Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revised 12-Month Finding to List the Upper Missouri River Distinct Population Segment of Arctic Grayling as Endangered or Threatened, 54708-54753 [2010-22038]
Download as PDF
54708
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R6-ES-2009-0065]
[MO 92210-0-0008-B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Revised 12-Month Finding
to List the Upper Missouri River
Distinct Population Segment of Arctic
Grayling as Endangered or Threatened
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of revised 12–month
finding.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service/USFWS),
announce a revised 12–month finding
on a petition to list the upper Missouri
River Distinct Population Segment
(Missouri River DPS) of Arctic grayling
(Thymallus arcticus) as endangered or
threatened under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended. After
review of all available scientific and
commercial information, we find that
listing the upper Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling as endangered or
threatened is warranted. However,
listing the upper Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling is currently precluded
by higher priority actions to amend the
Lists of Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife and Plants. Upon publication
of this 12–month finding, we will add
the upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling to our candidate species list.
We will develop a proposed rule to list
this DPS as our priorities allow. We will
make any determination on critical
habitat during development of the
proposed listing rule. In the interim, we
will address the status of this DPS
through our annual Candidate Notice of
Review (CNOR).
DATES: The finding announced in this
document was made on September 8,
2010.
SUMMARY:
This finding is available on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket Number
FWS-R6-ES-2009-0065. Supporting
documentation we used in preparing
this finding is available for public
inspection, by appointment, during
normal business hours at the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Montana Field
Office, 585 Shepard Way, Helena, MT
59601. Please submit any new
information, materials, comments, or
questions concerning this finding to the
above street address (Attention: Arctic
grayling).
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Mark Wilson, Field Supervisor,
Montana Field Office (see ADDRESSES);
by telephone at 406-449-5225; or by
facsimile at 406-449-5339. Persons who
use a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (ESA)
(16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), requires that,
for any petition containing substantial
scientific or commercial information
indicating that listing the species may
be warranted, we make a finding within
12 months of the date of receipt of the
petition. In this finding, we determine
that the petitioned action is: (a) Not
warranted, (b) warranted, or (c)
warranted, but immediate proposal of a
regulation implementing the petitioned
action is precluded by other pending
proposals to determine whether species
are endangered or threatened, and
expeditious progress is being made to
add or remove qualified species from
the Federal Lists of Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Section
4(b)(3)(C) of the ESA requires that we
treat a petition for which the requested
action is found to be warranted but
precluded as though resubmitted on the
date of such finding, that is, requiring a
subsequent finding to be made within
12 months. We must publish these 12–
month findings in the Federal Register.
Previous Federal Actions
We have published a number of
documents on Arctic grayling and have
been involved in litigation over
previous findings. We describe our
actions relevant to this notice below.
We initiated a status review for the
Montana Arctic grayling (Thymallus
arcticus montanus) in a Federal
Register notice on December 30, 1982
(47 FR 58454). In that notice, we
designated the purported subspecies,
Montana Arctic grayling, as a Category
2 species. At that time, we designated a
species as Category 2 if a listing as
endangered or threatened was possibly
appropriate, but we did not have
sufficient data to support a proposed
rule to list the species.
On October 9, 1991, the Biodiversity
Legal Foundation and George
Wuerthner petitioned us to list the
fluvial (riverine populations) of Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
basin as an endangered species
throughout its historical range in the
coterminous United States. We
published a notice of a 90–day finding
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
in the January 19, 1993, Federal
Register (58 FR 4975), concluding the
petitioners presented substantial
information indicating that listing the
fluvial Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River in Montana and
northwestern Wyoming may be
warranted. This finding noted that
taxonomic recognition of the Montana
Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus
montanus) as a subspecies (previously
designated as a category 2 species) was
not widely accepted, and that the
scientific community generally
considered this population a
geographically isolated member of the
wider species (T. arcticus).
On July 25, 1994, we published a
notice of a 12–month finding in the
Federal Register (59 FR 37738),
concluding that listing the DPS of
fluvial Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River was warranted but
precluded by other higher priority
listing actions. This DPS determination
predated our DPS policy (61 FR 4722,
February 7, 1996), so the entity did not
undergo a DPS analysis as described in
the policy. The 1994 finding placed
fluvial Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River on the candidate list and
assigned it a listing priority of 9. On
May 4, 2004, we elevated the listing
priority number of the fluvial Arctic
grayling to 3 (69 FR 24881).
On May 31, 2003, the Center for
Biological Diversity and Western
Watersheds Project (Plaintiffs) filed a
complaint in U.S. District Court in
Washington, D.C., challenging our
‘‘warranted but precluded’’
determination for Montana fluvial
Arctic grayling. On July 22, 2004, the
Plaintiffs amended their complaint to
challenge our failure to emergency list
this population. We settled with the
Plaintiffs in August 2005, and we agreed
to submit a final determination on
whether this population warranted
listing as endangered or threatened to
the Federal Register on or before April
16, 2007.
On April 24, 2007, we published a
revised 12–month finding on the
petition to list the upper Missouri River
DPS of fluvial Arctic grayling (72 FR
20305) (‘‘2007 finding’’). In this finding,
we determined that fluvial Arctic
grayling of the upper Missouri River did
not constitute a species, subspecies, or
DPS under the ESA. Therefore, we
found that the upper Missouri River
population of fluvial Arctic grayling was
not a listable entity under the ESA, and
as a result, listing was not warranted.
With that notice, we withdrew the
fluvial Arctic grayling from the
candidate list.
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
On November 15, 2007, the Center for
Biological Diversity, Federation of Fly
Fishers, Western Watersheds Project,
George Wuerthner, and Pat Munday
filed a complaint (CV-07-152, in the
District Court of Montana) to challenge
our 2007 finding. We settled this
litigation on October 5, 2009. In the
stipulated settlement, we agreed to: (a)
Publish, on or before December 31,
2009, a notice in the Federal Register
soliciting information on the status of
the upper Missouri River Arctic
grayling; and (b) submit, on or before
August 30, 2010, a new 12–month
finding for the upper Missouri River
Arctic grayling to the Federal Register.
On October 28, 2009, we published a
notice of intent to conduct a status
review of Arctic grayling (Thymallus
arcticus) in the upper Missouri River
system (74 FR 55524). To ensure the
status review was based on the best
available scientific and commercial
data, we requested information on the
taxonomy, biology, ecology, genetics,
and population status of the Arctic
grayling of the upper Missouri River
system; information relevant to
consideration of the potential DPS
status of Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River system; threats to the
species; and conservation actions being
implemented to reduce those threats in
the upper Missouri River system. The
notice further specified that the status
review may consider various DPS
designations that include different life
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
histories of Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River system. Specifically, we
may consider DPS configurations that
include: Fluvial, adfluvial (lake
populations), or all life histories of
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River system.
This notice constitutes the revised
12–month finding (‘‘2010 finding’’) on
whether to list the upper Missouri River
DPS of Arctic grayling (Thymallus
arcticus) as endangered or threatened.
Taxonomy and Species Description
The Arctic grayling (Thymallus
arcticus) belongs to the family
Salmonidae (salmon, trout, charr,
whitefishes), subfamily Thymallinae
(graylings), and it is represented by a
single genus, Thymallus. Scott and
Crossman (1998, p. 301) recognize four
species within the genus: T. articus
(Arctic grayling), T. thymallus
(European grayling), T. brevirostris
(Mongolian grayling), and T. nigrescens
(Lake Kosgol, Mongolia). Recent
research focusing on Eurasian
Thymallus (Koskinen et al. 2002, entire;
Froufe et al. 2003, entire; Froufe et al.
2005, entire; Weiss et al. 2006, entire)
indicates that the systematic diversity of
the genus is greater than previously
thought, or at least needs better
description (Knizhin et al. 2008, pp.
725–726, 729; Knizhin and Weiss 2009,
pp. 1, 7–8; Weiss et al. 2007, p. 384).
Arctic grayling have elongate,
laterally compressed, trout-like bodies
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54709
with deeply forked tails, and adults
typically average 300-380 millimeters
(mm) (12-15 inches (in.)) in length.
Coloration can be striking, and varies
from silvery or iridescent blue and
lavender, to dark blue (Behnke 2002, pp.
327–328). The sides are marked with a
varying number of V-shaped or
diamond-shaped spots (Scott and
Crossman 1998, p. 301). During the
spawning period, the colors darken and
the males become more brilliantly
colored than the females. A prominent
morphological feature of Arctic grayling
is the sail-like dorsal fin, which is large
and vividly colored with rows of orange
to bright green spots, and often has an
orange border (Behnke 2002, pp. 327–
328).
Distribution
Arctic grayling are native to Arctic
Ocean drainages of Alaska and
northwestern Canada, as far east as
Hudson’s Bay, and westward across
northern Eurasia to the Ural Mountains
(Scott and Crossman 1998, pp. 301–302;
Froufe et al. 2005, pp. 106–107; Weiss
et al. 2006, pp. 511–512; see Figure 1
below). In North America, they are
native to northern Pacific Ocean
drainages as far south as the Stikine
River in British Columbia (Nelson and
Paetz 1991, pp. 253–256; Behnke 2002,
pp. 327–331).
