Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 90-Day Finding on a Petition to List Cirsium wrightii (Wright's marsh thistle, 46542-46547 [E9-21755]
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46542
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 174 / Thursday, September 10, 2009 / Proposed Rules
ACTIONS FUNDED IN FY 2009 BUT NOT processes or achieve economies of scale,
such as by batching related actions
YET COMPLETED—Continued
Species
together. Given our limited budget for
implementing section 4 of the Act, these
actions described above collectively
constitute expeditious progress.
Astragalus anserinus will be added to
the list of candidate species upon
publication of this 12–month finding.
We will continue to monitor the status
of this species as new information
becomes available. This review will
determine if a change in status is
warranted, including the need to make
prompt use of emergency listing
procedures.
We intend that any proposed listing
action for Astragalus anserinus will be
as accurate as possible. Therefore, we
will continue to accept additional
information and comments from all
concerned governmental agencies, the
scientific community, industry, or any
other interested party concerning this
finding.
Action
2 mussels
(sheepnose (LPN
= 2),
spectaclecase
(LPN = 4),)
Proposed listing
Ozark hellbender2
(LPN = 3)
Proposed listing
Altamaha
spinymussel (LPN
= 2)
Proposed listing
5 southeast fish
(rush darter (LPN
= 2), chucky
madtom (LPN =
2), yellowcheek
darter (LPN = 2),
Cumberland darter
(LPN = 5), laurel
dace (LPN = 5))
Proposed listing
8 southeast mussels
(southern
kidneyshell (LPN
= 2), round
ebonyshell (LPN =
2), Alabama
pearlshell (LPN =
2), southern
sandshell (LPN =
5), fuzzy pigtoe
(LPN = 5), Choctaw bean (LPN =
5), narrow pigtoe
(LPN = 11), and
tapered pigtoe
(LPN = 11))
Proposed listing
3 Colorado plants
(Pagosa skyrocket
(Ipomopsis
polyantha) (LPN =
2), Parchute
beardtongue
(Penstemon
debilis) (LPN = 2),
Debeque phacelia
(Phacelia
submutica) (LPN =
8))
Proposed listing
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited
is available on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.govand on request
from the Idaho Fish and Wildlife Office
(see ADDRESSES).
Author
The primary authors of this document
are the staff members of the Idaho Fish
and Wildlife Office
Authority
The authority for this action is the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
Dated: August 26, 2009
Daniel M. Ashe
Acting Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
[FR Doc. E9–21754 Filed 9–9–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–S
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
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1 Funds
for listing actions for these species
were provided in previous FYs.
2 We funded a proposed rule for this subspecies with an LPN of 3 ahead of other species with LPN of 2, because the threats to the
species were so imminent and of a high magnitude that we considered emergency listing if
we were unable to fund work on a proposed
listing rule in FY 2008.
3 Funds for these high priority listing actions
were provided in FY 2008 and 2009
We have endeavored to make our
listing actions as efficient and timely as
possible, given the requirements of the
relevant law and regulations, and
constraints relating to workload and
personnel. We are continually
considering ways to streamline
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50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R2-ES-2009-0060]
[92210-1111-0000-B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; 90-Day Finding on a
Petition to List Cirsium wrightii
(Wright’s marsh thistle) as Threatened
or Endangered with Critical Habitat
AGENCY:
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 90–day petition
finding and initiation of a status review.
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SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce a
90–day finding on a petition to list
Cirsium wrightii (Wright’s marsh thistle)
as threatened or endangered under the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended, and designate critical habitat.
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 of the species
to determine if the petitioned action is
warranted. To ensure that the status
review is comprehensive, we request
scientific and commercial data
regarding Cirsium wrightii. At the
conclusion of this review, we will issue
a 12–month finding to determine if the
petitioned action is warranted. 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 September 10,
2009. To allow us adequate time to
conduct this review, we request that we
receive information on or before
November 9, 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-2009-0060 and then follow
the instructions for submitting
comments.
• U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public
Comments Processing, Attn: FWS-R2ES-2009-0060; 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 received
on https://www.regulations.gov. This
generally means that we will post any
personal information you provide us
(see the Information Solicited section
below for more details).
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 (TTD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Information
When we make a finding that a
petition presents substantial
information indicating that listing a
species may be warranted, we are
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 174 / Thursday, September 10, 2009 / Proposed Rules
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 request information on
the status of Cirsium wrightii. We
request information from the public,
other concerned governmental agencies,
Native American Tribes, the scientific
community, industry, or any other
interested parties concerning the status
of C. wrightii. We are seeking
information regarding:
(1) The historical and current status
and distribution of the Wright’s marsh
thistle, its biology and ecology, and
ongoing conservation measures for the
species and its habitat; 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 or
regulatory mechanisms; or
(e) Other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence and
threats to the species or its habitat.
If we determine that listing Cirsium
wrightii is warranted, it is our intent to
propose critical habitat to the maximum
extent prudent and determinable at the
time we would propose to list the
species. Therefore, with regard to areas
within the geographical range currently
occupied by C. wrightii, 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 C. wrightii that are
essential to the conservation of the
species. Please provide specific
comments and information as to what,
if any, critical habitat you think we
should propose for designation if the
species is proposed for listing, and why
that proposed habitat meets the
requirements of the Act.
We will base our 12–month finding
on a review of the best scientific and
commercial information available,
including information we receive during
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this public comment period. Please note
that comments merely stating support 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 petitioned action,
as provided in section 4(b)(3)(B) of the
Act.
You may submit your information
concerning this finding 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 personal
identifying 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.
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 at the time we
make the determination. 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
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
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46543
measure proposed in the petition may
be warranted’’ (50 CFR 424.14(b)). If we
find that substantial information was
presented, we are required to promptly
commence a review of the status of the
species.
In making this 90–day finding, we
based our decision on information
provided by the petitioner, as well as
information available in our files and on
the Internet that was directly relevant to
the information raised in the petition at
the time we received the petition. We
evaluated that information in
accordance with 50 CFR 424.14(b). Our
process for making this 90–day finding
under section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act and
§424.14(b) of our regulations is limited
to a determination of whether the
information contained in the petition
meets the ‘‘substantial information’’
threshold.
Petition
On October 15, 2008 we received a
petition from the WildEarth Guardians,
dated October 9, 2008, requesting that
we list Cirsium wrightii (Wright’s marsh
thistle) as threatened or endangered
under the Act. Additionally, the
petitioner requested that critical habitat
be designated concurrent with listing of
C. wrightii. The petition clearly
identified itself as such and included
the requisite identification information
for the petitioners, as required in 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. We also stated that,
to the maximum extent practicable, we
would address their petition within 90
days.
The petition asserted that water
diversion, habitat loss and degradation
through current livestock grazing,
inadequate regulatory mechanisms,
weed control, non-native species,
drought, and climate change threaten C.
wrightii. 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
December 18, 2008, we requested that
the petitioner provide references. On
February 13, 2009, the petitioner
provided additional references.
Previous Federal Actions
There have been no previous Federal
actions concerning this species.
