond A Ranch in southern Hidalgo
County (Bednarz 1977, pp. 4-5). During
investigations conducted between May
and August 1976, Bednarz (1977)
speculated that the number of whitesided jackrabbits in the Animas Valley
was between 250 to 300 individuals.
Five years later, surveys in New Mexico
revealed that white-sided jackrabbit
sightings had decreased to
approximately half of the mean reported
by Bednarz (Bednarz and Cook 1984,
pp. 359-360). The jackrabbit may now
be extirpated from the Playas Valley; no
observations of the species have been
made in this area during recent surveys
(Traphagen 2002, p. 5; Frey 2004, p. 22;
NMDGF 2006, p. 115). Surveys in
Chihuahua, Mexico, also reported low
densities of white-sided jackrabbits
(Desmond 2004, p. 417). We are
unaware of any additional information
on population abundance, or any yearround or long-term monitoring data on
the white-sided jackrabbit in either the
United States or Mexico (see also
NMDGF 1997, p. 3). As such, the status
of this species remains unclear in both
countries.
In the white-sided jackrabbit, females
are generally larger than males (Bednarz
1977, pp. 13, 15). In New Mexico,
white-sided jackrabbits are observed
almost unvaryingly in pairs (Bednarz
1977, p. 9), suggesting that mated
animals remain together on a long-term
basis. Pair bonds may serve to ensure
adequate reproduction, in the context of
generally low population density
(Bednarz 1977, p. 12). The members of
the pair are usually near each other and
run together when approached by
intruders (Bednarz 1977). Several litters
are probably produced each year, with
litter size appearing to average 2.2
young (Bednarz 1977). The young tend
to have a soft, woolly coat in early life
and attain sexual maturity at a rapid
rate.
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In the United States portion of its
range, the white-sided jackrabbit
appears to be found only in association
with grasslands (Bednarz 1977, p. 6).
Plants commonly found in areas
inhabited by this species in the Animas
and Playa valleys of New Mexico
include Bouteloua gracilis (blue grama),
B. eriopoda (black grama), Hilaria
mutica (tobosa), Buchloe dactyloides
(buffalo grass), Lycurus phleoides
(wolftail), Muhlenbergia torreyi (ring
muhly), Cyperus spp. (flatsedges),
Gutierrezia sarothrae (snakeweed),
Yucca elata (soaptree yucca), and
Prosopis glandulosa (honey mesquite)
(Bednarz and Cook 1984, pp. 358-359;
Mehlhop 1995, p. 15; Moore-Craig 1992,
p. 4). More than 97 percent of all
observations of this species have been in
pure grasslands and less than 3 percent
in grasslands with varying amounts of
forbs (flowering herbs) and shrubs
(Bednarz and Cook, 1984). In New
Mexico, white-sided jackrabbits feed
primarily on B. gracilis, B.dactyloides,
B. eripoda, L. phleoides, and M. torreyi
(Bednarz 1977, pp. 14, 16).
Although the white-sided jackrabbit
shares its range with the black-tailed
jackrabbit, the two generally occupy
different habitats, with white-sided
jackrabbit found in areas of pure
grassland and the black-tailed generally
found in areas dominated by shrubs
(Bednarz 1977, p. 17; Bednarz and Cook
1984, p. 359-360; Desmond 2004, p.
417).
The white-sided jackrabbit constructs
and uses forms (scrapes or depressions
in the ground). Forms provide
jackrabbits with concealment and
protection. The form is usually located
in clumps of grass and surrounded by
dense stands of Hilaria mutica (Bednarz
1977, p. 16). Daytime observations of
white-sided jackrabbits are uncommon,
as the species is primarily nocturnal
(Bednarz 1977, pp. 6-11; Best and Henry
1993, p. 5). Although many species of
jackrabbit and hare are considered pests
because they may damage crops, fields,
and orchards, the white-sided jackrabbit
is not known to depredate crops.
Five-Factor Evaluation
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533),
and its implementing regulations in the
Code of federal Regulations (CFR) at 50
CFR 424, set forth the procedures for
adding species to the Federal Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants. A species may be
determined to be an endangered or
threatened species due to one or more
of the five factors described in section
4(a)(1) of the Act: (A) The present or
threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range; (B)
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overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes; (C) disease or predation; (D)
the inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms; or (E) other natural or
manmade factors affecting its continued
existence.
In making this 90–day finding, we
evaluated whether information on
threats to the white-sided jackrabbit, as
presented in the petition and other
information available in our files, is
substantial, thereby indicating that the
petitioned action may be warranted. Our
evaluation of this information is
presented below.
A. The Present or Threatened
Destruction, Modification, or
Curtailment of the Species’ Habitat or
Range
The petition asserts that current and
historic grazing practices and
suppression of wildfire threaten the
jackrabbit because they have led to
shrub encroachment into grasslands.
The petitioner correctly asserts that the
jackrabbit is found only in association
with well-developed, high-elevation
(greater than 1,460 meters (4,800 feet))
Chihuahuan desert grasslands,
characterized by flat topography and
few shrubs and forbs (Bednarz 1977).
Moreover, the petitioner claims that
declines in grassland health, indicated
by increases in shrub and forb cover,
cause populations of white-sided
jackrabbit to decrease while populations
of black-tailed jackrabbit increase. The
petitioner states that this change in
grassland vegetation is especially
apparent in the Playas Valley, Hidalgo
County, where the white-sided
jackrabbit may have been recently
extirpated (Traphagen 2002, pp. 5, 11;
NMDGF 2006, p. 4). The petitioner
indicates that little is known about the
specific habitat associations of the
white-sided jackrabbit in Mexico, but it
appears to also inhabit high-elevation
grassland similar to that used by the
species in New Mexico.
The NMDGF’s 2006 biennial review of
State threatened and endangered species
identifies the loss and degradation of
grassland habitat through drought,
shrub encroachment, and changes in
grass composition as the primary threat
to the white-sided jackrabbit in New
Mexico (NMDGF 2006, p. 115).
Numerous sources substantiate that past
range-management practices have
contributed to the degradation of desert
grasslands or their conversion to
shrublands (National Museum of
Natural History 2008, p. 1; Bednarz and
Cook 1984, p. 360; Desmond 2004, p.
417; NatureServe 2008, p. 2; USDA
Forest Service 2007, p. 15; Service 2008,
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36155
p. 53). Bednarz and Cook (1984, p. 360)
postulated that numbers of white-sided
jackrabbit had decreased in New Mexico
as the density and vigor of grasses
declined, while black-tailed jackrabbits
and desert cottontail (Sylvilagus
audubonii) numbers increased in
response to an increase in woody
shrubs. Desmond (2004, p. 417) reported
a similar pattern from Chihuahua,
Mexico, where she found that increased
shrub encroachment into grasslands
negatively affected populations of
white-sided jackrabbits (Desmond 2004,
p. 417). It is likely that the increase in
shrub cover has occurred through a
combination of fire suppression
policies, drought, and intense livestock
grazing during the late 1800s and early
1900s, which were the key causes of the
replacement of grasslands by shrublands
(Malpai Borderlands Habitat
Conservation Plan Technical Working
Group 2008, p. 18; Traphagen 2002, p.
12).
Citing Brown (1994), the petition
asserts that the primary cause of loss
and degradation of grasslands in the
Chihuahuan Desert is overgrazing by
cattle. Overgrazed grassland is
susceptible to invasion by shrubs and
forbs, a cover type which greatly favors
the black-tailed jackrabbit (Baker 1977,
pp. 222-223; Bednarz and Cook 1984,
pp. 359-360; Desmond 2004, p. 417;
Moore-Craig 1992, p. 13; NMDGF 2006,
p. 115). Areas where white-sided
jackrabbits historically or currently
occur have been continuously grazed for
over a century (Traphagen 2002). We
will explore overgrazing more
thoroughly in our 12–month finding for
the jackrabbit.