BILLING CODE 4310–55–S
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
FIGURE 1. Approximate world-wide
distribution of Arctic grayling
(Thymallus arcticus) at the end of the
most recent glacial cycle. The Missouri
River distribution is based on Kaya
(1992, pp. 47-51). The distribution of
the extinct Michigan population is
based on Vincent (1962, p. 12) and the
University of Michigan (2010). The
North American distribution in Canada
and Alaska is based on Behnke (2002, p.
330) and Scott and Crossman (1998, pp.
301-302). The Eurasian distribution is
based on Knizhin (2009, p. 32) and
Knizhin (2010, pers. comm.).
Arctic grayling remains widely
distributed across its native range, but
within North America, the species has
experienced range decline or
contraction at the southern limits of its
distribution. In British Columbia,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Canada, populations in the Williston
River watershed are designated as a
provincial ‘‘red list’’ species, meaning
the population is a candidate for further
evaluation to determine if it should be
granted endangered (facing imminent
extirpation or extinction) or threatened
status (likely to become endangered)
(British Columbia Conservation Data
Centre 2010). In Alberta, Canada, Arctic
grayling are native to the Athabasca,
Peace, and Hay River drainages. In
Alberta, the species has undergone a
range contraction of about 40 percent,
and half of the province’s
subpopulations have declined in
abundance by more than 90 percent
(Alberta Sustainable Resource
Development (ASRD) 2005, p. iv).
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Distribution in the Conterminous
United States
Two disjunct groups of Arctic
grayling were native to the
conterminous United States: One in the
upper Missouri River basin in Montana
and Wyoming (extant in Montana, see
Figure 2), and another in Michigan that
was extirpated in the late 1930s (Hubbs
and Lagler 1949, p. 44). Michigan
grayling formerly occurred in the Otter
River of the Lake Superior drainage in
northern Michigan and in streams of the
lower peninsula of Michigan in both the
Lake Michigan and Lake Huron
drainages including the Au Sable,
Cheboygan, Jordan, Pigeon, and Rifle
Rivers (Vincent 1962, p. 12).
Introduced Lake Dwelling Arctic
Grayling in the Upper Missouri River
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
EP08SE10.000
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54710
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
System and western U.S. populations of
Arctic grayling have been established in
lakes outside their native range in
Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana,
New Mexico, Utah, Washington, and
Wyoming (Vincent 1962, p. 15; Montana
Fisheries Information System (MFISH)
2009; NatureServe 2010). Stocking of
hatchery grayling in Montana has been
particularly extensive, and there are
thought to be up to 78 introduced
lacustrine (lake-dwelling) populations
resulting from these introductions (see
Table 1 below). Over three-quarters of
54711
these introductions (79.5 percent) were
established outside the native
geographic range of upper Missouri
River grayling, while only 16 (20.5
percent) were established within the
watershed boundary of the upper
Missouri River system.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
EP08SE10.001
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
BILLING CODE 4310–55–C
54712
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
FIGURE 2. Historical (dark grey lines)
and current distribution (stars and
circled portion of Big Hole River) of
native Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River basin. White bars denote
mainstem river dams that are total
barriers to upstream passage by fish.
TABLE 1. INTRODUCED LAKE-DWELLING POPULATIONS OF ARCTIC GRAYLING IN MONTANA. THE PRIMARY DATA SOURCE
FOR THESE DESIGNATIONS IS MFISH (2009).
Number of Introduced
(Exotic) Populationsa
River Basin
Outside Native Geographic Range In Montana
Columbia River
23
Middle Missouri River
2
Saskatchewan River
1
36b
Yellowstone River
Within Watershed Boundary Of Native Geographic Range In Montana
Upper Missouri River
16
Total Exotic Populations
78
aList
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
of populations does not include lake populations derived from attempts to re-establish fluvial populations in Montana, native adfluvial populations, or genetic reserves of Big Hole River grayling.
bMany of these populations may not reproduce naturally and are only sustained through repeated stocking (Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks
2009, entire).
For the purposes of this finding, we
are analyzing a petitioned entity that
includes, at its maximum extent,
populations of Arctic grayling
considered native to the upper Missouri
River. Introduced populations present
in Montana (e.g., Table 1) or elsewhere
are not considered as part of the listable
entity because we do not consider them
to be native populations. Neither the
Act nor our implementing regulations
expressly address whether introduced
populations should be considered part
of an entity being evaluated for listing,
and no Service policy addresses the
issue. Consequently, in our evaluation
of whether or not to include introduced
populations in the potential listable
entity we considered the following: (1)
Our interpretation of the intent of the
Act with respect to the disposition of
native populations, (2) a policy used by
the National Marine Fishery Service
(NMFS) to evaluate whether hatcheryorigin populations warrant inclusion in
the listable entity, and (3) a set of
guidelines from another organization
(International Union for Conservation of
Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN))
with specific criteria for evaluating the
conservation contribution of introduced
populations.
Intent of the Endangered Species Act
The primary purpose of the Act is to
provide a means whereby the
ecosystems upon which endangered
species and threatened species depend
may be conserved. The Service has
interpreted the Act to provide a
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
statutory directive to conserve species
in their native ecosystems (49 FR 33890,
August 27, 1984) and to conserve
genetic resources and biodiversity over
a representative portion of a taxon’s
historical occurrence (61 FR 4723,
February 7, 1996). This priority on
natural populations is evident in the
Service’s DPS policy within the third
significance criteria. In that, a discrete
population segment may be significant
if it represents the only surviving
natural occurrence of the taxon that may
be more abundant elsewhere as an
introduced population outside of its
historical range.
National Marine Fishery Service
Hatchery Policy
In 2005, the NMFS published a final
policy on the consideration of hatcheryorigin fish in Endangered Species Act
listing determinations for Pacific salmon
and steelhead (anadromous
Oncorhynchus spp.) (NMFS 2005,
entire). A central tenet of this policy is
the primacy of the conservation of
naturally spawning salmon populations
and the ecosystems on which they
depend, consistent with the intent of the
Act (NMFS 2005, pp. 37211, 37214).
The policy recognizes that properly
managed hatchery programs may
provide some conservation benefit to
the evolutionary significant unit (ESU,
which is analogous to a DPS but applied
to Pacific salmon) (NMFS 2005, p.
37211), and that hatchery stocks that
contribute to survival and recovery of an
ESU are considered during a listing
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
decision (NMFS 2005, p. 37209). The
policy states that since hatchery stocks
are established and maintained with the
intent of furthering the viability of wild
populations in the ESU, that those
hatchery populations have an explicit
conservation value. Genetic divergence
is the preferred metric to determine if
hatchery fish should be included in the
ESU, but NMFS recognizes that these
data may be lacking in most cases
(NMFS 2005, p. 37209). Thus, proxies
for genetic divergence can be used, such
as the length of time a stock has been
isolated from its source population, the
degree to which natural broodstock has
been regularly incorporated into the
hatchery population, the history of nonESU fish or eggs in the hatchery
population, and the attention given to
genetic considerations in selecting and
mating broodstocks (NMFS 2005, p.
37209).
The NMFS policy applies to
artificially propagated (hatchery)
populations. In this finding, however,
the Service is deciding whether selfsustaining populations introduced
outside its natural range should be
included in the listable entity. Thus, the
NMFS policy is not directly applicable.
Nonetheless, if the NFMS policy’s
criteria are applied to the introduced
lake-dwelling populations of Arctic
grayling in Montana and elsewhere,
these populations do not appear to
warrant inclusion in the entity being
evaluated for listing. First, there does
not appear to be any formally
recognized conservation value for the
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
introduced populations of Arctic
grayling, and they are not being used in
restoration programs. Recent genetic
analysis indicates that many of the
introduced Arctic grayling populations
in Montana are derived, in part, from
stocks in the Red Rock Lakes system
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1767).
Nonetheless, there have been concerns
that introduced, lake-dwelling
populations could pose genetic risks to
the native fluvial population (Arctic
Grayling Workgroup (AGW) 1995, p.
15), and in practice, these introduced
populations have not been used for any
conservation purpose. In fact, efforts are
currently underway to establish a
genetically pure brood reserve
population of Red Rock Lakes grayling
to be used for conservation purposes
(Jordan 2010, pers. comm.), analogous to
the brood reserves maintained for Arctic
grayling from the Big Hole River (Rens
and Magee 2007, pp. 22–24).
Second, introduced populations in
lakes have apparently been isolated
from their original source stock for
decades without any supplementation
from the wild. These populations were
apparently established without any
formal genetic consideration to selecting
and mating broodstock, the source
populations were not well documented
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1767),
and the primary intent of culturing and
introducing these grayling appears to
have been to provide recreational
fishing opportunities in high mountain
lakes.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Guidelines Used in Other Evaluation
Systems
The IUCN uses its Red List system to
evaluate the conservation status and
relative risk of extinction for species,
and to catalogue and highlight plant and
animal species that are facing a higher
risk of global extinction (https://
www.iucnredlist.org). IUCN does not use
the term ‘‘listable entity’’ as the Service
does; however, IUCN does clarify that
their conservation ranking criteria apply
to any taxonomic group at the species
level or below (IUCN 2001, p.4).