Species Information
Cirsium wrightii is a wetland obligate
species that was originally collected in
1851 at San Bernardino Cienaga,
Cochise County, Arizona (Gray 1853, p.
101; Smithsonian 1849, p. 1).
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Historically, the species was found in
Arizona; New Mexico; and Chihuahua,
Mexico (Gray 1853, p. 101; Coulter
1891, p. 244; Kearney and Peebles 1951,
p. 952; Correll and Johnston 1970, p.
1719; Service 1995, p. 1). An occurrence
of the species in western Texas has been
verified from a few plants in Presidio
County; however, most specimens from
Texas have recently been identified as
Cirsium texanum (Texas thistle), rather
than C. wrightii (Sivinski 1994a, p. 1;
1996, p. 2; 2006, p. 1; Worthington
2002a, p. 4). This species is easily
confused in herbarium collections with
C. wrightii (Sivinski 1994a, p. 1; 1996,
p. 2; 2006, p. 1; Worthington 2002a, p.
4). In the field, C. wrightii differs from
C. texanum in being a wetland obligate
(almost always occurs in wetlands) with
thick succulent leaves (New Mexico
Rare Plant Technical Council
(NMRPTC) 2006, p. 1).
Cirsium wrightii is a biennial (a plant
completing development in 2 years,
flowering its second year) or a weak
monocarpic perennial (a plant that
flowers, sets seed, then dies) in the
sunflower family (Asteraceae). The
plant is prickly with short black spines
and a 0.9-to-2.4-meter (m) (3-to-8-foot
(ft)) single stalk covered with succulent
leaves (Sivinski 1996, p. 1; Arizona
Game and Fish Department (AGFD)
2001, p. 1). Numerous slender flowering
branches emerge from the stalk, starting
about one-third up the length of the
plant. Branches are terminated by one or
a few small flowering heads, which
have numerous slender phyllaries (a
modified leaf associated with the
flower) (Sivinski 1996, p. 1). Flowers are
white to pale pink in areas of the
Sacramento Mountains, but are vivid
pink in the Santa Rosa locality (Sivinski
1996, p. 1). The species occurs in wet,
alkaline soils in spring seeps and
marshy edges of streams and ponds
between 1,130 and 2,600 m (3,450 and
8,500 ft) in elevation (NMRPTC 2006, p.
1; Sivinski 1996, p. 1).
In the New Mexico portion of the
species’ range, Cirsium wrightii appears
to be an obligate of seeps, springs, and
wetlands (NMRPTC 2006; Sivinski
1996; Service 1998; Worthington 2002a,
p. 2). Plants commonly found in areas
inhabited by this species include
Scirpus spp. (bulrush), Salix spp.
(willow), Baccharis glutinosa
(seepwillow), Helianthus paradoxus
(Pecos sunflower), Juncus spp. (rush),
and Typha spp. (cattail) (New Mexico
Botanist 2004, p. 2; Sivinski 1996, pp.
2-5; Worthington 2002a, pp 1-2).
The petition and information in our
files indicate that Cirsium wrightii
populations may be declining. The
species is believed to be extant in New
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Mexico; however, it is unclear whether
the species has been extirpated from
Arizona, Texas, and Mexico
(Worthington 2002a, p. 4).
In New Mexico, C. wrightii is known
from the Pecos River Valley and the
west slope of the Sacramento Mountains
(Sivinski 1996, p. 2), in Chavez,
Guadalupe, Otero, and Socorro
Counties, New Mexico (Bridge 2001, p.
1; New Mexico Botanist 2004, p. 2;
NMRPTC 2006, p. 1; Sivinski 1994, p.
1; 2005, p. 1; Service 1998, p. 1;
Worthington 2002, p. 1; 2002a, pp. 1-3).
Known extant populations are widely
disjunct, sometimes separated by more
than 200 miles (322 km). Populations in
the City of Roswell, Chaves County, and
Lake Valley, Sierra County, New
Mexico, appear to be extirpated
(NMRPTC 2006, p. 2; Sivinski 2005, p.
1).
Information on the persistence and
status of localities is lacking for many
areas historically occupied by Cirsium
wrightii. We are unaware of specific
information on population abundance,
or any year-round or long-term
monitoring data on C. wrightii in
Arizona, New Mexico or Mexico (see
also Sivinski 1996). In Texas, Cirsium
wrightii specimens have been confused
with C. texanum because of the
difficulty in distinguishing the two
species (Sivinski 1994, p. 1; 1994a, p. 1;
Sivinski 2007, p. 1). For these reasons,
the status of this species remains
unclear in its range in both the
southwestern United States and in
Mexico.
Five-Factor Evaluation
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533),
and its implementing regulations 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 Cirsium wrightii, as presented
in the petition and other information
available in our files, is substantial,
thereby indicating that the petitioned
action may be warranted. Our
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evaluation of this information is
presented below.
A. Present or Threatened Destruction,
Modification, or Curtailment of the
Species’ Habitat or Range
Information Provided in the Petition
The petitioner asserts that the most
significant threat to Cirsium wrightii is
the alteration of the hydrology of its rare
wetland habitat. Cirsium wrightii is a
wetland obligate, and populations have
a high potential for extirpation when
habitat dries due to water diversions,
draining of wetlands, or drought. The
petitioner makes the following claims:
(1) The extirpation of C. wrightii
populations in Chaves and Sierra
Counties, New Mexico, are likely linked
to the depletion of water through human
activity;
(2) Marshes along drainages in the
Sacramento Mountains have been
drained, but likely contained
populations of C. wrightii historically;
and
(3) Extant populations of C. wrightii in
Otero and Guadalupe Counties, New
Mexico, are currently threatened, and
will be threatened in the future, by
municipal water diversion and use, and
the draining and development of
wetlands.
The petitioner cites the U.S. Forest
Service (USFS) (2008) as support for the
assertion that private wells in Otero
County have increased since the 1950s.
The petitioner believes that these
private wells threaten the species by
diverting and draining water from
canyons that currently or historically
supported C. wrightii populations.
Finally, the petitioner believes that,
although the USFS considers C. wrightii
to be a sensitive species on the Lincoln
National Forest (see further discussion
under Factor D), it recently permitted
actions that may result in the
destruction of its habitat (e.g., see USFS
2008, entire document).
The petitioner asserts Cirsium wrightii
is threatened by alterations to the
hydrology of its rare wetland habitat, as
desert springs and cienegas (marshes)
are susceptible to drying or being
diverted (NMPTC 2006, p. 2;
Worthington 2002a, p. 3). Loss of water
from wetland or spring habitat occurs
naturally through changing
precipitation patterns or as a result of
human impacts from direct or indirect
water diversion (USFS 2008, p. 19). For
example, the C. wrightii population on
City of Roswell lands has been
extirpated as habitat at that location is
no longer suitable for the plant (New
Mexico Department of Game and Fish
2005, pp. 33-34; Sivinski 1996, p. 4).