The petitioner claims that wildfire
suppression is a cause of grassland
degradation. We have information in
our files to substantiate that fire
exclusion has led to encroachment of
shrubs into the grassland habitat of the
white-sided jackrabbit. For example,
Humphrey (1958, p. 245) believed fires
were the controlling factor that kept
shrubs from invading the desert
grasslands in southeastern Arizona and
southwestern New Mexico. The Bureau
of Land management (BLM) came to a
similar conclusion for the region of
southwestern New Mexico where the
white-sided jackrabbit historically
occurred (BLM 2009, pp. 1-3).
Alternatively, Valone et al. (2002, p.
563) reported that two fires in 5 years
did not result in high levels of mortality
to woody shrubs such as Prosopis
glandulosa (mesquite) on the Diamond
A Ranch, Hidalgo County, which is
within the range of the jackrabbit. Based
on this information, we find that the
petition and other readily available
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information in our files support the
claim that fire exclusion may have led
to the degradation of grasslands
inhabited by the jackrabbit.
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Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
We have evaluated the petition and
readily available information in our files
and find substantial information
indicating that listing the species
throughout its range may be warranted
due to the present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of the habitat or range of the
white-sided jackrabbit. We find that
substantial information was presented
that shrub encroachment into grassland
fostered by current and historic grazing
practices, drought, and fire exclusion
may threaten the species.
B. Overutilization for Commercial,
Recreational, Scientific, or Educational
Purposes
The petitioner identifies hunting of
the white-sided jackrabbit for sport and
food as an ongoing threat to the species.
The petition reports that the species has
been commercially hunted in Mexico
and is considered a non-game species
that is hunted in New Mexico, and thus
is not protected by State game laws.
Matson and Baker (1986, p. 41)
indicated that the species was heavily
hunted and considered highly edible.
Reynolds (1988) also reported that
white-sided jackrabbits were commonly
hunted in some of the grasslands of
Mexico. The species was historically
hunted for commercial markets in
Mexico (Leopold 1959, p. 349). Thus,
hunting may have played a role in the
decline of the white-sided jackrabbit in
Mexico (Moore-Craig, 1992, p. 13).
While all of the citations in the petition
that document that the species was
hunted in Mexico are over 20 years old,
we do not have information indicating
that hunting of the jackrabbit in Mexico
has ceased. However, information in our
files indicates that the species is not
currently hunted in New Mexico. The
white-sided jackrabbit is currently
protected under the New Mexico
Wildlife Conservation Act and may not
be hunted (NMDGF 2008, p. 10). The
petitioner does not detail ongoing or
future impacts to the species from
hunting in the United States.
The petition claims that the whitesided jackrabbit is currently subject to
animal damage control programs, and
cites the NMDGF in saying that some
white-sided jackrabbits are known to
have been killed by gunners and
trappers. The NMDGF (1985, p. 2) stated
that some white-sided jackrabbits have
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been lost to ‘‘gunners and trappers,’’ but
provided no further information. This
may be referring to Federal or State
animal damage control agents. We have
information in our files that the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA)
reported that jackrabbits (Lepus spp.)
have been taken in New Mexico as part
of their animal damage control program
(USDA APHIS 1994, Appendix H, pp.
18-19). The petitioner does not describe
current or future plans for lethal control
of any white-sided jackrabbits or
quantify the amount that may have
taken place historically through either
the USDA or the general public.
Therefore, neither information in our
files nor the literature cited by the
petition supports the petitioner’s claim
that the white-sided jackrabbit is
currently subject to animal damage
control programs by methods such as
trapping or shooting, or is likely to be
in the future.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
The petition provides substantial
information that hunting of the whitesided jackrabbit has been, and may
continue to be, a threat to its
populations in Mexico. Therefore, we
find that the petition presents
substantial information indicating that
the petitioned action may be warranted
due to overutilization.
C. Disease or Predation
The petitioner cites Bednarz (1977) in
indicating that a lung infection has been
observed in white-sided jackrabbits, but
no serious diseases were noticed.
Moore-Craig (1992, p. 11) noted that the
infections found by Bednarz (1977) were
all of a minor nature, and the overall
health of the jackrabbit population
appeared to be fair to good. Tularemia,
a common disease among black-tailed
jackrabbits, has not been found in the
white-sided jackrabbit (Moore-Craig
1992, p. 11). The petition also notes that
a wide variety of predators exists in the
southern Animas Valley, New Mexico. It
is likely that predation occurs on whitesided jackrabbits, since native predators
occur within the range of both
subspecies. However, the petitioner
provided no data to support predation
as an impact to populations of the
jackrabbit.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
We have no information in our files
indicating that the petitioned action
may be warranted due to disease or
predation. Therefore, we find that the
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petition does not provide substantial
information that listing the white-sided
jackrabbit due to disease or predation
may be warranted.
D. The Inadequacy of Existing
Regulatory Mechanisms
The petitioner asserts that existing
regulatory mechanisms do not provide
any protections for the species and have
been ineffective in mitigating many of
the threats. The petitioner states that the
species’ ranking in NatureServe is G3
(vulnerable) and its National and State
Status rankings are N1S1 (critically
imperiled). Its status under the
International Union for Conservation of
Nature and Natural Resources is near
threatened. We reviewed these
designations and find the petitioner’s
claims to be accurate. However, these
lists are not regulatory mechanisms;
they serve only to notify the public of
the species’ status; no conservation or
management actions are required; no
regulatory authority for species
conservation is established through
these listings.
The petitioner states that the Malpai
Borderlands Habitat Conservation Plan
(MBHCP) does not reliably assure
protection to the jackrabbit on private
lands in New Mexico. The apparent
basis of this position is that the Service
willingly issued an incidental take
permit on private lands to the Malpai
Borderlands Group for the MBHCP. The
petitioner also contends, based upon
observed degradation of grassland
habitat and declines in the jackrabbit
population, that the Malpai Borderlands
Group is not fulfilling its stated mission
to restore and maintain natural
processes that support diverse and
flourishing animal life in the
borderlands region, which includes the
Diamond A Ranch in southern Hidalgo
County, and is within the range of the
white-sided jackrabbit in the United
States. The petition does not provide
information that documents the extent,
magnitude, or immediacy of the
perceived inadequacies of the MBHCP
or how they threaten the white-sided
jackrabbit in New Mexico.
The white-sided jackrabbit was listed
as threatened by the State of New
Mexico on January 24, 1975. This
designation provides the protection of
the New Mexico Wildlife Conservation
Act, which prohibits direct take of the
species except under issuance of a
scientific collecting permit. However,
this only conveys protection from
collection or intentional harm.
Although the State of New Mexico
statutes require the NMDGF to develop
a recovery plan that will restore and
maintain habitat for the species, the
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species does not have a finalized
recovery plan, conservation plan, or
conservation agreement (NMDGF 2006a,
p. 430). As such, existing State of New
Mexico regulatory mechanisms are
currently inadequate to protect the
jackrabbit. As discussed above under
Factor A, we find that the petition
presents substantial evidence of threats
to the species from grassland
degradation, and we thus find that the
petition presents substantial evidence
that the inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms to prevent
further grassland degradation or to
recover grasslands may threaten the
white-sided jackrabbit as well.
The white-sided jackrabbit is on the
Regional Forester’s Sensitive Species
List for the Coronado National Forest
(USDA Forest Service 2007, p. 15).