Further, the IUCN guidelines for species
status and scope of the categorization
process focus on wild populations
inside their natural range (IUCN 2001,
p. 4; 2003, p. 10) or so-called ‘‘benign’’
or ‘‘conservation introductions,’’ which
are defined as attempts to establish a
species, for the purpose of conservation,
outside its recorded distribution, when
suitable habitat is lacking within the
historical range (IUCN 1998, p. 6; 2003,
pp. 6, 10). Guidelines for evaluating
conservation status under the IUCN
exclude introduced populations located
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
outside the recorded distribution of the
species if such populations were
established for commercial or sporting
purposes (IUCN 1998, p. 5; 2003, p. 24).
In effect, the IUCN delineates between
introduced and native populations in
that non-benign introductions do not
qualify for evaluation under the IUCN
Red List system. Naturalized
populations of Arctic grayling in lakes
thus do not meet the IUCN criterion for
a wild population that should be
considered when evaluating the species
status for two reasons. First, there
remains ‘suitable habitat’ for Arctic
grayling in its native range, as
evidenced by extant native populations
in the Big Hole River, Madison River,
Miner Lake, Mussigbrod Lake, and Red
Rock Lakes. Second, the naturalized
populations derived from widespread
stocking were apparently aimed at
establishing recreational fisheries.
Our interpretation is that the ESA is
intended to preserve native populations
in their ecosystems. While hatchery or
introduced populations of fishes may
have some conservation value, this does
not appear to be the case with
introduced populations of Arctic
grayling in the conterminous United
States. These populations were
apparently established to support
recreational fisheries, and without any
formal genetic consideration to selecting
and mating broodstock, and are not part
of any conservation program to benefit
the native populations. Consequently,
we do not consider the introduced
populations of Arctic grayling in
Montana and elsewhere in the
conterminous United States, including
those in lakes and in an irrigation canal
(Sun River Slope Canal), to be part of
the listable entity.
Native Distribution in the Upper
Missouri River System
The first Euro-American ‘‘discovery’’
of Arctic grayling in North America is
attributed to members of the Lewis and
Clark Expedition, who encountered the
species in the Beaverhead River in
August 1805 (Nell and Taylor 1996, p.
133). Vincent (1962, p. 11) and Kaya
(1992, pp. 47–51) synthesized accounts
of Arctic grayling occurrence and
abundance from historical surveys and
contemporary monitoring to determine
the historical distribution of the species
in the upper Missouri River system
(Figure 2). We base our conclusions on
the historical distribution of Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
basin on these two reviews. Arctic
grayling were widely but irregularly
distributed in the upper Missouri River
system above the Great Falls in Montana
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54713
and in northwest Wyoming within the
present-day location of Yellowstone
National Park (Vincent 1962, p. 11).
They were estimated to inhabit up to
2,000 kilometers (km) (1,250 miles (mi))
of stream habitat until the early 20th
century (Kaya 1992, pp. 47–51). Arctic
grayling were reported in the mainstem
Missouri River, as well as in the Smith,
Sun, Jefferson, Madison, Gallatin, Big
Hole, Beaverhead, and Red Rock Rivers
(Vincent 1962, p. 11; Kaya 1992, pp. 47–
51; USFWS 2007; 72 FR 20307, April
24, 2007). ‘‘Old-timer’’ accounts report
that the species may have been present
in the Ruby River, at least seasonally
(Magee 2005, pers. comm.), and were
observed as recently as the early 1970s
(Holton, undated).
Fluvial Arctic grayling were
historically widely distributed in the
upper Missouri River basin, but a few
adfluvial populations also were native
to the basin. For example, Arctic
grayling are native to Red Rock Lakes,
in the headwaters of the Beaverhead
River (Vincent 1962, pp. 112–121; Kaya
1992, p. 47). Vincent (1962, p. 120)
stated that Red Rock Lakes were the
only natural lakes in the upper Missouri
River basin accessible to colonization by
Arctic grayling, and concluded that
grayling there were the only native
adfluvial population in the basin.
However, it appears that Arctic grayling
also were native to Elk Lake (in the Red
Rocks drainage; Kaya 1990, p. 44) and
a few small lakes in the upper Big Hole
River drainage (Peterson and Ardren
2009, p. 1768).
The distribution of native Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
went through a dramatic reduction in
the first 50 years of the 20th century,
especially in riverine habitats (Vincent
1962, pp. 86–90, 97–122, 127–129; Kaya
1992, pp. 47–53). The native
populations that formerly resided in the
Smith, Sun, Jefferson, Beaverhead,
Gallatin, and mainstem Missouri Rivers
are considered extirpated, and the only
remaining indigenous fluvial population
is found in the Big Hole River and some
if its tributaries (Kaya 1992, pp. 51–53).
The fluvial form currently occupies only
4 to 5 percent of its historic range in the
Missouri River system (Kaya 1992, p.
51). Other remaining native populations
in the upper Missouri River occur in
two small, headwater lakes in the upper
Big Hole River system (Miner and
Mussigbrod Lakes); the Madison River
upstream from Ennis Reservoir; and the
Red Rock Lakes in the headwaters of the
Beaverhead River system (Everett 1986,
p. 7; Kaya 1992, p. 53; Peterson and
Ardren 2009, pp. 1762, 1768; Figure 1
above, and Table 2 below).
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54714
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2. EXTANT NATIVE ARCTIC GRAYLING POPULATIONS IN THE UPPER MISSOURI RIVER BASIN.
Big Hole River Drainagea
1. Big Hole River
2. Miner Lake
3. Mussigbrod Lake
Madison River Drainage
4. Madison River-Ennis Reservoir
Beaverhead River Drainage
5. Red Rock Lakes
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
aArctic grayling also occur in Pintler Lake in the Big Hole River drainage, but this population has not been evaluated with genetic markers to
determine whether it constitutes a native remnant population.
Origins, Biogeography, and Genetics of
Arctic Grayling in North America
North American Arctic grayling are
most likely descended from Eurasian
Thymallus that crossed the Bering land
bridge during or before the Pleistocene
glacial period (Stamford and Taylor
2004, pp. 1533, 1546). A Eurasian origin
is suggested by the substantial
taxonomic diversity found in the genus
in that region. There were multiple
opportunities for freshwater faunal
exchange between North America and
Asia during the Pleistocene, but genetic
divergence between North American
and Eurasian Arctic grayling suggests
that the species could have colonized
North America as early as the mid-late
Pliocene (more than 3 million years ago)
(Stamford and Taylor 2004, p. 1546).
The North American distribution of
Arctic grayling was strongly influenced
by patterns of glaciation. Genetic studies
of grayling using mitochondrial DNA
(mtDNA, maternally-inherited DNA
located in cellular organelles called
mitochondria) and microsatellite DNA
(repeating sequences of nuclear DNA)
have shown that North American Arctic
grayling consist of at least three major
lineages that originated in distinct
Pleistocene glacial refugia (Stamford
and Taylor 2004, p. 1533). These three
groups include a South Beringia lineage
found in western Alaska to northern
British Columbia, Canada; a North
Beringia lineage found on the North
Slope of Alaska, the lower Mackenzie
River, and to eastern Saskatchewan; and
a Nahanni lineage found in the lower
Liard River and the upper Mackenzie
River drainage (Stamford and Taylor
2004, pp. 1533, 1540). The Nahanni
lineage is the most genetically distinct
group (Stamford and Taylor 2004, pp.
1541–1543). Arctic grayling from the
upper Missouri River basin were
tentatively placed in the North Beringia
lineage because a small sample (three
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
individuals) of Montana grayling shared
a mtDNA haplotype (form of the
mtDNA) with populations in
Saskatchewan and the lower Peace
River, British Columbia (Stamford and
Taylor 2004, p. 1538).
The existing mtDNA data suggest that
Missouri River Arctic grayling share a
common ancestry with the North
Beringia lineage, but other genetic
markers and biogeographic history
indicate that Missouri River grayling
have been physically and
reproductively isolated from northern
populations for millennia. The most
recent ancestors of Missouri River
Arctic grayling likely spent the last
glacial cycle in an ice-free refuge south
of the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice
sheets. Pre-glacial colonization of the
Missouri River basin by Arctic grayling
was possible because the river flowed to
the north and drained into the ArcticHudson Bay prior to the last glacial
cycle (Cross et al. 1986, pp. 374–375;
Pielou 1991, pp. 194–195). Low mtDNA
diversity observed in a small number of
Montana grayling samples and a shared
ancestry with Arctic grayling from the
north Beringia lineage suggest a more
recent, post-glacial colonization of the
upper Missouri River basin. In contrast,
microsatellite DNA show substantial
divergence between Montana and
Saskatchewan (i.e., same putative
mtDNA lineage) (Peterson and Ardren
2009, entire). Differences in the
frequency and size distribution of
microsatellite alleles between Montana
populations and two Saskatchewan
populations indicate that Montana
grayling have been isolated long enough
for mutations (i.e., evolution) to be
responsible for the observed genetic
differences.
Additional comparison of 21 Arctic
grayling populations from Alaska,
Canada, and the Missouri River basin
using 9 of the same microsatellite loci
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
as Peterson and Ardren (2009, entire)
further supports the distinction of
Missouri River Arctic grayling relative
to populations elsewhere in North
America (USFWS, unpublished data).
Analyses of these data using two
different methods clearly separates
sample fish from 21 populations into
two clusters: one cluster representing
populations from the upper Missouri
River basin, and another cluster
representing populations from Canada
and Alaska (USFWS, unpublished data).