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Cirsium wrightii occurrences in La Luz
Canyon in the Sacramento Mountains of
New Mexico are within municipal
supply watersheds, where pipelines
divert water to the City of Alamogordo
(Shomaker 2006, pp. 20, 26; USFS 2008,
p. 21). The petitioner indicates that:
(1) The City of Alamogordo holds
about 11,500 acre feet (1420 hectare
meters) per year in water rights on the
Lincoln National Forest and other lands
that they continue to use;
(2) The number of private wells in La
Luz and Fresnal Canyons in the
Sacramento Mountains has increased 94
percent since the 1950s; and
(3) These watersheds were recently
designated a critical management area,
where the New Mexico Office of the
State Engineer no longer permits new
non-domestic groundwater
appropriations (USFS 2008, p. 21).
The USFS (2008, p. 23) concluded
that water withdrawal would continue
to increase in this area and compound
the effects of the recent and ongoing
drought, leading to degradation of
wetland and riparian habitat. The USFS
(2008, p. 26) determined that Cirsium
wrightii occurrences in this area would
be affected by their issuance of a special
use permit to maintain and operate the
pipelines on USFS lands. Other C.
wrightii occurrences are within areas
where water is diverted for domestic
use, which may contribute to the drying
of its habitat (Sivinski 2006, p. 1).
The petitioner claims that the direct
effects of grazing on Cirsium wrightii are
not known and that Sivinski (1995, p. 5)
did not find any evidence of the plant
being grazed. Alternatively, the
petitioner asserts that cattle may
indirectly and adversely affect C.
wrightii by degrading its habitat,
changing soil structure and chemistry,
and reducing water quality.
Nevertheless, the petitioners note that
no studies specifically related to the
effects of livestock grazing on C. wrightii
have been conducted (NMRPTC 2006, p.
2). Sivinski (1995, p. 5) noted that if two
small springs in La Luz Canyon were
diverted for livestock use, C. wrightii
could potentially be impacted. The
petitioner does not detail ongoing or
future direct or indirect impacts to the
species from livestock.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
We reviewed Sivinski (1996, 2005a,
2006) and find the assertions made by
the petitioner to be reliable and
accurate. Sivinski (1994, pp.1-2; 1996,
p. 4; 2005, p. 1; 2006, p. 4) reported loss
or degradation of habitat in Chaves,
Otero, and Sierra Counties, New
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Mexico, areas that historically
supported Cirsium wrightii. The
population at the type locality from
Arizona has not been relocated and the
species may be extirpated from the State
(AGFD 2001, p. 1; Sivinski 1994, p. 1;
1996, p. 4). There are six general
confirmed locations in New Mexico,
each having occurrences within a few
miles of one another, one verified
population of a few plants in Presidio
County, Texas, and no locations
confirmed to be extant in Arizona and
Mexico (Sivinski 1996, pp. 2-5; Sivinski
2005, p. 1; 2006, p. 1; Worthington
2002a, p. 4).
Increased water extraction in the last
100 years has contributed to the
depletion of most surface spring systems
in the Chihuahuan Desert (see Karges
2003 and references therein). Moreover,
the appropriation of water rights from
springs for a ‘‘beneficial use,’’ such as
livestock water, farming, domestic use,
or recreational facilities, typically uses
points of diversion that can curtail
natural surface flows. Information in our
files indicates that aquifers in the
Sacramento Mountains are susceptible
to appropriation by existing water rights
and development of new water rights,
which may pose future threats to the
species (Service 2008, entire; USFS
2008, entire). For these reasons, we find
that the petition presents substantial
information that listing of the species
may be warranted due to the alteration
of wetland habitat occupied and needed
by C. wrightii. We intend to assess this
factor more thoroughly during the status
review for the species.
We have no information in our files
regarding grazing as a threat to C.
wrightii, nor did the petitioner provide
any information on observed or
potential effects of grazing.
We find that there is substantial
information in the petition and readily
available in our files to indicate Cirsium
wrightii may be threatened by the
present or threatened destruction,
modification, or curtailment of its
habitat as a result of the alteration of
desert springs, seeps, and wetland
habitats. We did not find substantial
information in the petition or readily
available in our files to indicate that
livestock grazing may be a threat to the
species; however, we will assess the
potential impacts of livestock grazing
during the status review for the species.
B. Overutilization for Commercial,
Recreational, Scientific, or Educational
Purposes
The petitioner provides no
information addressing this factor, and
we have no information in our files
indicating that listing of the species due
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46545
to overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes may be warranted. We intend
to assess this factor more thoroughly
during the status review for the species.
C. Disease or Predation
Information Provided in the Petition
The petitioner provides information
on an exotic weevil (Rhinocyllus
conicus) that was introduced into the
Great Plains to feed on various species
of thistles, and claims that this and
other native and exotic predator species
may threaten native Cirsium (thistle)
species. The petitioner provides no
information addressing impacts of
disease on Cirsium wrightii.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
Information in our files substantiates
that there have been intentional releases
of the exotic weevil to control Carduus
nutans (musk thistle) (Sivinski 1994, p.
2; 2007, p. 6; NMRPTC 2006, p. 2;
Bridge 2001, p. 1; AGFD 2001, p. 2).
This exotic weevil has recently been
found in the Sacramento Mountains in
habitat occupied by Cirsium wrightii
(Sivinski 2007, p. 6). Moreover, a native
predator, the stem borer weevil (Lixus
pervestitus) caused a widespread
premature stem death to the flower
heads of at least one population of the
endangered C. vinaceum (Sacramento
Mountains thistle), which co-occurrs
with C. wrightii (Sivinski 2007, pp. 812). It is unknown if the stem borer
weevil feeds on C. wrightii or has the
same level of impact; however, we will
assess these potential impacts during
the status review for the species.
We find that there is substantial
information in the petition and readily
available in our files to indicate Cirsium
wrightii may be threatened by predation.
We did not find substantial information
in the petition or readily available in
our files to indicate that disease may be
a threat to the species; however, we will
assess the potential impact of disease
during the status review for the species.
D. The Inadequacy of Existing
Regulatory Mechanisms
Information Provided in the Petition
The petitioner asserts that Cirsium
wrightii is not adequately protected by
Federal or State laws or policies to
prevent its endangerment or extinction.
The petitioner states that the species’
ranking in NatureServe was changed
from G3 (vulnerable) to G2 (imperiled)
in 2003 (NatureServe 2009, p. 1).
Similarly, its National Status ranking for
the U.S. is N2 (imperiled due to a
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restricted range and very few
populations) (NatureServe 2009, p. 2).
The petition reports that Cirsium
wrightii is listed as endangered by the
State of New Mexico; however, the
petitioner claims that this designation
provides little regulatory protection for
the habitat of the species. The petition
reports that Cirsium wrightii is on the
Regional Forester’s Sensitive Species
List and is noted by the Service to be a
species of concern (USFS 2008, p. 35);
however, the petitioner claims that
these designations provide no
protection or mitigation for impacts to
the species.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
We reviewed these designations and
find that the species receives no
protection from the NatureServe
designations because the designation
lists only serve to notify the public of
the species’ status and do not require
any conservation or management
actions or provide any regulatory
authority for conservation of species.