However, we found no information in
our files to substantiate that the
jackrabbit is present on any public lands
in New Mexico. Moreover, the petition
asserts that the jackrabbit is only found
on private lands in New Mexico. If the
species is found on National Forest
System lands, the US Forest Service
(USFS) is required to analyze the
impacts any proposed actions may have
on the jackrabbit in all applicable
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.)
documents. On April 21, 2008, a new
USFS planning rule (73 FR 21468) was
made final. The USFS’s new planning
rule indicated that once a USFS land
and resource management plan has been
revised, the sensitive species
designation will no longer be needed
because species of concern (listed,
proposed, or candidate species under
the Act) or species of interest will
replace them. Since the occurrence of
the jackrabbit on the Coronado National
Forest is uncertain, the petition and
information in our files do not contain
substantial information that the
jackrabbit is faced with current and
future threats on Forest Service lands.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
Neither the petition nor our files
provide information about existing
regulatory mechanisms for the species
in Mexico, which contains the majority
of the current range of the white-sided
jackrabbit. As such, we have no
information that the lack of regulatory
mechanisms in Mexico is affecting the
continued existence of the white-sided
jackrabbit. We intend to assess this
factor more thoroughly during our status
review of the species.
As noted above, the jackrabbit
receives no protection from the
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NatureServe or International Union for
Conservation of Nature and Natural
Resources designations, as these lists
serve only to notify the public of the
species’ status rather than requiring any
conservation or management actions;
these listings do not impact either
adequacy or inadequacy of regulatory
mechanisms, since they are not
regulatory in nature.
The petitioner does provide
substantial information that the whitesided jackrabbit’s status as a State-listed
threatened species in New Mexico
confers little regulatory protection
(except against direct take). Therefore,
we find that the petition presents
substantial information that the
petitioned action may be warranted due
to the inadequacy of existing
mechanisms in the United States.
E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors
Affecting the Species’ Continued
Existence
The petition cites non-point source
habitat change as a threat to the
jackrabbit, suggesting that no single
factor (e.g., grazing, fire suppression,
shifting rainfall patterns, or increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels) has
led to the encroachment of shrubs into
the grasslands. We find the information
cited to be generic in nature and not
specific to the white-sided jackrabbit or
its habitat beyond the discussion under
Factor A above.
The petitioner states that climate
change and drought threaten the whitesided jackrabbit under Factor E. The
petitioner cites a variety of sources in
the body of the petition to support the
claim regarding climate change and
drought and their relation to the
persistence of the jackrabbit, but did not
provide any of these to us. Much of this
information is not readily available to
us. There is uncertainty over how
climate change will affect the jackrabbit
and its habitat. The petition claims that
climate change will likely cause a
deterioration of grassland habitat in
New Mexico and the Chihuahuan Desert
region. Further, the petitioner asserts
that information indicates that the
impact of drought and climate change
have been implicated as influencing
shrub encroachment into grasslands.
Information readily available to us
supports the petitioner’s assertion that
climate change might contribute to more
frequent and intense drought within the
U.S. and northern Mexico portion of the
range of the jackrabbit (Seager et al.
2007, pp. 1181-1182). We will review
the possible effects of climate change on
the white-sided jackrabbit more
thoroughly in our status review.
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36157
The petitioner reports a case of a New
Mexico rancher finding several dead
white-sided jackrabbits while
eradicating mustard plants. Bednarz
(1977) suggests that this mortality may
have been caused by the jackrabbits’
consumption of mustard plants and
ensuing nitrate poisoning. Consumption
of mustard plants is known to cause
nitrate poisoning in cattle, and Bednarz
(1977, p. 18) cites it as likely having the
same effect on jackrabbits. No other
information or support was provided by
the petition, nor is there any
information readily available to us that
provides substantial information that
food poisoning threatens the jackrabbit
now or in the foreseeable future. The
potential for jackrabbit mortality due to
food poisoning merits further
investigation during our status review of
the species.
The petition asserts that road-killed
white-sided jackrabbits have been found
in the past. Nevertheless, the petition
does not claim this is a threat to the
species. Moore-Craig (1992, p. 16) found
that occasionally white-sided
jackrabbits are killed by vehicles.
Traphagen (2009, p. 1) also noted that
white-sided jackrabbits have been
reported road-killed recently, likely
from an increased presence of Border
Patrol vehicles in New Mexico. Bednarz
(1977, p. 18) reported that, even though
fieldworkers were constantly looking for
road-killed white-sided jackrabbits
during a study, the species was rarely
observed on the roads and tended to
avoid approaching vehicles. The
NMDGF (1997, p. 4) found that impacts
from this type of mortality are
unknown, but probably do not represent
a significant threat to the species. Based
on this review, the petition and
information readily available to us do
not provide any substantial information
to support that vehicle collisions
represent a threat to the white-sided
jackrabbit currently or in the foreseeable
future.
The petition notes that Smith (1999,
p. 1) observed a white-sided jackrabbit’s
behavior in response to an approaching
wildfire, but does not claim this is a
threat to the species. The petitioner does
not present specific information that the
wildfire Smith (1999) observed resulted
in losses of the white-sided jackrabbit.
We acknowledge that the active fire
management program in the Malpai
Borderlands area may affect the whitesided jackrabbit. Effects during fire
management may include mortality or
injury of individuals as a result of direct
exposure to fire, smoke inhalation, and
crushing by the tires or tracks of
vehicles used in fire management
activities (Service 2008, pp. 64-65). We
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believe that the jackrabbit is capable of
surviving such fire effects by running
away (Service 2008, p. 64). We find
prescribed burns may also expose
white-sided jackrabbits to higher rates of
predation, but also allow for easier
detection of terrestrial predators
(Service 2008, p. 65). The effects of a
prescribed burn would likely be shortterm, because the fire-adapted grassland
community usually responds quickly,
with plant species showing regrowth
within several days post-fire.
Nevertheless, a reduction of shrubs
would benefit the white-sided jackrabbit
by improving grassland habitat.
Although the MBHCP will likely result
in short-term adverse effects to the
jackrabbit, the long-term effects will
improve the grassland community used
by white-sided jackrabbits by reducing
the shrub component, providing
additional suitable habitat, and
improving the area around occupied
habitat for potential expansion; thus,
implementation of the MBHCP,
including the fire management program,
should promote the conservation of the
white-sided jackrabbit. For these
reasons, we found no data or substantial
information to indicate that wildfires or
prescribed burns threaten white-sided
jackrabbits or their habitat.
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Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
We reviewed the petition, supporting
information, and the information readily
available to the Service and find the
petition does not present any additional
substantial information that any natural
or manmade factors other than those
discussed above for Factors A, B, and D
may affect the white-sided jackrabbit’s
continued existence.
Finding
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act)
(16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), requires that we
make a finding on whether a petition to
list, delist, or reclassify a species
presents substantial scientific or
commercial information indicating that
the petitioned action may be warranted.
We are to base this finding on
information provided in the petition,
supporting information submitted with
the petition, and information otherwise
available in our files. To the maximum
extent practicable, we are to make this
finding within 90 days of our receipt of
the petition and publish our notice of
the finding promptly in the Federal
Register.
Our process for making this 90–day
finding under section 4(b)(3)(A) of the
Act is limited to a determination of
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whether the information in the petition
presents ‘‘substantial scientific and
commercial information,’’ which is
interpreted in our regulations as ‘‘that
amount of information that would lead
a reasonable person to believe that the
measure proposed in the petition may
be warranted’’ (50 CFR 424.14(b)). We
have reviewed the petition and the
available literature cited in the petition,
and evaluated the information to
determine whether the sources cited
support the claims made in the petition.
We also reviewed reliable information
that was readily available in our files to
clarify and verify information in the
petition. As described in our Five-Factor
Evaluation, above, the petition presents
substantial information indicating that
listing the white-sided jackrabbit
throughout its entire range may be
warranted based on Factor A (present or
threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of the species’ habitat or
range), Factor B (overutilization for
commercial, recreational, scientific or
educational purposes), and Factor D
(inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms). Based on our Five-Factor
Evaluation (above), the petition does not
present substantial information
indicating that Factor C (disease or
predation) or Factor E (other natural or
manmade factors affecting the species’
continued existence) is currently, or in
the future will be, a threat to the whitesided jackrabbit.