These new data, although not yet peer
reviewed, support the interpretation
that the previous analyses of Stamford
and Taylor (2004, entire)
underestimated the distinctiveness of
Missouri River Arctic grayling relative
to other sample populations, likely
because of the combined effect of small
sample sizes and the lack of variation
observed in the Missouri River for the
markers used in that study (Stamford
and Taylor 2004, pp. 1537–1538). Thus,
these recent microsatellite DNA data
suggest that Arctic grayling may have
colonized the Missouri River before the
onset of Wisconsin glaciation (more
than 80,000 years ago).
Genetic relationships among native
and introduced populations of Arctic
grayling in Montana have recently been
investigated (Peterson and Ardren 2009,
entire). Introduced, lake-dwelling
populations of Arctic grayling trace
much of their original ancestry to Red
Rock Lakes (Peterson and Ardren 2009,
p. 1767), and stocking of hatchery
grayling did not appear to have a large
effect on the genetic composition of the
extant native populations (Peterson and
Ardren 2009, p. 1768). Differences
between native populations of the two
grayling ecotypes (adfluvial, fluvial) do
not appear to be as large as differences
resulting from geography (i.e., drainage
of origin).
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Habitat
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Arctic grayling generally require clear,
cold water. Selong et al. (2001, p. 1032)
characterized Arctic grayling as
belonging to a ‘‘coldwater’’ group of
salmonids, which also includes bull
trout (Salvelinus confluentus) and
Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus). Hubert
et al. (1985, p. 24) developed a habitat
suitability index study for Arctic
grayling and concluded that thermal
habitat was optimal between 7 to 17 °C
(45 to 63 °F), but became unsuitable
above 20°C (68°F). Arctic grayling fry
may be more tolerant of high water
temperature than adults (LaPerriere and
Carlson 1973, p. 30; Feldmeth and
Eriksen 1978, p. 2041).
Having a broad, nearly-circumpolar
distribution, Arctic grayling occupy a
variety of habitats including small
streams, large rivers, lakes, and even
bogs (Northcote 1995, pp. 152–153;
Scott and Crossman 1998, p. 303). They
may even enter brackish water (less than
or equal to 4 parts per thousand) when
migrating between adjacent river
systems (West et al. 1992, pp. 713–714).
Native populations are found at
elevations ranging from near sea level,
such as in Bristol Bay, Alaska, to highelevation montane valleys (more than
1,830 meters (m) or 6,000 feet (ft)), such
as the Big Hole River and Centennial
Valley in southwestern Montana.
Despite this broad distribution, Arctic
grayling have specific habitat
requirements that can constrain their
local distributions, especially water
temperature and channel gradient. At
the local scale, Arctic grayling prefer
cold water and are often associated with
spring-fed habitats in regions with
warmer climates (Vincent 1962, p. 33).
Arctic grayling are generally not found
in swift, high-gradient streams, and
Vincent (1962, p. 36–37, 41–43)
characterized typical Arctic grayling
habitat in Montana (and Michigan) as
low-to-moderate gradient (less than 4
percent) streams and rivers with low-tomoderate water velocities (less than 60
centimeters/sec). Juvenile and adult
Arctic grayling in streams and rivers
spend much of their time in pool habitat
(Kaya 1990 and references therein, p.
20; Lamothe and Magee 2003, pp. 13–
14).
Breeding
Arctic grayling typically spawn in the
spring or early summer, depending on
latitude and elevation (Northcote 1995,
p. 149). In Montana, Arctic grayling
generally spawn from late April to midMay by depositing adhesive eggs over
gravel substrate without excavating a
nest (Kaya 1990, p. 13; Northcote 1995,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
p. 151). In general, the reproductive
ecology of Arctic grayling differs from
other salmonid species (trout and
salmon) in that Arctic grayling eggs tend
to be comparatively small; thus, they
have higher relative fecundity (females
have more eggs per unit body size).
Males establish and defend spawning
territories rather than defending access
to females (Northcote 1995, pp. 146,
150–151). The time required for
development of eggs from embryo until
they emerge from stream gravel and
become swim-up fry depends on water
temperature (Northcote 1995, p. 151). In
the upper Missouri River basin,
development from embryo to fry
averages about 3 weeks (Kaya 1990, pp.
16–17). Small, weakly swimming fry
(typically 1–1.5 centimeters (cm) (0.4–
0.6 in.) at emergence) prefer lowvelocity stream habitats (Armstrong
1986, p. 6; Kaya 1990, pp. 23–24;
Northcote 1995, p. 151).
Arctic grayling of all ages feed
primarily on aquatic and terrestrial
invertebrates captured on or near the
water surface, but also will feed
opportunistically on fish and fish eggs
(Northcote 1995, pp. 153–154; Behnke
2002, p. 328). Feeding locations for
individual fish are typically established
and maintained through size-mediated
dominance hierarchies where larger
individuals defend favorable feeding
positions (Hughes 1992, p. 1996).
Life History Diversity
Migratory behavior is a common lifehistory trait in salmonid fishes such as
Arctic grayling (Armstrong 1986, pp. 7–
8; Northcote 1995, pp. 156–158; 1997,
pp. 1029, 1031–1032, 1034). In general,
migratory behavior in Arctic grayling
and other salmonids results in cyclic
patterns of movement between refuge,
rearing-feeding, and spawning habitats
(Northcote 1997, p. 1029).
Arctic grayling may move to refuge
habitat as part of a regular seasonal
migration (e.g., in winter), or in
response to episodic environmental
stressors (e.g., high summer water
temperatures). In Alaska, Arctic grayling
in rivers typically migrate downstream
in the fall, moving into larger streams or
mainstem rivers that do not completely
freeze (Armstrong 1986, p. 7). In Arctic
rivers, fish often seek overwintering
habitat influenced by groundwater
(Armstrong 1986, p. 7). In some
drainages, individual fish may migrate
considerable distances (greater than 150
km or 90 mi) to overwintering habitats
(Armstrong 1986, p. 7). In the Big Hole
River, Montana, similar downstream
and long-distance movement to
overwintering habitat has been observed
in Arctic grayling (Shepard and Oswald
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54715
1989, pp. 18–21, 27). In addition, Arctic
grayling in the Big Hole River may move
downstream in proximity to colder
tributary streams in summer when
thermal conditions in the mainstem
river become stressful (Lamothe and
Magee 2003, p. 17).
In spring, mature Arctic grayling leave
overwintering areas and migrate to
suitable spawning sites. In river
systems, this typically involves an
upstream migration to tributary streams
or shallow riffles within the mainstem
(Armstrong 1986, p. 8). Arctic grayling
in lakes typically migrate to either the
inlet or outlet to spawn (Armstrong
1986, p. 8; Northcote 1997, p. 148). In
either situation, Arctic grayling
typically exhibit natal homing, whereby
individuals spawn in or near the
location where they were born
(Northcote 1997, pp. 157–160).
Fry from river populations typically
seek feeding and rearing habitats in the
vicinity where they were spawned
(Armstrong 1986, pp. 6–7; Northcote
1995, p. 156), while those from lake
populations migrate downstream (inlet
spawners) or upstream (outlet spawners)
to the adjacent lake. Following
spawning, adults move to appropriate
feeding areas if they are not adjacent to
spawning habitat (Armstrong 1986, pp.
7–8). Juvenile Arctic grayling may
undertake seasonal migrations between
feeding and overwintering habitats until
they reach maturity and add the
spawning migration to this cycle
(Northcote 1995, pp. 156–157).
Life History Diversity in Arctic Grayling
in the Upper Missouri River
Two general life-history forms or
ecotypes of native Arctic grayling occur
in the upper Missouri River Arctic:
Fluvial and adfluvial. Fluvial fish use
river or stream (lotic) habitat for all of
their life cycles and may undergo
extensive migrations within river
habitat. Adfluvial fish live in lakes and
migrate to tributary streams to spawn.
These same life-history forms also are
expressed by Arctic grayling elsewhere
in North America (Northcote 1997, p.
1030). Historically, the fluvial lifehistory form predominated in the
Missouri River basin above the Great
Falls, perhaps because there were only
a few lakes accessible to natural
colonization of Arctic grayling that
would permit expression of the
adfluvial ecotype (Kaya 1992, p. 47).
The fluvial and adfluvial life-history
forms of Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River do not appear to
represent distinct evolutionary lineages.
Instead, they appear to represent an
example of adaptive radiation (Schluter
2000, p. 1), whereby the forms
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54716
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
differentiated from a common ancestor
developed traits that allowed them to
exploit different habitats. The primary
evidence for this conclusion is genetic
data that indicate that within the
Missouri River basin the two ecotypes
are more closely related to each other
than they are to the same ecotype
elsewhere in North America (Redenbach
and Taylor 1999, pp. 27–28; Stamford
and Taylor 2004, p. 1538; Peterson and
Ardren 2009, p. 1766). Historically,
there may have been some genetic
exchange between the two life-history
forms as individuals strayed or
dispersed into different populations
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1770), but
the genetic structure of current
populations in the upper Missouri River
basin is consistent with reproductive
isolation.
The fluvial and adfluvial forms of
Arctic grayling appear to differ in their
genetic characteristics, but there appears
to be some plasticity in behavior where
individuals from a population can
exhibit a range of behaviors. Arctic
grayling fry in Montana can exhibit
heritable, genetically-based differences
in swimming behavior between fluvial
and adfluvial ecotypes (Kaya 1991, pp.