The State of New Mexico lists Cirsium
wrightii as endangered. As such, C.
wrightii is protected from unauthorized
collection, transport, or sale by the New
Mexico Endangered Plant Species Act,
9-10-10 NMSA. This law prohibits the
taking, possession, transportation and
exportation, selling or offering for sale
any listed plant species. Listed species
can only be collected under permit from
the State of New Mexico for scientific
studies and impact mitigation; however,
this law does not provide any protection
for C. wrightii habitat. There are no
statutory requirements under the
jurisdiction of the State of New Mexico
that serve as an effective regulatory
mechanism for reducing or eliminating
the threats (see Factors A and C above)
that may adversely affect the C. wrightii
and its habitat. There are also no
requirements under the New Mexico
State statutes to develop a recovery plan
that will restore and protect existing
habitat for the species. Therefore, the
species does not have a recovery plan,
conservation plan, or conservation
agreement. For these reasons, we find
that the petition contains substantial
information that existing New Mexico
State regulatory mechanisms may
currently be inadequate to protect C.
wrightii.
The USFS is required to analyze the
impacts on its sensitive species,
including C. wrightii, in all applicable
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) documents (42 U.S.C. 4321 et.
seq.). On April 21, 2008, a new USFS
planning rule (73 FR 21468) was made
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final that detailed how sensitive species
would be analyzed in project planning
and review. However, on June 30, 2009,
the United States District Court for the
Northern District of California issued a
decision in Citizens for Better Forestry
v. United States Department of
Agriculture, No. C 08-1927 CW (N.D.
Cal. June 30, 2009). The court enjoined
the USFS from implementing and using
the 2008 planning rule and remanded
the matter to them for further
proceedings. The Government has not
yet determined whether to appeal the
District Court’s June 30, 2009 decision
to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Therefore, the protections that may be
afforded the species due to its USFS
sensitive species status are unclear, and
we will assess this factor more
thoroughly during the status review for
the species.
Similarly, the petitioner notes that the
Service has identified Cirsium wrightii
as a species of concern (Service 2009).
While not a formal legal designation
under Service regulations, a species of
concern is defined as a taxon for which
further biological research and field
study are needed to resolve its
conservation status or which is
considered sensitive, rare, or declining
on lists maintained by Natural Heritage
Programs, State wildlife agencies, other
Federal agencies, or professional/
academic scientific societies. Species of
concern are identified for planning
purposes only and the title confers no
regulatory protection.
Neither the petition nor our files
provide information about existing
regulatory mechanisms for the species if
it is extant in Arizona, Texas, or Mexico.
As such, we found no information that
the lack of regulatory mechanisms in
Arizona, Texas, or Mexico is affecting
the continued existence of Cirsium
wrightii.
We find that there is substantial
information in the petition and readily
available in our files to indicate that
Cirsium wrightii may receive inadequate
protection from its designation as a
USFS sensitive species and from current
regulatory mechanisms in the State of
New Mexico. It receives no regulatory
protection from the NatureServe
designations or from the Service
designation as a species of concern,
because these lists only serve to notify
the public of the species’ status and do
not require any conservation or
management actions. The petitioner
does not provide substantial
information on the inadequacy of other
existing regulatory mechanisms,
including those which may be in place
in Texas, Arizona, or Mexico. In
summary, we find that there is
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substantial information in the petition
and readily available in our files to
indicate C. wrightii may be threatened
by the inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms.
E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors
Affecting the Species’ Continued
Existence
Information Presented in the Petition
The petitioner reports that drought
may threaten Cirsium wrightii, as parts
of the Sacramento Mountains have
experienced extreme drought conditions
in recent years, creating conditions that
are not conducive to the species’
occupation (USFS 2008, p. 21).
The petitioner notes that Cirsium
wrightii is known to hybridize with C.
texanum and C. vinaceum, threatening
the genetic integrity of the species
(Correll and Johnston 1979, p. 1719;
NMRPTC 2006, pp. 1-2).
The petitioner also claims that
Cirsium wrightii is threatened by
climate change. The petitioner does not
cite any information or publications in
support of their claim on a correlation
between climate change and the
persistence of the species. The
petitioner claims that climate change
further complicates the impact of
drought and water diversions, and
suggests that regional landscape-scale
vegetation changes from climate change
are strong indicators for the potential
loss of wetland habitat. The petitioner
cites Breshears et al. (2005) as support;
however, the authors (Breshears et al.
(2005)) report on Pinus edulis (pinyon
pine) in the Jemez Mountains, New
Mexico, and not changes to wetland
habitat or even vegetation changes
within the range of C. wrightii.
The petitioner also claims that
introduced plant species pose a threat to
Cirsium wrightii through competition.
The petitioner believes that Elaeagnus
angustifolia (Russian olive), Tamarix
spp. (salt cedar), and Lythrum spp.
(loosestrife) can severely impact
occurrences of C. wrightii.
The petitioner asserts that some
occurrences of Cirsium wrightii are
threatened by mechanical and herbicide
treatments by individuals who believe
they are eradicating invasive plants.
Evaluation of Information Provided in
the Petition and Available in Service
Files
Information in our files supports the
petitioner’s claim that Cirsium wrightii
may be threatened by drought. Sivinski
(2005a, pp. 3-4) reports that springs and
wet valleys have been affected by
drought in at least three canyons of the
Sacramento Mountains, New Mexico,
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resulting in reduced C. wrightii
populations.
Information in our files substantiates
the petitioner’s claim that Cirsium
wrightii hybridizes with other species.
For example, Cirsium species observed
at Rattlesnake Springs (Carlsbad
Caverns National Park), New Mexico,
show characteristics that are
intermediate between C. wrightii and C.
texanum (NMRPTC 2006, pp. 1-2). This
Cirsium population blooms in May
rather than in August through October,
as is typical of C. wrightii. C. wrightii
sometimes occurs with the threatened C.
vinaceum in the Sacramento Mountains,
where a few hybrids between these rare
taxa have been observed; however,
hybrid plants are apparently uncommon
(Service 2008a, p. 13; Worthington
2002, p. 1). We will assess hybridization
more thoroughly during the status
review for the species.
We find the information presented in
the petition and readily available in our
files on the subject of climate change to
be insufficiently specific to C. wrightii
to be conclusive; however, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) states that warming of
the climate is unequivocal and indicates
that drying trends in the Southwest are
likely to persist or worsen (IPCC 2007a,
p. 15; IPCC 2007b, p. 887). We intend
to investigate the effects of climate
change on C. wrightii further in the
status review for the species.
We find the information cited on the
potential threat of introduced species, E.
angustifolia and Tamarix spp, to be
generic in nature and not specific to C.
wrightii or its habitat. Sivinski (1996)
reports that E. angustifolia and Tamarix
spp. are becoming dominate in many
riparian and wetland areas, but that
these species likely do not threaten C.
wrightii because it grows in saturated
substrates that are not suitable habitat
for these exotic trees; however, there is
substantial information that indicates
that Lythrum spp. could severely impact
the habitat of C. wrightii at some point
in the foreseeable future. Sivinski (1996,
p. 6) reports that this exotic species has
not yet spread to the interior Southwest,
but is spreading throughout the west
coast States.