Based on this review and evaluation,
we find that the petition has presented
substantial scientific or commercial
information that listing the jackrabbit
throughout all of its range may be
warranted due to current and future
threats under Factors A, B, and D. We
also find that the petition presented
substantial information that the
northern populations of the species may
be a valid DPS and may warrant listing.
Therefore, we are initiating a status
review to determine whether listing the
jackrabbit under the Act is warranted.
As part of our status review, we will
examine whether the full species,
subspecies, or the petitioned northern
DPS of the jackrabbit warrants listing
under the Act. We will issue a 12–
month finding as to whether any of the
petitioned actions is warranted. To
ensure that the status review is
comprehensive, we are soliciting
scientific and commercial information
regarding the jackrabbit.
The ‘‘substantial information’’
standard for a 90–day finding is in
contrast to the Act’s ‘‘best scientific and
commercial data’’ standard that applies
to a 12–month finding as to whether a
petitioned action is warranted. A 90–
day finding is not a status assessment of
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the species and does not constitute a
status review under the Act. Our final
determination as to whether a
petitioned action is warranted is not
made until we have completed a
thorough status review of the species,
which is conducted following a positive
90–day finding. Because the Act’s
standards for 90–day and 12–month
findings are different, as described
above, a positive 90–day finding does
not mean that the 12–month finding
also will be positive.
The petitioner requested that critical
habitat be designated for this species. If
we determine in our 12–month finding
that listing the jackrabbit is warranted,
we will address the designation of
critical habitat at the time of the
proposed rulemaking.
References Cited
A complete list of references cited is
available on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov and upon request
from the New Mexico Ecological
Services Office (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT).
Author
The primary authors of this notice are
the staff members of the New Mexico
Ecological Services Office (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Authority
The authority for this action is the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
Dated: July 14, 2009.
James J. Slack,
Acting Deputy Director, Fish and Wildlife
Service.
[FR Doc. E9–17449 Filed 7–21–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–S
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Parts 21 and 22
[FWS–R9–MB–2009–0002; 91200–1231–
9BPP]
RIN 1018–AW44
Migratory Bird Permits; Changes in the
Regulations Governing Falconry
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, published a final rule
in the Federal Register on October 8,
2008, to revise our regulations
governing falconry in the United States.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 139 (Wednesday, July 22, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 36152-36158]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-17449]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R2-ES-2009-0039; MO 922105 0082-B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 90-Day Finding on
a Petition To List the White-Sided Jackrabbit (Lepus callotis) as
Threatened or Endangered
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 90-day petition finding and initiation of status and
critical habitat review.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce a
90-day finding on a petition to list the white-sided jackrabbit (Lepus
callotis) as an endangered species and designate critical habitat under
the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended. Following a review of
the petition, we find the petition provides substantial scientific or
commercial information indicating that listing this species may be
warranted. Therefore, with the publication of this notice, we are
initiating a status review to determine if listing this species is
warranted. To ensure that the status review is comprehensive, we are
requesting the public to submit scientific and commercial data and
other information regarding the white-sided jackrabbit. We will make a
determination on critical habitat if and when we initiate a listing
action for this species.
DATES: We made the finding announced in this document on July 22, 2009.
To allow us adequate time to conduct this review, we request that we
receive information on or before September 21, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit information by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Search for docket FWS-R2-ES-2009-0039 and then follow the instructions
for submitting comments.
U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public Comments Processing,
Attn: FWS-R2-ES-2009-0039; Division of Policy and Directives
Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive,
Suite 222; Arlington, VA 22203.
We will post all information we receive on https://www.regulations.gov. This generally means that we will post any
personal information you provide us (see the Information Requested
section below for more details).
[[Page 36153]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wally ``J'' Murphy, Field Supervisor,
New Mexico Ecological Services Office, 2105 Osuna NE, Albuquerque, NM
87113; by telephone (505-346-2525) or by facsimile (505-346-2542).
Persons who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call
the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Information Requested
When we make a finding that a petition presents substantial
information indicating that listing a species may be warranted, we are
required to promptly commence a review of the status of the species. To
ensure that the status review is complete and based on the best
available scientific and commercial information, we are soliciting
information on the status of the white-sided jackrabbit. We request
information from the public, other governmental agencies, Native
American Tribes, the scientific community, industry, or any other
interested parties concerning the status of the white-sided jackrabbit.
We are seeking information regarding:
(1) The historical and current status and distribution of the
white-sided jackrabbit, its biology and ecology, and ongoing
conservation measures for the species and its habitat in the United
States and Mexico; and
(2) Information relevant to the factors that are the basis for
making a listing determination for a species under section 4(a) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act) (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.), which are:
(a) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of the species' habitat or range;
(b) Overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or
educational purposes;
(c) Disease or predation;
(d) The inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; or
(e) Other natural or manmade factors affecting the species'
continued existence and threats to it or its habitat.
If we determine that listing the white-sided jackrabbit is
warranted, we intend to propose critical habitat to the maximum extent
prudent and determinable at the time we propose to list the species.
Therefore, with regard to areas within the geographical range currently
occupied by the white-sided jackrabbit, we also request data and
information on what may constitute physical or biological features
essential to the conservation of the species, where these features are
currently found, and whether any of these features may require special
management considerations or protection. In addition, we request data
and information regarding whether there are areas outside the
geographical area occupied by the white-sided jackrabbit that are
essential to the conservation of the species. Please provide specific
comments and information as to what, if any, critical habitat should be
proposed for designation if the species is proposed for listing, and
why that proposed habitat meets the requirements of the Act.
Please note that submissions merely stating support for or
opposition to the action under consideration without providing
supporting information, although noted, will not be considered in
making a determination, as section 4(b)(1)(A) of the Act directs that
determinations as to whether any species is a threatened or endangered
species must be made ``solely on the basis of the best scientific and
commercial data available.'' Based on the status review, we will issue
a 12-month finding on the petition, as provided in section 4(b)(3)(B)
of the Act.
You may submit your information concerning this status review by
one of the methods listed in the ADDRESSES section.
If you submit information via https://www.regulations.gov, your
entire submission--including any personal identifying information--will
be posted on the website. If your submission is made via a hardcopy
that includes personal identifying information, you may request at the
top of your document that we withhold this information from public
review. However, we cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so. We
will post all hardcopy submissions on https://www.regulations.gov.
Please include sufficient information with your comments to allow us to
verify any scientific or commercial information you include.
Information and materials we receive, as well as supporting
documentation we used in preparing this finding, will be available for
public inspection on https://www.regulations.gov, or by appointment,
during normal business hours, at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
New Mexico Ecological Services Office (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT).
Background
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act requires that we make a finding on
whether a petition to list, delist, or reclassify a species presents
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the
petitioned action may be warranted. We are to base this finding on
information provided in the petition, supporting information submitted
with the petition, and information otherwise available in our files. To
the maximum extent practicable, we are to make this finding within 90
days of our receipt of the petition and publish our notice of this
finding promptly in the Federal Register.
Our standard for substantial scientific or commercial information
within the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) with regard to a 90-day
petition finding is ``that amount of information that would lead a
reasonable person to believe that the measure proposed in the petition
may be warranted'' (50 CFR 424.14(b)). If we find that substantial
scientific or commercial information was presented, we are required to
promptly commence a review of the status of the species.