53, 56–58; Kaya and Jeanes 1995, pp.
454, 456). Progeny of Arctic grayling
from the fluvial ecotype exhibited a
greater tendency to hold their position
in flowing water relative to progeny
from adfluvial ecotypes (Kaya 1991, pp.
53, 56–58; Kaya and Jeanes 1995, pp.
454, 456). Similarly, young grayling
from inlet and outlet spawning adfluvial
ecotypes exhibited an innate tendency
to move downstream and upstream,
respectively (Kaya 1989, pp. 478–480).
All three studies (Kaya 1989, entire;
1991, entire; Kaya and Jeanes 1995,
entire) demonstrate that the response of
fry to flowing water depended strongly
on the life-history form (ecotype) of the
source population, and that this
behavior has a genetic basis. However,
behavioral responses also were
mediated by environmental conditions
(light—Kaya 1991, pp. 56–57; light and
water temperature—Kaya 1989, pp.
477–479), and some progeny of each
ecotype exhibited behavior
characteristic of the other; for example
some individuals from the fluvial
ecotype moved downstream rather than
holding position, and some individuals
from an inlet-spawning adfluvial
ecotype held position or moved
upstream (Kaya 1991, p. 58). These
observations indicate that some
plasticity for behavior exists, at least for
very young Arctic grayling.
However, the ability of one ecotype of
Arctic grayling to give rise to a
functional population of the other
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
ecotype within a few decades is much
less certain, and may parallel the
differences in plasticity that have
evolved between river- and lake-type
European grayling (Salonen 2005,
entire). Circumstantial support for
reduced plasticity in adfluvial Arctic
grayling comes from observations that
adfluvial fish stocked in river habitats
almost never establish populations
(Kaya 1990, pp. 31–34). In contrast, a
population of Arctic grayling in the
Madison River that would have
presumably expressed a fluvial ecotype
under historical conditions has
apparently adapted to an adfluvial lifehistory after construction of an
impassible dam, which impounded
Ennis Reservoir (Kaya 1992, p. 53;
Jeanes 1996, pp. 54). We note that
adfluvial Arctic grayling retain some
life-history flexibility—at least in lake
environments—as naturalized
populations derived from inletspawning stocks have established
outlet-spawning demes (a deme is a
local populations that shares a distinct
gene pool) in Montana and in
Yellowstone National Park (Kruse 1959,
p. 318; Kaya 1989, p. 480). While in
some cases Arctic grayling may be able
to adapt or adjust rapidly to a new
environment, the frequent failure of
introductions of Arctic grayling suggest
a cautionary approach to the loss of
particular life-history forms is
warranted. Healey and Prince (1995,
entire) reviewed patterns of genotypic
and phenotypic variation in Pacific
salmon and warn that recovery of lost
life-history forms may not follow
directly from conservation of the
genotype (p. 181), and reason that the
critical conservation unit is the
population within its habitat (p. 181).
Age and Growth
Age at maturity and longevity in
Arctic grayling varies regionally and is
probably related to growth rate, with
populations in colder, northern
latitudes maturing at later ages and
having a greater lifespan (Kruse 1959,
pp. 340–341; Northcote 1995 and
references therein, pp. 155–157). Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
typically mature at age 2 (males) or age
3 (females), and individuals greater than
age 6 are rare (Kaya 1990, p. 18; Magee
and Lamothe 2003, pp. 16–17).
Similarly, Nelson (1954, pp. 333–334)
observed that the majority of the Arctic
grayling spawning in two tributaries in
the Red Rock Lakes system, Montana,
were age 3, and the oldest individuals
aged from a larger sample were age 6.
Mogen (1996, pp. 32–34) found that
Arctic grayling spawning in Red Rock
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Creek were mostly ages 2 to 5, but he
did encounter some individuals age 7.
Generally, growth rates of Arctic
grayling are greatest during the first
years of life then slow dramatically after
maturity. Within that general pattern,
there is substantial variation among
populations from different regions.
Arctic grayling populations in Montana
(Big Hole River and Red Rock Lakes)
appear to have very high growth rates
relative to those from British Columbia,
Asia, and the interior and North Slope
of Alaska (Carl et al. 1992, p. 240;
Northcote 1995, pp. 155–157; Neyme
2005, p. 28). Growth rates of Arctic
grayling from different management
areas in Alberta are nearly as high as
those observed in Montana grayling
(ASRD 2005, p. 4).
Distinct Population Segment
In its stipulated settlement with
Plaintiffs, the Service agreed to consider
the appropriateness of DPS designations
for Arctic grayling populations in the
upper Missouri River basin that
included: (a) All life ecotypes or
histories, (b) the fluvial ecotype, and (c)
the adfluvial ecotype. The fluvial
ecotype has been the primary focus of
past Service action and litigation, but
the Service also has alluded to the
possibility of alternative DPS
designations in previous candidate
species assessments (USFWS 2005, p.
11). Since the 2007 finding (72 FR
20305), additional research has been
conducted and new information on the
genetics of Arctic grayling is available.
This finding contains a more
comprehensive and robust distinct
population segment analysis than the
2007 finding.
Distinct Population Segment Analysis
for Native Arctic Graying in the Upper
Missouri River
Discreteness
The discreteness standard under the
Service’s and National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA)
joint Policy Regarding the Recognition
of Distinct Vertebrate Population
Segments Under the Endangered
Species Act (61 FR 4722) requires an
entity to be adequately defined and
described in some way that
distinguishes it from other
representatives of its species. A segment
is discrete if it is: (1) Markedly
separated from other populations of the
same taxon as consequence of physical,
physiological, ecological, or behavioral
factors (quantitative measures of genetic
or morphological discontinuity may
provide evidence of this separation); or
(2) delimited by international
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
governmental boundaries within which
differences in control of exploitation,
management of habitat, conservation
status, or regulatory mechanisms exist
that are significant in light of section
4(a)(1)(D) of the ESA.
Arctic grayling native to the upper
Missouri River are isolated from
populations of the species inhabiting
the Arctic Ocean, Hudson Bay, and
north Pacific Ocean drainages in Asia
and North America (see Figure 1). Arctic
grayling native to the upper Missouri
River occur as a disjunct group of
populations approximately 800 km (500
mi) to the south of the next-nearest
Arctic grayling population in central
Alberta, Canada. Missouri River Arctic
grayling have been isolated from other
populations for at least 10,000 years
based on historical reconstruction of
river flows at or near the end of the
Pleistocene (Cross et al. 1986, p. 375;
Pileou 1991, pp. 10–11;). Genetic data
confirm Arctic grayling in the Missouri
River basin have been reproductively
isolated from populations to the north
for millennia (Everett 1986, pp. 79–80;
Redenbach and Taylor 1999, p. 23;
Stamford and Taylor 2004, p. 1538;
Peterson and Ardren 2009, pp. 1764–
1766; USFWS, unpublished data).
Consequently, we conclude that Arctic
grayling native to the upper Missouri
River are markedly separated from other
native populations of the taxon as a
result of physical factors (isolation), and
therefore meet the first criterion of
discreteness under the DPS policy. As a
result, Arctic grayling native to the
upper Missouri River are considered a
discrete population according to the
DPS policy. Because the entity meets
the first criterion (markedly separated),
an evaluation with respect to the second
criterion (international boundaries) is
not needed.
Significance
If we determine that a population
meets the DPS discreteness element, we
then consider whether it also meets the
DPS significance element. The DPS
policy states that, if a population
segment is considered discrete under
one or more of the discreteness criteria,
its biological and ecological significance
will be considered in light of
congressional guidance that the
authority to list DPSs be used
‘‘sparingly’’ while encouraging the
conservation of genetic diversity (see
U.S. Congress 1979, Senate Report 151,
96th Congress, 1st Session). In making
this determination, we consider
available scientific evidence of the
discrete population’s importance to the
taxon to which it belongs. Since precise
circumstances are likely to vary
considerably from case to case, the DPS
policy does not describe all the classes
of information that might be used in
determining the biological and
ecological importance of a discrete
population. However, the DPS policy
does provide four possible reasons why
a discrete population may be significant.
As specified in the DPS policy, this
consideration of significance may
include, but is not limited to, the
following: (1) Persistence of the discrete
population segment in a unique or
unusual ecological setting; (2) evidence
that loss of the discrete segment would
result in a significant gap in the range
of the taxon; (3) evidence that the
discrete population segment represents
the only surviving natural occurrence of
the taxon that may be more abundant
elsewhere as an introduced population
outside of its historic range; or (4)
evidence that the discrete population
segment differs markedly from other
populations of the species in its genetic
characteristics.
Unique Ecological Setting
Water temperature is a key factor
influencing the ecology and physiology
of ectothermic (body temperature
regulated by ambient environmental
conditions) salmonid fishes, and can
dictate reproductive timing, growth and
development, and life-history strategies.
54717
Groundwater temperatures can be
related to air temperatures (Meisner
1990, p. 282), and thus reflect the
regional climatic conditions. Warmer
groundwater influences ecological
factors such as food availability, the
efficiency with which food is converted
into energy for growth and
reproduction, and ultimately growth
rates of aquatic organisms (Allan 1995,
pp. 73–79). Aquifer structure and
groundwater temperature is important
to salmonid fishes because groundwater
can strongly influence stream
temperature, and consequently egg
incubation and fry growth rates, which
are strongly temperature-dependent
(Coutant 1999, pp. 32–52; Quinn 2005,
pp. 143–150).