We find that there is substantial
information in the petition and readily
available in our files to indicate Cirsium
wrightii may be threatened by drought
and potential competition from Lythrum
spp. While hybridization between C.
wrightii and other Cirsium species has
been observed, it is uncommon, and
does not appear to be a significant threat
to C. wrightii. We did not find
substantial information in the petition
or readily available in our files to
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indicate that C. wrightii may be
threatened by the effects of climate
change or competition from Elaeagnus
angustifolia or Tamarix spp; however,
we will assess these potential impacts
during the status review for the species.
Finding
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
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
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.
Based on our evaluation of the
information provided in the petition, we
find that the petition presents
substantial scientific information
indicating that listing Cirsium wrightii
may be warranted.
The petitioner presents substantial
information indicating that Cirsium
wrightii may be threatened by Factor A
(the present or threatened destruction,
modification, or curtailment of its
habitat or range), Factor C (predation),
Factor D (inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms), and Factor E
(other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence). The
petitioner does not present substantial
information that Factor B
(overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes) is currently, or may be in the
future, a threat to C. wrightii. Based on
this review and evaluation, we find that
the petition presents substantial
scientific or commercial information
that listing C. wrightii throughout all or
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46547
a significant portion of its range may be
warranted due to current and future
threats under Factors A, C, D, and E.
Therefore, we are initiating a status
review to determine whether listing C.
wrightii under the Act is warranted. We
will issue a 12–month finding as to
whether any of the petitioned actions
are warranted. To ensure that the status
review is comprehensive, we request
scientific and commercial information
regarding C. wrightii.
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 review 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.
We encourage interested parties to
continue gathering data that will assist
with the conservation of Cirsium
wrightii. The petitioner requests that
critical habitat be designated for this
species. If we determine in our 12–
month finding that listing C. wrightii is
warranted, we will address the
designation of critical habitat at the time
of the proposed rulemaking.
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited
in this finding is available upon request
from the New Mexico Ecological
Services Office (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT).
Author
The primary authors of this rule 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: August 24, 2009.
Daniel M. Ashe,
Acting Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. E9–21755 Filed 9–9– 09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–S
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[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 174 (Thursday, September 10, 2009)]
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[FR Doc No: E9-21755]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R2-ES-2009-0060]
[92210-1111-0000-B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 90-Day Finding on
a Petition to List Cirsium wrightii (Wright's marsh thistle) as
Threatened or Endangered with Critical Habitat
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of 90-day petition finding and initiation of a status
review.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce a
90-day finding on a petition to list Cirsium wrightii (Wright's marsh
thistle) as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act
of 1973, as amended, and designate critical habitat. 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 of the species to determine if the
petitioned action is warranted. To ensure that the status review is
comprehensive, we request scientific and commercial data regarding
Cirsium wrightii. At the conclusion of this review, we will issue a 12-
month finding to determine if the petitioned action is warranted. 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 September 10,
2009. To allow us adequate time to conduct this review, we request that
we receive information on or before November 9, 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-2009-0060 and then
follow the instructions for submitting comments.
U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public Comments Processing,
Attn: FWS-R2-ES-2009-0060; 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 received on https://www.regulations.gov. This generally means that we will post any
personal information you provide us (see the Information Solicited
section below for more details).
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 (TTD) may call
the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Information
When we make a finding that a petition presents substantial
information indicating that listing a species may be warranted, we are
[[Page 46543]]
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 request information
on the status of Cirsium wrightii. We request information from the
public, other concerned governmental agencies, Native American Tribes,
the scientific community, industry, or any other interested parties
concerning the status of C. wrightii. We are seeking information
regarding:
(1) The historical and current status and distribution of the
Wright's marsh thistle, its biology and ecology, and ongoing
conservation measures for the species and its habitat; 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 or regulatory mechanisms; or
(e) Other natural or manmade factors affecting its continued
existence and threats to the species or its habitat.
If we determine that listing Cirsium wrightii is warranted, it is
our intent to propose critical habitat to the maximum extent prudent
and determinable at the time we would propose to list the species.
Therefore, with regard to areas within the geographical range currently
occupied by C. wrightii, 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 C. wrightii that are essential to the conservation of
the species. Please provide specific comments and information as to
what, if any, critical habitat you think we should propose for
designation if the species is proposed for listing, and why that
proposed habitat meets the requirements of the Act.
We will base our 12-month finding on a review of the best
scientific and commercial information available, including information
we receive during this public comment period. Please note that comments
merely stating support 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 petitioned action, as provided
in section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Act.
You may submit your information concerning this finding 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 personal identifying
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.
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 at
the time we make the determination. 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 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 information was presented, we
are required to promptly commence a review of the status of the
species.
In making this 90-day finding, we based our decision on information
provided by the petitioner, as well as information available in our
files and on the Internet that was directly relevant to the information
raised in the petition at the time we received the petition. We
evaluated that information in accordance with 50 CFR 424.14(b). Our
process for making this 90-day finding under section 4(b)(3)(A) of the
Act and Sec. 424.14(b) of our regulations is limited to a determination
of whether the information contained in the petition meets the
``substantial information'' threshold.
Petition
On October 15, 2008 we received a petition from the WildEarth
Guardians, dated October 9, 2008, requesting that we list Cirsium
wrightii (Wright's marsh thistle) as threatened or endangered under the
Act. Additionally, the petitioner requested that critical habitat be
designated concurrent with listing of C. wrightii. The petition clearly
identified itself as such and included the requisite identification
information for the petitioners, as required in 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. We also stated that, to the maximum extent practicable, we
would address their petition within 90 days.
The petition asserted that water diversion, habitat loss and
degradation through current livestock grazing, inadequate regulatory
mechanisms, weed control, non-native species, drought, and climate
change threaten C. wrightii. 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 December 18, 2008, we requested
that the petitioner provide references. On February 13, 2009, the
petitioner provided additional references.
Previous Federal Actions
There have been no previous Federal actions concerning this
species.
Species Information
Cirsium wrightii is a wetland obligate species that was originally
collected in 1851 at San Bernardino Cienaga, Cochise County, Arizona
(Gray 1853, p. 101; Smithsonian 1849, p. 1).
[[Page 46544]]
Historically, the species was found in Arizona; New Mexico; and
Chihuahua, Mexico (Gray 1853, p. 101; Coulter 1891, p. 244; Kearney and
Peebles 1951, p. 952; Correll and Johnston 1970, p. 1719; Service 1995,
p. 1). An occurrence of the species in western Texas has been verified
from a few plants in Presidio County; however, most specimens from
Texas have recently been identified as Cirsium texanum (Texas thistle),
rather than C. wrightii (Sivinski 1994a, p. 1; 1996, p. 2; 2006, p. 1;
Worthington 2002a, p. 4). This species is easily confused in herbarium
collections with C. wrightii (Sivinski 1994a, p. 1; 1996, p. 2; 2006,
p. 1; Worthington 2002a, p. 4). In the field, C. wrightii differs from
C. texanum in being a wetland obligate (almost always occurs in
wetlands) with thick succulent leaves (New Mexico Rare Plant Technical
Council (NMRPTC) 2006, p. 1).