On October 15, 2008, we received a petition dated October 9, 2008,
from the WildEarth Guardians requesting that the white-sided jackrabbit
(Lepus callotis) (jackrabbit) be listed as threatened or endangered
under the Act. The petitioner requested that we evaluate three
potentially listable entities of the jackrabbit: (1) the northern
population of the subspecies L. callotis gaillardia as a distinct
population segment (DPS); (2) the full species L. callotis throughout
its range; and (3) each of the subspecies of the jackrabbit, which they
identified as L. callotis gaillardia and L. callotis callotis.
Additionally, the petition requested that critical habitat be
designated concurrent with listing of L. callotis, its subspecies, and
the northern DPS. The petition clearly identified itself as such and
included the requisite identification information for the petitioner,
as required by 50 CFR 424.14(a). In a November 26, 2008, letter to the
petitioner, we responded that we had reviewed the petition and
determined that an emergency listing was not necessary. In that letter,
we advised the petitioner that, to the maximum extent practicable, we
would address the petition within 90 days. During our review of the
petition, we found that the majority of information cited in the
petition was not readily available to us. Therefore, on January 13,
2009, we requested that the petitioner provide references. On February
13, 2009, the petitioner provided references. We received a 60-day
notice of intent to sue from the petitioner dated January 28, 2009, and
on April 15, 2009, the petitioner brought a lawsuit against us for
failure to make a decision on the Petition within 90 days of its
receipt.
[[Page 36154]]
Previous Federal Actions
The white-sided jackrabbit was first listed as a candidate
(Category 2) for Federal listing as either a threatened or endangered
species under the Act, in the 1982 Candidate Notice of Review (47 FR
58454, December 30, 1982). Category 2 status included those taxa for
which information in the Service's possession indicated that a proposed
listing rule was possibly appropriate, but for which sufficient data on
biological vulnerability and threats were not available to support a
proposed rule. In the Candidate Notice of Review published on February
28, 1996, we announced a revised list of animal and plant taxa that
were regarded as candidates for possible addition to the Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants (61 FR 7595). The revised
candidate list included only former Category 1 species. All former
Category 2 species were dropped from the list to reduce confusion about
the conservation status of these species, and to clarify that the
Service no longer regarded these species as candidates for listing.
Because the white-sided jackrabbit was a Category 2 species, it was no
longer recognized as a candidate species.
Species Information
The white-sided jackrabbit is one of four species of hares (Family
Leporidae) occurring in New Mexico, including the black-tailed
jackrabbit (Lepus californicus), which co-occurs with the white-sided
jackrabbit (Findley et al. 1975). The white-sided jackrabbit can be
distinguished from the black-tailed jackrabbit by its extensive white
sides and inconspicuous or absent black ear tips (Findley et al. 1975,
pp. 92, 96; Best and Henry 1993, p. 1).
One of the primary issues presented by the petitioner is related to
the taxonomy of the jackrabbit. The petitioner presents information
that morphological and genetic data have caused some to question the
uniqueness of the subspecies Lepus callotis callotis and the subspecies
L. callotis gaillardi (e.g., InfoNatura 2008). They request that we
consider each recognized subspecies for listing, if we find them to be
taxonomically valid. Under section 3(16) of the Act, we may consider
for listing any species or subspecies of fish, wildlife, or plants, or
any distinct population segment of vertebrate fish or wildlife which
interbreeds when mature. Thus, in our 12-month finding, should we
determine that the species as a whole does not warrant listing, we will
evaluate whether any valid subspecies warrants listing. If we conclude
that the subspecies L. callotis gaillardia is valid, but does not
warrant listing, we will consider whether the northern populations of
the subspecies is a valid DPS under our policy (61 FR 4722, February 7,
1996) and, if so, whether it warrants listing. If we conclude that the
subspecies L. callotis gaillardia is not valid, we will consider
whether the northern populations of the full species is a valid DPS
and, if so, whether it warrants listing.
The core distribution of the white-sided jackrabbit lies within
Mexico (New Mexico Department of Game and Fish (NMDGF) 2006, p. 114).
The species historically occurred from southern New Mexico to northern
Oaxaca, Mexico, within two distinct geographic areas (Best and Henry
1993, p. 2). One area was located in the southern Animas and Playas
valleys of Hidalgo County, south to west-central Chihuahua and north-
central Durango, Mexico (Bednarz and Cook 1984, p. 358; Reynolds 1988,
p. 1). The other area was from central Durango south across the open
plains of the Mexican Plateau to the State of Oaxaca, Mexico (Hall
1981, p. 330). The geographic separation of the two areas occurs on
either side of the Rio Nazas, Durango, Mexico; that river marks the
dividing line for many subspecies of mammals (Peterson 1976, pp. 496-
498). The jackrabbit's range in New Mexico was restricted to about 121
square kilometers (47 square miles) (Bednarz 1977, p. 6; Bednarz and
Cook 1984, p. 359). We are unaware of any similar estimate for Mexico.
There is no recent information on the amount of habitat occupied by the
jackrabbit in either country. Moreover, the white-sided jackrabbit has
not been confirmed as extant in Arizona (Cahalane 1939, p. 436),
although in 1954, Hoffmeister and Goodpaster reportedly observed what
they believed to be white-sided jackrabbits along the west base of the
Huachuca Mountains, Cochise County, Arizona (Hoffmeister 1986).
Therefore, New Mexico is the only confirmed place in the United States
where the species has been documented to occur.
This species is highly elusive. It inhabits predominately well-
developed open grasslands that have low shrub density and level
terrain, avoiding hills or mountains (Bednarz and Cook 1984, p. 359;
Cook 1986, p. 15; Desmond 2004, p. 416). It was reported only a few
times after the species was discovered in 1892 along the International
Border between the United States and Mexico (Mearns 1895). For example,
two animals were collected in the Playas Valley in 1931 and one animal
was collected in the Animas Valley in 1974 (Anderson and Gaunt 1962;
Bogan and Jones 1975, p. 47; Bednarz 1977, p. 1).
The petitioner provides information indicating that white-sided
jackrabbit populations are declining (Bednarz and Cook 1984, p. 360;
Mehlhop 1995, pp. 3-10; Traphagen 2002, pp. 4-5). The information in
our files is consistent with the population numbers reported in the
petition. We judge the information regarding a possible decline in
jackrabbit numbers to be substantial and reliable. In 1976, the white-
sided jackrabbit was found in New Mexico only in the Animas Valley on
the Diamond A Ranch (the Diamond A Ranch includes the lands formerly
called Gray Ranch in southwestern New Mexico) and in limited parts of
the southern Playas Valley east of the Diamond A Ranch in southern
Hidalgo County (Bednarz 1977, pp. 4-5). During investigations conducted
between May and August 1976, Bednarz (1977) speculated that the number
of white-sided jackrabbits in the Animas Valley was between 250 to 300
individuals. Five years later, surveys in New Mexico revealed that
white-sided jackrabbit sightings had decreased to approximately half of
the mean reported by Bednarz (Bednarz and Cook 1984, pp. 359-360). The
jackrabbit may now be extirpated from the Playas Valley; no
observations of the species have been made in this area during recent
surveys (Traphagen 2002, p. 5; Frey 2004, p. 22; NMDGF 2006, p. 115).
Surveys in Chihuahua, Mexico, also reported low densities of white-
sided jackrabbits (Desmond 2004, p. 417). We are unaware of any
additional information on population abundance, or any year-round or
long-term monitoring data on the white-sided jackrabbit in either the
United States or Mexico (see also NMDGF 1997, p. 3). As such, the
status of this species remains unclear in both countries.
In the white-sided jackrabbit, females are generally larger than
males (Bednarz 1977, pp. 13, 15). In New Mexico, white-sided
jackrabbits are observed almost unvaryingly in pairs (Bednarz 1977, p.
9), suggesting that mated animals remain together on a long-term basis.