Missouri River Arctic grayling occur
within the 4 to 7 °C (39 to 45 °F) ground
water isotherm (see Heath 1983, p. 71;
an isotherm is a line connecting bands
of similar temperatures on the earth’s
surface), whereas most other North
American grayling are found in
isotherms less than 4 °C, and much of
the species’ range is found in areas with
discontinuous or continuous permafrost
(Meisner et al. 1988, p. 5). Much of the
historical range of Arctic grayling in the
upper Missouri River is encompassed by
mean annual air temperature isotherms
of 5 to 10 °C (41 to 50 °F) (USGS 2009),
with the colder areas being in the
headwaters of the Madison River in
Yellowstone National Park. In contrast,
Arctic grayling in Canada, Alaska, and
Asia are located in regions encompassed
by air temperature isotherms 5 °C and
colder (41 °F and colder), with much of
the species distributed within the 0 to
-10 °C isolines (32 to 14 °F). This
difference is significant because Arctic
grayling in the Missouri River basin
have evolved in isolation for millennia
in a generally warmer climate than other
populations. The potential for thermal
adaptations makes Missouri River Arctic
grayling a significant biological resource
for the species under expected climate
change scenarios.
TABLE 3. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE ECOLOGICAL SETTING OF THE UPPER MISSOURI RIVER AND ELSEWHERE IN THE
SPECIES’ RANGE OF ARCTIC GRAYLING.
Missouri River
Rest of Taxon
Ocean watershed
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Ecological Setting Variable
Gulf of Mexico–Atlantic Ocean
Hudson Bay, Arctic Ocean, or
north Pacific
Bailey’s Ecoregion
Dry Domain: Temperate Steppe
Polar Domain: Tundra & Subarctic
Humid Temperate: Marine,
Prairie, Warm Continental
Mountains
5 to 10 °C
(41 to 50 °F)
-15 to 5 °C
(5 to 41 °F)
Air temperature (isotherm)
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54718
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE ECOLOGICAL SETTING OF THE UPPER MISSOURI RIVER AND ELSEWHERE IN THE
SPECIES’ RANGE OF ARCTIC GRAYLING.—Continued
Ecological Setting Variable
Missouri River
Rest of Taxon
4 to 7°C
(39 to 45 °F)
Less than 4 °C
(less than 39 °F)
None, in most of the rangea
Bull trout, lake trout, northern
pike, taimen
Groundwater temperature (isotherm)
Native occurrence of large-bodied fish predators on salmonids
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
aLake trout are native to two small lakes in the upper Missouri River basin (Twin Lakes and Elk Lake), where their distributions presumably
overlapped with the native range of Arctic grayling, so they would not have interacted with most Arctic grayling populations in the basin that were
found in rivers.
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River basin occur in a temperate
ecoregion distinct from all other Arctic
grayling populations worldwide, which
occur in Arctic or sub-Arctic ecoregions
dominated by Arctic flora and fauna. An
ecoregion is a continuous geographic
area within which there are associations
of interacting biotic and abiotic features
(Bailey 2005, pp. S14, S23). These
ecoregions delimit large areas within
which local ecosystems recur more or
less in a predictable fashion on similar
sites (Bailey 2005, p. S14). Ecoregional
classification is hierarchical, and based
on the study of spatial coincidences,
patterning, and relationships of climate,
vegetation, soil, and landform (Bailey
2005, p. S23). The largest ecoregion
categories are domains, which represent
subcontinental areas of similar climate
(e.g., polar, humid temperate, dry, and
humid tropical) (Bailey 1994; 2005, p.
S17). Domains are divided into
divisions that contain areas of similar
vegetation and regional climates. Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
basin are the only example of the
species naturally occurring in a dry
domain (temperate steppe division; see
Table 3 above). The vast majority of the
species’ range is found in the polar
domain (all of Asia, most of North
America), with small portions of the
range occurring in the humid temperate
domain (northern British Columbia and
southeast Alaska). Occupancy of
Missouri River Arctic grayling in a
temperate ecoregion is significant for
two primary reasons. First, an ecoregion
represents a suite of factors (climate,
vegetation, landform) influencing, or
potentially influencing, the evolution of
species within that ecoregion. Since
Missouri River Arctic grayling have
existed for thousands of years in an
ecoregion quite different from the
majority of the taxon, they have likely
developed adaptations during these
evolutionary timescales that distinguish
them from the rest of the taxon, even if
we have yet to conduct the proper
studies to measure these adaptations.
Second, the occurrence of Missouri
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
River Arctic grayling in a unique
ecoregion helps reduce the risk of
species-level extinction, as the different
regions may respond differently to
environmental change.
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River basin have existed for at least
10,000 years in an ecological setting
quite different from that experienced by
Arctic grayling elsewhere in the species’
range. The most salient aspects of this
different setting relate to temperature
and climate, which can strongly and
directly influence the biology of
ectothermic species (like Arctic
grayling). Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River have experienced
warmer temperatures than most other
populations. Physiological and lifehistory adaptation to local temperature
regimes are regularly documented in
salmonid fishes (Taylor 1991, pp. 191–
193), but experimental evidence for
adaptations to temperature, such as
unusually high temperature tolerance or
lower tolerance to colder temperatures,
is lacking for Missouri River Arctic
grayling because the appropriate studies
have not been conducted. Lohr et al.
(1996, p. 934) studied the upper thermal
tolerances of Arctic grayling from the
Big Hole River, but their research design
did not include other populations from
different thermal regimes, so it was not
possible to make between-population
contrasts under a common set of
conditions. Arctic grayling from the
upper Missouri River demonstrate very
high growth rates relative to other
populations (Northcote 1995, p. 157).
Experimental evidence obtained by
growing fish from populations under
similar conditions would be needed to
measure the relative influence of
genetics (local adaptation) versus
environment.
An apex fish predator that preys
successfully on salmonids has been
largely absent from most of the upper
Missouri River basin over evolutionary
time scales (tens of thousands of years).
This suggests that Arctic grayling in the
upper Missouri River basin have faced
a different selective pressure than Arctic
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
grayling in many other areas of the
species’ range, at least with respect to
predation by fishes. Predators can exert
a strong selective pressure on
populations. One noteworthy aspect of
the aquatic biota experienced by Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River is
the apparent absence of a large-bodied
fish that would be an effective predator
on juvenile and adult salmonids. In
contrast, one or more species of large
predatory fishes like northern pike
(Esox lucius), bull trout, taimen (Hucho
taimen), and lake trout (Salvelinus
namaycush) are broadly distributed
across much of the range of Arctic
grayling in Canada and Asia (Northern
pike—Scott and Crossman 1998, pp.
302, 358; taimen—VanderZanden et al.
2007, pp. 2281–2282; Esteve et al. 2009,
p. 185; bull trout—Behnke 2002, pp.
296, 330; lake trout —Behnke 2002, pp.
296, 330). The only exceptions to this
general pattern are where Arctic
grayling formerly coexisted with lake
trout native to Twin Lakes and Elk Lake
(Beaverhead County) (Vincent 1963, pp.
188–189), but both of these Arctic
grayling populations are thought to be
extirpated (Oswald 2000, pp. 10, 16;
Oswald 2006, pers. comm.). The burbot
(Lota lota) is a freshwater fish belonging
to the cod family and is native to the
Missouri, Big Hole, Beaverhead, Ruby,
and Madison Rivers in Montana (MFISH
2010); thus its distribution significantly
overlapped the historical and current
ranges of Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River system. Burbot are
voracious predators, but tend to be
benthic (bottom-oriented) and
apparently prefer the deeper portions of
larger rivers and lakes. A few studies
have investigated the diet of burbot
where they overlap with native Arctic
grayling in Montana, but did not detect
any predation on Arctic grayling (Streu
1990, pp. 16–20; Katzman 1998, pp. 98–
100). Burbot apparently do not consume
salmonids in significant amounts, even
when they are very abundant (Katzman
1998 and references therein, p. 106).
The response of Arctic grayling in the
Missouri River basin to introduced,
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
nonnative trout suggests they were not
generally pre-adapted to cope with the
presence of a large-bodied salmonid
predator. Missouri River Arctic grayling
lack a co-evolutionary history with
brown trout, and there are repeated
observations that the two species tend
not to coexist and that brown trout
displace Arctic grayling (Kaya 1992, p.
56; 2000, pp. 14–15). We caution that
competition with and predation by
brown trout has not been directly
studied with Arctic grayling, but at least
some circumstantial evidence indicates
that Missouri River Arctic grayling may
not coexist well with brown trout.
We conclude that the occurrence of
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River is biogeographically important to
the species, that grayling there have
occupied a distinctly different
ecological setting relative to the rest of
the species (see Table 3 above), and that
they have been on a different
evolutionary trajectory for at least
10,000 years. Consequently, we believe
that Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River occupy a unique
ecological setting. The role that this
unique setting plays in influencing
adaptations or determining unique traits
is unclear, and therefore a
determination of the significance of this
ecological setting to the taxon is
unknown.