Cirsium wrightii is a biennial (a plant completing development in 2
years, flowering its second year) or a weak monocarpic perennial (a
plant that flowers, sets seed, then dies) in the sunflower family
(Asteraceae). The plant is prickly with short black spines and a 0.9-
to-2.4-meter (m) (3-to-8-foot (ft)) single stalk covered with succulent
leaves (Sivinski 1996, p. 1; Arizona Game and Fish Department (AGFD)
2001, p. 1). Numerous slender flowering branches emerge from the stalk,
starting about one-third up the length of the plant. Branches are
terminated by one or a few small flowering heads, which have numerous
slender phyllaries (a modified leaf associated with the flower)
(Sivinski 1996, p. 1). Flowers are white to pale pink in areas of the
Sacramento Mountains, but are vivid pink in the Santa Rosa locality
(Sivinski 1996, p. 1). The species occurs in wet, alkaline soils in
spring seeps and marshy edges of streams and ponds between 1,130 and
2,600 m (3,450 and 8,500 ft) in elevation (NMRPTC 2006, p. 1; Sivinski
1996, p. 1).
In the New Mexico portion of the species' range, Cirsium wrightii
appears to be an obligate of seeps, springs, and wetlands (NMRPTC 2006;
Sivinski 1996; Service 1998; Worthington 2002a, p. 2). Plants commonly
found in areas inhabited by this species include Scirpus spp.
(bulrush), Salix spp. (willow), Baccharis glutinosa (seepwillow),
Helianthus paradoxus (Pecos sunflower), Juncus spp. (rush), and Typha
spp. (cattail) (New Mexico Botanist 2004, p. 2; Sivinski 1996, pp. 2-5;
Worthington 2002a, pp 1-2).
The petition and information in our files indicate that Cirsium
wrightii populations may be declining. The species is believed to be
extant in New Mexico; however, it is unclear whether the species has
been extirpated from Arizona, Texas, and Mexico (Worthington 2002a, p.
4).
In New Mexico, C. wrightii is known from the Pecos River Valley and
the west slope of the Sacramento Mountains (Sivinski 1996, p. 2), in
Chavez, Guadalupe, Otero, and Socorro Counties, New Mexico (Bridge
2001, p. 1; New Mexico Botanist 2004, p. 2; NMRPTC 2006, p. 1; Sivinski
1994, p. 1; 2005, p. 1; Service 1998, p. 1; Worthington 2002, p. 1;
2002a, pp. 1-3). Known extant populations are widely disjunct,
sometimes separated by more than 200 miles (322 km). Populations in the
City of Roswell, Chaves County, and Lake Valley, Sierra County, New
Mexico, appear to be extirpated (NMRPTC 2006, p. 2; Sivinski 2005, p.
1).
Information on the persistence and status of localities is lacking
for many areas historically occupied by Cirsium wrightii. We are
unaware of specific information on population abundance, or any year-
round or long-term monitoring data on C. wrightii in Arizona, New
Mexico or Mexico (see also Sivinski 1996). In Texas, Cirsium wrightii
specimens have been confused with C. texanum because of the difficulty
in distinguishing the two species (Sivinski 1994, p. 1; 1994a, p. 1;
Sivinski 2007, p. 1). For these reasons, the status of this species
remains unclear in its range in both the southwestern United States and
in Mexico.
Five-Factor Evaluation
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533), and its implementing
regulations 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 Cirsium wrightii, 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. Present or Threatened Destruction, Modification, or Curtailment of
the Species' Habitat or Range
Information Provided in the Petition
The petitioner asserts that the most significant threat to Cirsium
wrightii is the alteration of the hydrology of its rare wetland
habitat. Cirsium wrightii is a wetland obligate, and populations have a
high potential for extirpation when habitat dries due to water
diversions, draining of wetlands, or drought. The petitioner makes the
following claims:
(1) The extirpation of C. wrightii populations in Chaves and Sierra
Counties, New Mexico, are likely linked to the depletion of water
through human activity;
(2) Marshes along drainages in the Sacramento Mountains have been
drained, but likely contained populations of C. wrightii historically;
and
(3) Extant populations of C. wrightii in Otero and Guadalupe
Counties, New Mexico, are currently threatened, and will be threatened
in the future, by municipal water diversion and use, and the draining
and development of wetlands.
The petitioner cites the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) (2008) as
support for the assertion that private wells in Otero County have
increased since the 1950s. The petitioner believes that these private
wells threaten the species by diverting and draining water from canyons
that currently or historically supported C. wrightii populations.
Finally, the petitioner believes that, although the USFS considers C.
wrightii to be a sensitive species on the Lincoln National Forest (see
further discussion under Factor D), it recently permitted actions that
may result in the destruction of its habitat (e.g., see USFS 2008,
entire document).
The petitioner asserts Cirsium wrightii is threatened by
alterations to the hydrology of its rare wetland habitat, as desert
springs and cienegas (marshes) are susceptible to drying or being
diverted (NMPTC 2006, p. 2; Worthington 2002a, p. 3). Loss of water
from wetland or spring habitat occurs naturally through changing
precipitation patterns or as a result of human impacts from direct or
indirect water diversion (USFS 2008, p. 19). For example, the C.
wrightii population on City of Roswell lands has been extirpated as
habitat at that location is no longer suitable for the plant (New
Mexico Department of Game and Fish 2005, pp. 33-34; Sivinski 1996, p.
4).
[[Page 46545]]
Cirsium wrightii occurrences in La Luz Canyon in the Sacramento
Mountains of New Mexico are within municipal supply watersheds, where
pipelines divert water to the City of Alamogordo (Shomaker 2006, pp.
20, 26; USFS 2008, p. 21). The petitioner indicates that:
(1) The City of Alamogordo holds about 11,500 acre feet (1420
hectare meters) per year in water rights on the Lincoln National Forest
and other lands that they continue to use;
(2) The number of private wells in La Luz and Fresnal Canyons in
the Sacramento Mountains has increased 94 percent since the 1950s; and
(3) These watersheds were recently designated a critical management
area, where the New Mexico Office of the State Engineer no longer
permits new non-domestic groundwater appropriations (USFS 2008, p. 21).
The USFS (2008, p. 23) concluded that water withdrawal would
continue to increase in this area and compound the effects of the
recent and ongoing drought, leading to degradation of wetland and
riparian habitat. The USFS (2008, p. 26) determined that Cirsium
wrightii occurrences in this area would be affected by their issuance
of a special use permit to maintain and operate the pipelines on USFS
lands. Other C. wrightii occurrences are within areas where water is
diverted for domestic use, which may contribute to the drying of its
habitat (Sivinski 2006, p. 1).