Pair bonds may serve to ensure adequate reproduction, in the context of
generally low population density (Bednarz 1977, p. 12). The members of
the pair are usually near each other and run together when approached
by intruders (Bednarz 1977). Several litters are probably produced each
year, with litter size appearing to average 2.2 young (Bednarz 1977).
The young tend to have a soft, woolly coat in early life and attain
sexual maturity at a rapid rate.
[[Page 36155]]
In the United States portion of its range, the white-sided
jackrabbit appears to be found only in association with grasslands
(Bednarz 1977, p. 6). Plants commonly found in areas inhabited by this
species in the Animas and Playa valleys of New Mexico include Bouteloua
gracilis (blue grama), B. eriopoda (black grama), Hilaria mutica
(tobosa), Buchloe dactyloides (buffalo grass), Lycurus phleoides
(wolftail), Muhlenbergia torreyi (ring muhly), Cyperus spp.
(flatsedges), Gutierrezia sarothrae (snakeweed), Yucca elata (soaptree
yucca), and Prosopis glandulosa (honey mesquite) (Bednarz and Cook
1984, pp. 358-359; Mehlhop 1995, p. 15; Moore-Craig 1992, p. 4). More
than 97 percent of all observations of this species have been in pure
grasslands and less than 3 percent in grasslands with varying amounts
of forbs (flowering herbs) and shrubs (Bednarz and Cook, 1984). In New
Mexico, white-sided jackrabbits feed primarily on B. gracilis,
B.dactyloides, B. eripoda, L. phleoides, and M. torreyi (Bednarz 1977,
pp. 14, 16).
Although the white-sided jackrabbit shares its range with the
black-tailed jackrabbit, the two generally occupy different habitats,
with white-sided jackrabbit found in areas of pure grassland and the
black-tailed generally found in areas dominated by shrubs (Bednarz
1977, p. 17; Bednarz and Cook 1984, p. 359-360; Desmond 2004, p. 417).
The white-sided jackrabbit constructs and uses forms (scrapes or
depressions in the ground). Forms provide jackrabbits with concealment
and protection. The form is usually located in clumps of grass and
surrounded by dense stands of Hilaria mutica (Bednarz 1977, p. 16).
Daytime observations of white-sided jackrabbits are uncommon, as the
species is primarily nocturnal (Bednarz 1977, pp. 6-11; Best and Henry
1993, p. 5). Although many species of jackrabbit and hare are
considered pests because they may damage crops, fields, and orchards,
the white-sided jackrabbit is not known to depredate crops.
Five-Factor Evaluation
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533), and its implementing
regulations in the Code of federal Regulations (CFR) at 50 CFR 424, set
forth the procedures for adding species to the Federal Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. A species may be
determined to be an endangered or threatened species due to one or more
of the five factors described in section 4(a)(1) of the Act: (A) The
present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of its
habitat or range; (B) overutilization for commercial, recreational,
scientific, or educational purposes; (C) disease or predation; (D) the
inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; or (E) other natural or
manmade factors affecting its continued existence.
In making this 90-day finding, we evaluated whether information on
threats to the white-sided jackrabbit, as presented in the petition and
other information available in our files, is substantial, thereby
indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted. Our evaluation
of this information is presented below.
A. The Present or Threatened Destruction, Modification, or Curtailment
of the Species' Habitat or Range
The petition asserts that current and historic grazing practices
and suppression of wildfire threaten the jackrabbit because they have
led to shrub encroachment into grasslands. The petitioner correctly
asserts that the jackrabbit is found only in association with well-
developed, high-elevation (greater than 1,460 meters (4,800 feet))
Chihuahuan desert grasslands, characterized by flat topography and few
shrubs and forbs (Bednarz 1977). Moreover, the petitioner claims that
declines in grassland health, indicated by increases in shrub and forb
cover, cause populations of white-sided jackrabbit to decrease while
populations of black-tailed jackrabbit increase. The petitioner states
that this change in grassland vegetation is especially apparent in the
Playas Valley, Hidalgo County, where the white-sided jackrabbit may
have been recently extirpated (Traphagen 2002, pp. 5, 11; NMDGF 2006,
p. 4). The petitioner indicates that little is known about the specific
habitat associations of the white-sided jackrabbit in Mexico, but it
appears to also inhabit high-elevation grassland similar to that used
by the species in New Mexico.
The NMDGF's 2006 biennial review of State threatened and endangered
species identifies the loss and degradation of grassland habitat
through drought, shrub encroachment, and changes in grass composition
as the primary threat to the white-sided jackrabbit in New Mexico
(NMDGF 2006, p. 115). Numerous sources substantiate that past range-
management practices have contributed to the degradation of desert
grasslands or their conversion to shrublands (National Museum of
Natural History 2008, p. 1; Bednarz and Cook 1984, p. 360; Desmond
2004, p. 417; NatureServe 2008, p. 2; USDA Forest Service 2007, p. 15;
Service 2008, p. 53). Bednarz and Cook (1984, p. 360) postulated that
numbers of white-sided jackrabbit had decreased in New Mexico as the
density and vigor of grasses declined, while black-tailed jackrabbits
and desert cottontail (Sylvilagus audubonii) numbers increased in
response to an increase in woody shrubs. Desmond (2004, p. 417)
reported a similar pattern from Chihuahua, Mexico, where she found that
increased shrub encroachment into grasslands negatively affected
populations of white-sided jackrabbits (Desmond 2004, p. 417). It is
likely that the increase in shrub cover has occurred through a
combination of fire suppression policies, drought, and intense
livestock grazing during the late 1800s and early 1900s, which were the
key causes of the replacement of grasslands by shrublands (Malpai
Borderlands Habitat Conservation Plan Technical Working Group 2008, p.
18; Traphagen 2002, p. 12).
Citing Brown (1994), the petition asserts that the primary cause of
loss and degradation of grasslands in the Chihuahuan Desert is
overgrazing by cattle. Overgrazed grassland is susceptible to invasion
by shrubs and forbs, a cover type which greatly favors the black-tailed
jackrabbit (Baker 1977, pp. 222-223; Bednarz and Cook 1984, pp. 359-
360; Desmond 2004, p. 417; Moore-Craig 1992, p. 13; NMDGF 2006, p.
115). Areas where white-sided jackrabbits historically or currently
occur have been continuously grazed for over a century (Traphagen
2002). We will explore overgrazing more thoroughly in our 12-month
finding for the jackrabbit.
The petitioner claims that wildfire suppression is a cause of
grassland degradation. We have information in our files to substantiate
that fire exclusion has led to encroachment of shrubs into the
grassland habitat of the white-sided jackrabbit. For example, Humphrey
(1958, p. 245) believed fires were the controlling factor that kept
shrubs from invading the desert grasslands in southeastern Arizona and
southwestern New Mexico. The Bureau of Land management (BLM) came to a
similar conclusion for the region of southwestern New Mexico where the
white-sided jackrabbit historically occurred (BLM 2009, pp. 1-3).
Alternatively, Valone et al. (2002, p. 563) reported that two fires in
5 years did not result in high levels of mortality to woody shrubs such
as Prosopis glandulosa (mesquite) on the Diamond A Ranch, Hidalgo
County, which is within the range of the jackrabbit. Based on this
information, we find that the petition and other readily available
[[Page 36156]]
information in our files support the claim that fire exclusion may have
led to the degradation of grasslands inhabited by the jackrabbit.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
We have evaluated the petition and readily available information in
our files and find substantial information indicating that listing the
species throughout its range may be warranted due to the present or
threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of the habitat or
range of the white-sided jackrabbit. We find that substantial
information was presented that shrub encroachment into grassland
fostered by current and historic grazing practices, drought, and fire
exclusion may threaten the species.