Gap in the Range
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River basin occur in an ocean drainage
basin that is distinct from all other
Arctic grayling populations worldwide.
All other Arctic grayling occur in
drainages of Hudson Bay, the Arctic
Ocean, or the north Pacific Ocean; the
Missouri River is part of the Gulf of
Mexico–Atlantic Ocean drainage. The
significance of occupancy of this
drainage basin is that the upper
Missouri River basin represents an
important part of the species’ range from
a biogeographic perspective. The only
other population of Arctic grayling to
live in a non-Arctic environment was
the Michigan–Great Lakes population
that was extirpated in the 1930s.
Arctic grayling in Montana (southern
extent is approximately 44°36′23″ N
latitude) represent the southern-most
extant population of the species’
distribution since the Pleistocene
glaciation (Figure 1). The next-closest
native Arctic grayling population
outside the Missouri River basin is
found in the Pembina River
(approximately 52°55′6.77″ N latitude)
in central Alberta, Canada, west of
Edmonton (Blackburn and Johnson
2004, pp. ii, 17; ASRD 2005, p. 6). Loss
of the native Arctic grayling of the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
upper Missouri River would shift the
southern distribution of Arctic grayling
by more than 8° latitude. Such a
dramatic range constriction would
constitute a significant geographic gap
in the species’ range, and eliminate a
genetically distinct group of Arctic
grayling, which may limit the species’
ability to cope with future
environmental change.
Marginal populations, defined as
those on the periphery of the species’
range, are believed to have high
conservation significance (see reviews
by Scudder 1989, entire; Lesica and
Allendorf 1995, entire; Fraser 2000,
entire). Peripheral populations may
occur in suboptimal habitats and thus
be subjected to very strong selective
pressures (Fraser 2000, p. 50).
Consequently, individuals from these
populations may contain adaptations
that may be important to the taxon in
the future. Lomolino and Channell
(1998, p. 482) hypothesize that because
peripheral populations should be
adapted to a greater variety of
environmental conditions, then they
may be better suited to deal with
anthropogenic (human-caused)
disturbances than populations in the
central part of a species’ range. Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
have, for millennia, existed in a climate
warmer than that experienced by the
rest of the taxon. If this selective
pressure has resulted in adaptations to
cope with increased water temperatures,
then the population segment may
contain genetic resources important to
the taxon. For example, if northern
populations of Arctic grayling are less
suited to cope with increased water
temperatures expected under climate
warming, then Missouri River Arctic
grayling might represent an important
population for reintroduction in those
northern regions. We believe that Arctic
grayling from the upper Missouri River’s
occurrence at the southernmost extreme
of the range contributes to its
significance that may increased
adaptability and contribute to the
resilience of the overall taxon.
Only Surviving Natural Occurrence of
the Taxon that May be More Abundant
Elsewhere as an Introduced Population
Outside of its Historical Range
This criterion does not directly apply
to the Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River because it is not the only
surviving natural occurrence of the
taxon; there are native Arctic grayling
populations in Canada, Alaska, and
Asia. That said, there are introduced
Lake Dwelling Arctic Grayling within
the native range in the Upper Missouri
River System and Arctic grayling have
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54719
been established in lakes outside their
native range in Arizona, Colorado,
Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah,
Washington, and Wyoming (Vincent
1962, p. 15; Montana Fisheries
Information System (MFISH) 2009;
NatureServe 2010).
Differs Markedly in Its Genetic
Characteristics
Differences in genetic characteristics
can be measured at the molecular
genetic or phenotypic level. Three
different types of molecular markers
(allozymes, mtDNA, and microsatellites)
demonstrate that Arctic grayling from
the upper Missouri River are genetically
different from those in Canada, Alaska,
and Asia (Everett 1986, pp. 79–80;
Redenbach and Taylor 1999, p. 23;
Stamford and Taylor 2004, p. 1538;
Peterson and Ardren 2009, pp. 1764–
1766; USFWS, unpublished data). These
data confirm the reproductive isolation
among populations that establishes the
discreteness of Missouri River Arctic
grayling under the DPS policy. Here, we
speak to whether these data also
establish significance.
Allozymes
Using allozyme electrophoretic data,
Everett (1986, entire) found marked
genetic differences among Arctic
grayling collected from the Chena River
in Alaska, those descended from fish
native to the Athabasca River drainage
in the Northwest Territories, Canada,
and native upper Missouri River
drainage populations or populations
descended from them (see Leary 2005,
pp. 1–2). The Canadian population had
a high frequency of a unique isocitrate
dehydrogenase allele (form of a gene)
and a unique malate dehydrogenase
allele, which strongly differentiated
them from all the other samples (Everett
1986, p. 44). With the exception one
introduced population in Montana that
is believed to have experienced extreme
genetic bottlenecks, the Chena River
(Alaskan) fish were highly divergent
from all the other samples as they
possessed an unusually low frequency
of superoxide dismutase (Everett 1986,
p. 60; Leary 2005, p. 1), and contained
a unique variant of the malate
dehydrogenase (Leary 2005, p. 1).
Overall, each of the four native Missouri
River populations examined (Big Hole,
Miner, Mussigbrod, and Red Rock)
exhibited statistically significant
differences in allele frequencies relative
to both the Chena River (Alaska) and
Athabasca River (Canada) populations
(Everett 1986, pp. 15, 67).
Combining the data of Everett (1986,
entire), Hop and Gharrett (1989, entire),
and Leary (1990, entire) results in
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54720
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
information from 21 allozyme loci
(genes) from the five native upper
Missouri River drainage populations,
five native populations in the Yukon
River drainage in Alaska, and the one
population descended from the
Athabasca River drainage in Canada
(Leary 2005, pp. 1–2). Examination of
the genetic variation in these samples
indicated that most of the genetic
divergence is due to differences among
drainages (29 percent) and
comparatively little (5 percent) results
from differences among populations
within a drainage (Leary 2005, p. 1).
Mitochondrial DNA
Analysis using mtDNA suggest that
Arctic grayling in North America
represent at least three evolutionary
lineages that are associated with distinct
glacial refugia (Redenbach and Taylor
1999, entire; Stamford and Taylor 2004,
entire). Arctic grayling in the Missouri
River basin belong to the so-called
North Beringia lineage (Redenbach and
Taylor 1999, pp. 27–28; Samford and
Taylor 2004, pp. 1538–1540). Analysis
of Arctic grayling using restriction
enzymes and DNA sequencing indicated
that the fish from the upper Missouri
River drainage possessed, in terms of
North American fish, an ancestral form
of the molecule (different forms of
mtDNA molecules are referred to as
haplotypes) that was generally absent
from populations collected from other
locations within the species’ range in
North America (Redenbach and Taylor
1999, pp. 27–28; Stamford and Taylor
2004, p. 1538). The notable exceptions
were that some fish from the lower
Peace River drainage in British
Columbia, Canada (2 of 24 individuals
in the population), and all sampled
individuals from the Saskatchewan
River drainage Saskatchewan, Canada (a
total of 30 individuals from 2
populations), also possessed this
haplotype (Stamford and Taylor 2004, p.
1538).
Variation in mtDNA haplotypes based
on sequencing a portion of the ‘control
region’ of the mtDNA molecule of Arctic
grayling from 26 different populations
seems to support the groupings
proposed by Stamford and Taylor (2004,
entire) (USFWS unpublished data). Two
haplotypes were common in the five
native Missouri River populations (Big
Hole, Red Rock, Madison, Miner, and
Mussigbrod – total sample size 143
individuals; USFWS unpublished data).
Fish from three populations in
Saskatchewan or near Hudson’s Bay
also had one of these Missouri River
haplotypes at very high frequency (50 of
51 individuals sequenced had the same
haplotype; USFWS unpublished data).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
The two ‘‘common’’ Missouri River
haplotypes also occurred at low
frequency in handful of other
populations elsewhere in Canada and
Alaska. For example, there a total of five
such populations where a few
individuals contained had one or the
other of the two common Missouri River
haplotypes (25 of 107 individuals
sequenced; USFWS unpublished data).
Also similar to the earlier study by
Stamford and Taylor (2004, entire), a
few individuals (9 of 40 individuals)
from two populations from the Lower
Peace River and the Upper Yukon River
also had one or the other of the two
common Missouri River haplotypes
(USFWS unpublished data).
The distribution of the common
Missouri River haplotype compared to
others suggested that Arctic grayling
native to the upper Missouri River
drainage probably originated from a
glacial refuge in the drainage and
subsequently migrated northwards
when the Missouri River temporarily
flowed into the Saskatchewan River and
was linked to an Arctic drainage (Cross
et al. 1986, pp. 374–375; Pielou 1991, p.
195). When the Missouri River began to
flow southwards because of the advance
of the Laurentide ice sheet (Cross et al.
1986, p. 375; Pileou 1991, p. 10), the
Arctic grayling in the drainage became
physically and reproductively isolated
from the rest of the species’ range (Leary
2005, p. 2; Campton 2006, p. 6), which
would have included those populations
in Saskatchewan. Alternatively, the
Missouri River Arctic grayling could
have potentially colonized
Saskatchewan or the Lower Peace River
(in British Columbia) or both postglacially (Stamford 2001, p. 49) via a
gap in the Cordilleran and Laurentide
ice sheets (Pielou 1991, pp. 10–11),
which also might explain the low
frequency of one or the other of the
‘Missouri River’ haplotypes in grayling
in the Lower Peace River and Upper
Yukon River.