The petitioner claims that the direct effects of grazing on Cirsium
wrightii are not known and that Sivinski (1995, p. 5) did not find any
evidence of the plant being grazed. Alternatively, the petitioner
asserts that cattle may indirectly and adversely affect C. wrightii by
degrading its habitat, changing soil structure and chemistry, and
reducing water quality. Nevertheless, the petitioners note that no
studies specifically related to the effects of livestock grazing on C.
wrightii have been conducted (NMRPTC 2006, p. 2). Sivinski (1995, p. 5)
noted that if two small springs in La Luz Canyon were diverted for
livestock use, C. wrightii could potentially be impacted. The
petitioner does not detail ongoing or future direct or indirect impacts
to the species from livestock.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
We reviewed Sivinski (1996, 2005a, 2006) and find the assertions
made by the petitioner to be reliable and accurate. Sivinski (1994,
pp.1-2; 1996, p. 4; 2005, p. 1; 2006, p. 4) reported loss or
degradation of habitat in Chaves, Otero, and Sierra Counties, New
Mexico, areas that historically supported Cirsium wrightii. The
population at the type locality from Arizona has not been relocated and
the species may be extirpated from the State (AGFD 2001, p. 1; Sivinski
1994, p. 1; 1996, p. 4). There are six general confirmed locations in
New Mexico, each having occurrences within a few miles of one another,
one verified population of a few plants in Presidio County, Texas, and
no locations confirmed to be extant in Arizona and Mexico (Sivinski
1996, pp. 2-5; Sivinski 2005, p. 1; 2006, p. 1; Worthington 2002a, p.
4).
Increased water extraction in the last 100 years has contributed to
the depletion of most surface spring systems in the Chihuahuan Desert
(see Karges 2003 and references therein). Moreover, the appropriation
of water rights from springs for a ``beneficial use,'' such as
livestock water, farming, domestic use, or recreational facilities,
typically uses points of diversion that can curtail natural surface
flows. Information in our files indicates that aquifers in the
Sacramento Mountains are susceptible to appropriation by existing water
rights and development of new water rights, which may pose future
threats to the species (Service 2008, entire; USFS 2008, entire). For
these reasons, we find that the petition presents substantial
information that listing of the species may be warranted due to the
alteration of wetland habitat occupied and needed by C. wrightii. We
intend to assess this factor more thoroughly during the status review
for the species.
We have no information in our files regarding grazing as a threat
to C. wrightii, nor did the petitioner provide any information on
observed or potential effects of grazing.
We find that there is substantial information in the petition and
readily available in our files to indicate Cirsium wrightii may be
threatened by the present or threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat as a result of the alteration of desert
springs, seeps, and wetland habitats. We did not find substantial
information in the petition or readily available in our files to
indicate that livestock grazing may be a threat to the species;
however, we will assess the potential impacts of livestock grazing
during the status review for the species.
B. Overutilization for Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or
Educational Purposes
The petitioner provides no information addressing this factor, and
we have no information in our files indicating that listing of the
species due to overutilization for commercial, recreational,
scientific, or educational purposes may be warranted. We intend to
assess this factor more thoroughly during the status review for the
species.
C. Disease or Predation
Information Provided in the Petition
The petitioner provides information on an exotic weevil
(Rhinocyllus conicus) that was introduced into the Great Plains to feed
on various species of thistles, and claims that this and other native
and exotic predator species may threaten native Cirsium (thistle)
species. The petitioner provides no information addressing impacts of
disease on Cirsium wrightii.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
Information in our files substantiates that there have been
intentional releases of the exotic weevil to control Carduus nutans
(musk thistle) (Sivinski 1994, p. 2; 2007, p. 6; NMRPTC 2006, p. 2;
Bridge 2001, p. 1; AGFD 2001, p. 2). This exotic weevil has recently
been found in the Sacramento Mountains in habitat occupied by Cirsium
wrightii (Sivinski 2007, p. 6). Moreover, a native predator, the stem
borer weevil (Lixus pervestitus) caused a widespread premature stem
death to the flower heads of at least one population of the endangered
C. vinaceum (Sacramento Mountains thistle), which co-occurrs with C.
wrightii (Sivinski 2007, pp. 8-12). It is unknown if the stem borer
weevil feeds on C. wrightii or has the same level of impact; however,
we will assess these potential impacts during the status review for the
species.
We find that there is substantial information in the petition and
readily available in our files to indicate Cirsium wrightii may be
threatened by predation. We did not find substantial information in the
petition or readily available in our files to indicate that disease may
be a threat to the species; however, we will assess the potential
impact of disease during the status review for the species.
D. The Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
Information Provided in the Petition
The petitioner asserts that Cirsium wrightii is not adequately
protected by Federal or State laws or policies to prevent its
endangerment or extinction. The petitioner states that the species'
ranking in NatureServe was changed from G3 (vulnerable) to G2
(imperiled) in 2003 (NatureServe 2009, p. 1). Similarly, its National
Status ranking for the U.S. is N2 (imperiled due to a
[[Page 46546]]
restricted range and very few populations) (NatureServe 2009, p. 2).
The petition reports that Cirsium wrightii is listed as endangered by
the State of New Mexico; however, the petitioner claims that this
designation provides little regulatory protection for the habitat of
the species. The petition reports that Cirsium wrightii is on the
Regional Forester's Sensitive Species List and is noted by the Service
to be a species of concern (USFS 2008, p. 35); however, the petitioner
claims that these designations provide no protection or mitigation for
impacts to the species.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
We reviewed these designations and find that the species receives
no protection from the NatureServe designations because the designation
lists only serve to notify the public of the species' status and do not
require any conservation or management actions or provide any
regulatory authority for conservation of species.
The State of New Mexico lists Cirsium wrightii as endangered. As
such, C. wrightii is protected from unauthorized collection, transport,
or sale by the New Mexico Endangered Plant Species Act, 9-10-10 NMSA.
This law prohibits the taking, possession, transportation and
exportation, selling or offering for sale any listed plant species.
Listed species can only be collected under permit from the State of New
Mexico for scientific studies and impact mitigation; however, this law
does not provide any protection for C. wrightii habitat. There are no
statutory requirements under the jurisdiction of the State of New
Mexico that serve as an effective regulatory mechanism for reducing or
eliminating the threats (see Factors A and C above) that may adversely
affect the C. wrightii and its habitat. There are also no requirements
under the New Mexico State statutes to develop a recovery plan that
will restore and protect existing habitat for the species. Therefore,
the species does not have a recovery plan, conservation plan, or
conservation agreement. For these reasons, we find that the petition
contains substantial information that existing New Mexico State
regulatory mechanisms may currently be inadequate to protect C.
wrightii.
The USFS is required to analyze the impacts on its sensitive
species, including C. wrightii, in all applicable National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) documents (42 U.S.C. 4321 et. seq.). On
April 21, 2008, a new USFS planning rule (73 FR 21468) was made final
that detailed how sensitive species would be analyzed in project
planning and review. However, on June 30, 2009, the United States
District Court for the Northern District of California issued a
decision in Citizens for Better Forestry v. United States Department of
Agriculture, No. C 08-1927 CW (N.D. Cal. June 30, 2009). The court
enjoined the USFS from implementing and using the 2008 planning rule
and remanded the matter to them for further proceedings. The Government
has not yet determined whether to appeal the District Court's June 30,
2009 decision to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Therefore, the
protections that may be afforded the species due to its USFS sensitive
species status are unclear, and we will assess this factor more
thoroughly during the status review for the species.