B. Overutilization for Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or
Educational Purposes
The petitioner identifies hunting of the white-sided jackrabbit for
sport and food as an ongoing threat to the species. The petition
reports that the species has been commercially hunted in Mexico and is
considered a non-game species that is hunted in New Mexico, and thus is
not protected by State game laws. Matson and Baker (1986, p. 41)
indicated that the species was heavily hunted and considered highly
edible. Reynolds (1988) also reported that white-sided jackrabbits were
commonly hunted in some of the grasslands of Mexico. The species was
historically hunted for commercial markets in Mexico (Leopold 1959, p.
349). Thus, hunting may have played a role in the decline of the white-
sided jackrabbit in Mexico (Moore-Craig, 1992, p. 13). While all of the
citations in the petition that document that the species was hunted in
Mexico are over 20 years old, we do not have information indicating
that hunting of the jackrabbit in Mexico has ceased. However,
information in our files indicates that the species is not currently
hunted in New Mexico. The white-sided jackrabbit is currently protected
under the New Mexico Wildlife Conservation Act and may not be hunted
(NMDGF 2008, p. 10). The petitioner does not detail ongoing or future
impacts to the species from hunting in the United States.
The petition claims that the white-sided jackrabbit is currently
subject to animal damage control programs, and cites the NMDGF in
saying that some white-sided jackrabbits are known to have been killed
by gunners and trappers. The NMDGF (1985, p. 2) stated that some white-
sided jackrabbits have been lost to ``gunners and trappers,'' but
provided no further information. This may be referring to Federal or
State animal damage control agents. We have information in our files
that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) reported that
jackrabbits (Lepus spp.) have been taken in New Mexico as part of their
animal damage control program (USDA APHIS 1994, Appendix H, pp. 18-19).
The petitioner does not describe current or future plans for lethal
control of any white-sided jackrabbits or quantify the amount that may
have taken place historically through either the USDA or the general
public. Therefore, neither information in our files nor the literature
cited by the petition supports the petitioner's claim that the white-
sided jackrabbit is currently subject to animal damage control programs
by methods such as trapping or shooting, or is likely to be in the
future.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
The petition provides substantial information that hunting of the
white-sided jackrabbit has been, and may continue to be, a threat to
its populations in Mexico. Therefore, we find that the petition
presents substantial information indicating that the petitioned action
may be warranted due to overutilization.
C. Disease or Predation
The petitioner cites Bednarz (1977) in indicating that a lung
infection has been observed in white-sided jackrabbits, but no serious
diseases were noticed. Moore-Craig (1992, p. 11) noted that the
infections found by Bednarz (1977) were all of a minor nature, and the
overall health of the jackrabbit population appeared to be fair to
good. Tularemia, a common disease among black-tailed jackrabbits, has
not been found in the white-sided jackrabbit (Moore-Craig 1992, p. 11).
The petition also notes that a wide variety of predators exists in the
southern Animas Valley, New Mexico. It is likely that predation occurs
on white-sided jackrabbits, since native predators occur within the
range of both subspecies. However, the petitioner provided no data to
support predation as an impact to populations of the jackrabbit.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
We have no information in our files indicating that the petitioned
action may be warranted due to disease or predation. Therefore, we find
that the petition does not provide substantial information that listing
the white-sided jackrabbit due to disease or predation may be
warranted.
D. The Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
The petitioner asserts that existing regulatory mechanisms do not
provide any protections for the species and have been ineffective in
mitigating many of the threats. The petitioner states that the species'
ranking in NatureServe is G3 (vulnerable) and its National and State
Status rankings are N1S1 (critically imperiled). Its status under the
International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources is
near threatened. We reviewed these designations and find the
petitioner's claims to be accurate. However, these lists are not
regulatory mechanisms; they serve only to notify the public of the
species' status; no conservation or management actions are required; no
regulatory authority for species conservation is established through
these listings.
The petitioner states that the Malpai Borderlands Habitat
Conservation Plan (MBHCP) does not reliably assure protection to the
jackrabbit on private lands in New Mexico. The apparent basis of this
position is that the Service willingly issued an incidental take permit
on private lands to the Malpai Borderlands Group for the MBHCP. The
petitioner also contends, based upon observed degradation of grassland
habitat and declines in the jackrabbit population, that the Malpai
Borderlands Group is not fulfilling its stated mission to restore and
maintain natural processes that support diverse and flourishing animal
life in the borderlands region, which includes the Diamond A Ranch in
southern Hidalgo County, and is within the range of the white-sided
jackrabbit in the United States. The petition does not provide
information that documents the extent, magnitude, or immediacy of the
perceived inadequacies of the MBHCP or how they threaten the white-
sided jackrabbit in New Mexico.
The white-sided jackrabbit was listed as threatened by the State of
New Mexico on January 24, 1975. This designation provides the
protection of the New Mexico Wildlife Conservation Act, which prohibits
direct take of the species except under issuance of a scientific
collecting permit. However, this only conveys protection from
collection or intentional harm.
Although the State of New Mexico statutes require the NMDGF to
develop a recovery plan that will restore and maintain habitat for the
species, the
[[Page 36157]]
species does not have a finalized recovery plan, conservation plan, or
conservation agreement (NMDGF 2006a, p. 430). As such, existing State
of New Mexico regulatory mechanisms are currently inadequate to protect
the jackrabbit. As discussed above under Factor A, we find that the
petition presents substantial evidence of threats to the species from
grassland degradation, and we thus find that the petition presents
substantial evidence that the inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms to prevent further grassland degradation or to recover
grasslands may threaten the white-sided jackrabbit as well.
The white-sided jackrabbit is on the Regional Forester's Sensitive
Species List for the Coronado National Forest (USDA Forest Service
2007, p. 15). However, we found no information in our files to
substantiate that the jackrabbit is present on any public lands in New
Mexico. Moreover, the petition asserts that the jackrabbit is only
found on private lands in New Mexico. If the species is found on
National Forest System lands, the US Forest Service (USFS) is required
to analyze the impacts any proposed actions may have on the jackrabbit
in all applicable National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.) documents. On April 21, 2008, a new USFS planning rule
(73 FR 21468) was made final. The USFS's new planning rule indicated
that once a USFS land and resource management plan has been revised,
the sensitive species designation will no longer be needed because
species of concern (listed, proposed, or candidate species under the
Act) or species of interest will replace them. Since the occurrence of
the jackrabbit on the Coronado National Forest is uncertain, the
petition and information in our files do not contain substantial
information that the jackrabbit is faced with current and future
threats on Forest Service lands.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
Neither the petition nor our files provide information about
existing regulatory mechanisms for the species in Mexico, which
contains the majority of the current range of the white-sided
jackrabbit. As such, we have no information that the lack of regulatory
mechanisms in Mexico is affecting the continued existence of the white-
sided jackrabbit. We intend to assess this factor more thoroughly
during our status review of the species.
As noted above, the jackrabbit receives no protection from the
NatureServe or International Union for Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources designations, as these lists serve only to notify the
public of the species' status rather than requiring any conservation or
management actions; these listings do not impact either adequacy or
inadequacy of regulatory mechanisms, since they are not regulatory in
nature.
The petitioner does provide substantial information that the white-
sided jackrabbit's status as a State-listed threatened species in New
Mexico confers little regulatory protection (except against direct
take). Therefore, we find that the petition presents substantial
information that the petitioned action may be warranted due to the
inadequacy of existing mechanisms in the United States.
E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors Affecting the Species' Continued
Existence
The petition cites non-point source habitat change as a threat to
the jackrabbit, suggesting that no single factor (e.g., grazing, fire
suppression, shifting rainfall patterns, or increased atmospheric
carbon dioxide levels) has led to the encroachment of shrubs into the
grasslands. We find the information cited to be generic in nature and
not specific to the white-sided jackrabbit or its habitat beyond the
discussion under Factor A above.