Similarly, the petitioner notes that the Service has identified
Cirsium wrightii as a species of concern (Service 2009). While not a
formal legal designation under Service regulations, a species of
concern is defined as a taxon for which further biological research and
field study are needed to resolve its conservation status or which is
considered sensitive, rare, or declining on lists maintained by Natural
Heritage Programs, State wildlife agencies, other Federal agencies, or
professional/academic scientific societies. Species of concern are
identified for planning purposes only and the title confers no
regulatory protection.
Neither the petition nor our files provide information about
existing regulatory mechanisms for the species if it is extant in
Arizona, Texas, or Mexico. As such, we found no information that the
lack of regulatory mechanisms in Arizona, Texas, or Mexico is affecting
the continued existence of Cirsium wrightii.
We find that there is substantial information in the petition and
readily available in our files to indicate that Cirsium wrightii may
receive inadequate protection from its designation as a USFS sensitive
species and from current regulatory mechanisms in the State of New
Mexico. It receives no regulatory protection from the NatureServe
designations or from the Service designation as a species of concern,
because these lists only serve to notify the public of the species'
status and do not require any conservation or management actions. The
petitioner does not provide substantial information on the inadequacy
of other existing regulatory mechanisms, including those which may be
in place in Texas, Arizona, or Mexico. In summary, we find that there
is substantial information in the petition and readily available in our
files to indicate C. wrightii may be threatened by the inadequacy of
existing regulatory mechanisms.
E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors Affecting the Species' Continued
Existence
Information Presented in the Petition
The petitioner reports that drought may threaten Cirsium wrightii,
as parts of the Sacramento Mountains have experienced extreme drought
conditions in recent years, creating conditions that are not conducive
to the species' occupation (USFS 2008, p. 21).
The petitioner notes that Cirsium wrightii is known to hybridize
with C. texanum and C. vinaceum, threatening the genetic integrity of
the species (Correll and Johnston 1979, p. 1719; NMRPTC 2006, pp. 1-2).
The petitioner also claims that Cirsium wrightii is threatened by
climate change. The petitioner does not cite any information or
publications in support of their claim on a correlation between climate
change and the persistence of the species. The petitioner claims that
climate change further complicates the impact of drought and water
diversions, and suggests that regional landscape-scale vegetation
changes from climate change are strong indicators for the potential
loss of wetland habitat. The petitioner cites Breshears et al. (2005)
as support; however, the authors (Breshears et al. (2005)) report on
Pinus edulis (pinyon pine) in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, and not
changes to wetland habitat or even vegetation changes within the range
of C. wrightii.
The petitioner also claims that introduced plant species pose a
threat to Cirsium wrightii through competition. The petitioner believes
that Elaeagnus angustifolia (Russian olive), Tamarix spp. (salt cedar),
and Lythrum spp. (loosestrife) can severely impact occurrences of C.
wrightii.
The petitioner asserts that some occurrences of Cirsium wrightii
are threatened by mechanical and herbicide treatments by individuals
who believe they are eradicating invasive plants.
Evaluation of Information Provided in the Petition and Available in
Service Files
Information in our files supports the petitioner's claim that
Cirsium wrightii may be threatened by drought. Sivinski (2005a, pp. 3-
4) reports that springs and wet valleys have been affected by drought
in at least three canyons of the Sacramento Mountains, New Mexico,
[[Page 46547]]
resulting in reduced C. wrightii populations.
Information in our files substantiates the petitioner's claim that
Cirsium wrightii hybridizes with other species. For example, Cirsium
species observed at Rattlesnake Springs (Carlsbad Caverns National
Park), New Mexico, show characteristics that are intermediate between
C. wrightii and C. texanum (NMRPTC 2006, pp. 1-2). This Cirsium
population blooms in May rather than in August through October, as is
typical of C. wrightii. C. wrightii sometimes occurs with the
threatened C. vinaceum in the Sacramento Mountains, where a few hybrids
between these rare taxa have been observed; however, hybrid plants are
apparently uncommon (Service 2008a, p. 13; Worthington 2002, p. 1). We
will assess hybridization more thoroughly during the status review for
the species.
We find the information presented in the petition and readily
available in our files on the subject of climate change to be
insufficiently specific to C. wrightii to be conclusive; however, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) states that warming of
the climate is unequivocal and indicates that drying trends in the
Southwest are likely to persist or worsen (IPCC 2007a, p. 15; IPCC
2007b, p. 887). We intend to investigate the effects of climate change
on C. wrightii further in the status review for the species.
We find the information cited on the potential threat of introduced
species, E. angustifolia and Tamarix spp, to be generic in nature and
not specific to C. wrightii or its habitat. Sivinski (1996) reports
that E. angustifolia and Tamarix spp. are becoming dominate in many
riparian and wetland areas, but that these species likely do not
threaten C. wrightii because it grows in saturated substrates that are
not suitable habitat for these exotic trees; however, there is
substantial information that indicates that Lythrum spp. could severely
impact the habitat of C. wrightii at some point in the foreseeable
future. Sivinski (1996, p. 6) reports that this exotic species has not
yet spread to the interior Southwest, but is spreading throughout the
west coast States.
We find that there is substantial information in the petition and
readily available in our files to indicate Cirsium wrightii may be
threatened by drought and potential competition from Lythrum spp. While
hybridization between C. wrightii and other Cirsium species has been
observed, it is uncommon, and does not appear to be a significant
threat to C. wrightii. We did not find substantial information in the
petition or readily available in our files to indicate that C. wrightii
may be threatened by the effects of climate change or competition from
Elaeagnus angustifolia or Tamarix spp; however, we will assess these
potential impacts during the status review for the species.
Finding
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 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 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. Based on our evaluation of the
information provided in the petition, we find that the petition
presents substantial scientific information indicating that listing
Cirsium wrightii may be warranted.
The petitioner presents substantial information indicating that
Cirsium wrightii may be threatened by Factor A (the present or
threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of its habitat or
range), Factor C (predation), Factor D (inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms), and Factor E (other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence). The petitioner does not present
substantial information that Factor B (overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational purposes) is currently, or may
be in the future, a threat to C. wrightii. Based on this review and
evaluation, we find that the petition presents substantial scientific
or commercial information that listing C. wrightii throughout all or a
significant portion of its range may be warranted due to current and
future threats under Factors A, C, D, and E. Therefore, we are
initiating a status review to determine whether listing C. wrightii
under the Act is warranted. We will issue a 12-month finding as to
whether any of the petitioned actions are warranted. To ensure that the
status review is comprehensive, we request scientific and commercial
information regarding C. wrightii.
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 review 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.
We encourage interested parties to continue gathering data that
will assist with the conservation of Cirsium wrightii. The petitioner
requests that critical habitat be designated for this species. If we
determine in our 12-month finding that listing C. wrightii is
warranted, we will address the designation of critical habitat at the
time of the proposed rulemaking.
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited in this finding is
available upon request from the New Mexico Ecological Services Office
(see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Author
The primary authors of this rule 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: August 24, 2009.
Daniel M. Ashe,
Acting Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. E9-21755 Filed 9-9- 09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-S