The petitioner states that climate change and drought threaten the
white-sided jackrabbit under Factor E. The petitioner cites a variety
of sources in the body of the petition to support the claim regarding
climate change and drought and their relation to the persistence of the
jackrabbit, but did not provide any of these to us. Much of this
information is not readily available to us. There is uncertainty over
how climate change will affect the jackrabbit and its habitat. The
petition claims that climate change will likely cause a deterioration
of grassland habitat in New Mexico and the Chihuahuan Desert region.
Further, the petitioner asserts that information indicates that the
impact of drought and climate change have been implicated as
influencing shrub encroachment into grasslands. Information readily
available to us supports the petitioner's assertion that climate change
might contribute to more frequent and intense drought within the U.S.
and northern Mexico portion of the range of the jackrabbit (Seager et
al. 2007, pp. 1181-1182). We will review the possible effects of
climate change on the white-sided jackrabbit more thoroughly in our
status review.
The petitioner reports a case of a New Mexico rancher finding
several dead white-sided jackrabbits while eradicating mustard plants.
Bednarz (1977) suggests that this mortality may have been caused by the
jackrabbits' consumption of mustard plants and ensuing nitrate
poisoning. Consumption of mustard plants is known to cause nitrate
poisoning in cattle, and Bednarz (1977, p. 18) cites it as likely
having the same effect on jackrabbits. No other information or support
was provided by the petition, nor is there any information readily
available to us that provides substantial information that food
poisoning threatens the jackrabbit now or in the foreseeable future.
The potential for jackrabbit mortality due to food poisoning merits
further investigation during our status review of the species.
The petition asserts that road-killed white-sided jackrabbits have
been found in the past. Nevertheless, the petition does not claim this
is a threat to the species. Moore-Craig (1992, p. 16) found that
occasionally white-sided jackrabbits are killed by vehicles. Traphagen
(2009, p. 1) also noted that white-sided jackrabbits have been reported
road-killed recently, likely from an increased presence of Border
Patrol vehicles in New Mexico. Bednarz (1977, p. 18) reported that,
even though fieldworkers were constantly looking for road-killed white-
sided jackrabbits during a study, the species was rarely observed on
the roads and tended to avoid approaching vehicles. The NMDGF (1997, p.
4) found that impacts from this type of mortality are unknown, but
probably do not represent a significant threat to the species. Based on
this review, the petition and information readily available to us do
not provide any substantial information to support that vehicle
collisions represent a threat to the white-sided jackrabbit currently
or in the foreseeable future.
The petition notes that Smith (1999, p. 1) observed a white-sided
jackrabbit's behavior in response to an approaching wildfire, but does
not claim this is a threat to the species. The petitioner does not
present specific information that the wildfire Smith (1999) observed
resulted in losses of the white-sided jackrabbit. We acknowledge that
the active fire management program in the Malpai Borderlands area may
affect the white-sided jackrabbit. Effects during fire management may
include mortality or injury of individuals as a result of direct
exposure to fire, smoke inhalation, and crushing by the tires or tracks
of vehicles used in fire management activities (Service 2008, pp. 64-
65). We
[[Page 36158]]
believe that the jackrabbit is capable of surviving such fire effects
by running away (Service 2008, p. 64). We find prescribed burns may
also expose white-sided jackrabbits to higher rates of predation, but
also allow for easier detection of terrestrial predators (Service 2008,
p. 65). The effects of a prescribed burn would likely be short-term,
because the fire-adapted grassland community usually responds quickly,
with plant species showing regrowth within several days post-fire.
Nevertheless, a reduction of shrubs would benefit the white-sided
jackrabbit by improving grassland habitat. Although the MBHCP will
likely result in short-term adverse effects to the jackrabbit, the
long-term effects will improve the grassland community used by white-
sided jackrabbits by reducing the shrub component, providing additional
suitable habitat, and improving the area around occupied habitat for
potential expansion; thus, implementation of the MBHCP, including the
fire management program, should promote the conservation of the white-
sided jackrabbit. For these reasons, we found no data or substantial
information to indicate that wildfires or prescribed burns threaten
white-sided jackrabbits or their habitat.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
We reviewed the petition, supporting information, and the
information readily available to the Service and find the petition does
not present any additional substantial information that any natural or
manmade factors other than those discussed above for Factors A, B, and
D may affect the white-sided jackrabbit's continued existence.
Finding
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (Act) (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), requires that we make a finding
on whether a petition to list, delist, or reclassify a species presents
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the
petitioned action may be warranted. We are to base this finding on
information provided in the petition, supporting information submitted
with the petition, and information otherwise available in our files. To
the maximum extent practicable, we are to make this finding within 90
days of our receipt of the petition and publish our notice of the
finding promptly in the Federal Register.
Our process for making this 90-day finding under section 4(b)(3)(A)
of the Act is limited to a determination of whether the information in
the petition presents ``substantial scientific and commercial
information,'' which is interpreted in our regulations as ``that amount
of information that would lead a reasonable person to believe that the
measure proposed in the petition may be warranted'' (50 CFR 424.14(b)).
We have reviewed the petition and the available literature cited in the
petition, and evaluated the information to determine whether the
sources cited support the claims made in the petition. We also reviewed
reliable information that was readily available in our files to clarify
and verify information in the petition. As described in our Five-Factor
Evaluation, above, the petition presents substantial information
indicating that listing the white-sided jackrabbit throughout its
entire range may be warranted based on Factor A (present or threatened
destruction, modification, or curtailment of the species' habitat or
range), Factor B (overutilization for commercial, recreational,
scientific or educational purposes), and Factor D (inadequacy of
existing regulatory mechanisms). Based on our Five-Factor Evaluation
(above), the petition does not present substantial information
indicating that Factor C (disease or predation) or Factor E (other
natural or manmade factors affecting the species' continued existence)
is currently, or in the future will be, a threat to the white-sided
jackrabbit.
Based on this review and evaluation, we find that the petition has
presented substantial scientific or commercial information that listing
the jackrabbit throughout all of its range may be warranted due to
current and future threats under Factors A, B, and D. We also find that
the petition presented substantial information that the northern
populations of the species may be a valid DPS and may warrant listing.
Therefore, we are initiating a status review to determine whether
listing the jackrabbit under the Act is warranted. As part of our
status review, we will examine whether the full species, subspecies, or
the petitioned northern DPS of the jackrabbit warrants listing under
the Act. We will issue a 12-month finding as to whether any of the
petitioned actions is warranted. To ensure that the status review is
comprehensive, we are soliciting scientific and commercial information
regarding the jackrabbit.
The ``substantial information'' standard for a 90-day finding is in
contrast to the Act's ``best scientific and commercial data'' standard
that applies to a 12-month finding as to whether a petitioned action is
warranted. A 90-day finding is not a status assessment of the species
and does not constitute a status review under the Act. Our final
determination as to whether a petitioned action is warranted is not
made until we have completed a thorough status review of the species,
which is conducted following a positive 90-day finding. Because the
Act's standards for 90-day and 12-month findings are different, as
described above, a positive 90-day finding does not mean that the 12-
month finding also will be positive.
The petitioner requested that critical habitat be designated for
this species. If we determine in our 12-month finding that listing the
jackrabbit is warranted, we will address the designation of critical
habitat at the time of the proposed rulemaking.
References Cited
A complete list of references cited is available on the Internet at
https://www.regulations.gov and upon request from the New Mexico
Ecological Services Office (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Author
The primary authors of this notice are the staff members of the New
Mexico Ecological Services Office (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT).
Authority
The authority for this action is the Endangered Species Act of
1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
Dated: July 14, 2009.
James J. Slack,
Acting Deputy Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. E9-17449 Filed 7-21-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-S