We do not interpret the observation
that Arctic grayling in Montana and
Saskatchewan, and to lesser extent those
from the Lower Peace and Upper Yukon
River systems, share a mtDNA
haplotype to mean that these groups of
fish are genetically identical. Rather, we
interpret it to mean that these fish
shared a common ancestor tens to
hundreds of thousands of years ago.
Microsatellite DNA
Recent analysis of microsatellite DNA
(highly variable portions of nuclear
DNA that exhibit tandem repeats of
DNA base pairs) that included samples
from five native Missouri River
populations and two from
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Saskatchewan showed substantial
divergence between these groups
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, entire).
Genetic differentiation between sample
populations can be compared in terms
of the genetic variation within relative
to among populations, measured in
terms of allele frequencies, a metric
called Fst (Allendorf and Luikart 2007,
pp. 52–54, 198–199). An analogous
metric, named Rst, also measures genetic
differentiation between populations
based on microsatellite DNA, but differs
from Fst in that it also considers the size
differences between alleles (Hardy et al.
2003, p. 1468). An Fst or Rst of 0
indicates that populations are the same
genetically (all genetic diversity within
a species is shared by all populations),
whereas a value of 1 indicates the
populations are completely different (all
the genetic diversity within a species is
found as fixed differences among
populations). Fst values ranged from
0.13 to 0.31 (average 0.18) between
Missouri River and Saskatchewan
populations (Peterson and Ardren 2009,
pp. 1758, 1764–1765), whereas Rst
values ranged from 0.47 to 0.71 (average
0.54) for the same comparisons
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, pp. 1758,
1764–1765). This indicates that the two
groups (Missouri vs. Saskatchewan
populations) differ significantly in allele
frequency and also in the size
differences, and therefore divergence,
among those alleles. This indicates that
the observed genetic differences are not
simply due to random loss of genetic
variation because the populations are
isolated (genetic drift), but they also are
due to mutational differences, which
suggests the groups may have been
separated for millennia (Peterson and
Ardren 2009, pp. 1767–1768).
Comparison of 435 individuals from
21 Arctic grayling populations from
Alaska, Canada, and the Missouri River
basin using nine of the same
microsatellite loci as Peterson and
Ardren (2009, entire) further supports
the distinction of Missouri River Arctic
grayling relative to populations
elsewhere in North America (USFWS,
unpublished data). A statistical analysis
that determines the likelihood that an
individual fish belongs to a particular
group (e.g., STRUCTURE) (Pritchard et
al. 2000, entire), clearly separated the
sample fish from 21 populations into
two clusters: one cluster representing
populations from the upper Missouri
River basin, and another cluster
representing populations from across
Canada and Alaska (USFWS,
unpublished data). Factorial
correspondence analysis (FCA) plots of
individual fish also separated the fish
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
into two groups, or clouds of data points
when visualized in a three-dimensional
space (USFWS, unpublished data). The
FCA is a multivariate data analysis
technique used to simplify presentation
of complex data and to identify
systematic relations between variables,
in this case the multi-locus genotypes of
Arctic grayling. As with the other
analysis, the FCA plots clearly
distinguished Missouri River Arctic
grayling from those native to Canada
and Alaska (USFWS, unpublished data).
Divergence in size among these alleles
further supports the distinction between
Missouri River grayling from those in
Canada and Alaska (USFWS,
unpublished data). The interpretation of
these data is that the Missouri River
populations and the Canada/Alaska
populations are most genetically
distinct at the microsatellite loci
considered.
Phenotypic Characteristics Influenced
by Genetics—Meristics
Phenotypic variation can be evaluated
by counts of body parts (i.e., meristic
counts of the number of gill rakers, fin
rays, and vertebrae characteristics of a
population) that can vary within and
among species. These meristic traits are
influenced by both genetics and the
environment (Allendorf and Luikart
2007, pp. 258–259). When the traits are
controlled primarily by genetic factors,
then meristic characteristics can
indicate significant genetic differences
among groups. Arctic grayling north of
the Brooks Range in Alaska and in
northern Canada had lower lateral line
scale counts than those in southern
Alaska and Canada (McCart and Pepper
1971, entire). These two scale-size
phenotypes are thought to correspond to
fish from the North and South Beringia
glacial refuges, respectively (Stamford
and Taylor 2004, p. 1545). Arctic
grayling from the Red Rock Lakes
drainage had a phenotype intermediate
to the large- and small-scale types
(McCart and Pepper 1971, pp. 749, 754).
Arctic grayling populations from the
Missouri River (and one each from
Canada and Alaska) could be correctly
assigned to their group 60 percent of the
time using a suite of seven meristic
traits (Everett 1986, pp. 32–35). Those
native Missouri River populations that
had high genetic similarity also tended
to have similar meristic characteristics
(Everett 1986, pp. 80, 83).
Arctic grayling from the Big Hole
River showed marked differences in
meristic characteristics relative to two
populations from Siberia, and were
correctly assigned to their population of
origin 100 percent of the time (Weiss et
al. 2006, pp. 512, 515–516, 518). The
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
populations that were significantly
different in terms of their meristic
characteristics also exhibited differences
in molecular genetic markers (Weiss et
al. 2006, p. 518).
Inference Concerning Genetic
Differences in Arctic Grayling of the
Missouri River Relative to Other
Examples of the Taxon
We believe the differences between
Arctic grayling in the Missouri River
and sample populations from Alaska
and Canada measured using
microsatellite DNA markers (Peterson
and Ardren 2009, pp. 1764–1766;
USFWS, unpublished data) represent
‘‘marked genetic differences’’ in terms of
the extent of differentiation (e.g., Fst, Rst)
and the importance of that genetic
legacy to the rest of the taxon. The
presence of morphological
characteristics separating Missouri River
Arctic grayling from other populations
also likely indicates genetic differences,
although this conclusion is based on a
limited number of populations (Everett
1986, pp. 32–35; Weiss et al. 2006,
entire), and we cannot entirely rule out
the influence of environmental
variation.
The intent of the DPS policy and the
ESA is to preserve important elements
of biological and genetic diversity, not
necessarily to preserve the occurrence of
unique alleles in particular populations.
In Arctic grayling of the Missouri River,
the microsatellite DNA data indicate
that the group is evolving
independently from the rest of the
species. The extirpation of this group
would mean the loss of the genetic
variation in one of the two most distinct
groups identified in the microsatellite
DNA analysis, and the loss of the future
evolutionary potential that goes with it.
Thus, the genetic data support the
conclusion that Arctic grayling of the
upper Missouri River represent a unique
and irreplaceable biological resource of
the type the ESA was intended to
preserve. Thus, we conclude that
Missouri River Arctic grayling differ
markedly in their genetic characteristics
relative to the rest of the taxon.
Conclusion
We find that a population segment
that includes all native ecotypes of
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River basin satisfies the discreteness
standard of the DPS policy. The segment
is physically isolated, and genetic data
indicates that Arctic grayling in the
Missouri River basin have been
separated from other populations for
thousands of years. The population
segment occurs in an ocean drainage
different from all other Arctic grayling
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54721
populations worldwide, and we find
that loss of this population segment
would create a significant gap in the
species’ range. Molecular genetic data
clearly differentiate Missouri River
Arctic grayling from other Arctic
grayling populations, including those in
Canada and Alaska. We conclude that
because Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River basin satisfy the criteria
for being discrete and significant under
our DPS policy, we determined that this
population constitutes a DPS under our
policy and the Act.
In our stipulated settlement
agreement, we also agreed to consider
the appropriateness of distinct
population segments based on the two
different ecotypes (fluvial and adfluvial)
expressed by native Arctic grayling of
the upper Missouri River. We
acknowledge there are cases where the
Service has designated distinct
population segments primarily on lifehistory even when they co-occur with
another ecotype that can be part of the
same gene pool (e.g., anadromous
steelhead and resident rainbow trout,
Oncorhynchus mykiss (71 FR 838,
January 5, 2006). However, we conclude
that designation of a single population
segment for Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River is more appropriate than
designating two separate distinct
population segments delineated by lifehistory type. In the Missouri River
basin, the two ecotypes share a common
evolutionary history, and do not cluster
genetically based strictly on ecotype. As
we discussed above, the fluvial and
adfluvial life-history forms of Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River do
not appear to represent distinct
evolutionary lineages. There appears to
be some plasticity in behavior where
individuals from a population can
exhibit a range of behaviors. From a
practical standpoint, we observe that
only five native Arctic grayling
populations remain in the Missouri
River basin, and we believe that both
fluvial and adfluvial native ecotypes
have a role in the conservation of the
larger population segment. We believe
that the intent of the ESA and the DPS
policy, and our obligation to assess the
appropriateness of alternate DPS
designations in the settlement
agreement are best served by
designating a single distinct population
segment, rather than multiple
population segments.
As we described above, we are not
including introduced populations that
occur in lakes in the Upper Missouri
River basin in the DPS. The Service has
interpreted the Act to provide a
statutory directive to conserve species
in their native ecosystems (49 FR 33890,
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54722
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
August 27, 1984) and to conserve
genetic resources and biodiversity over
a representative portion of a taxon’s
historical occurrence (61 FR 4723,
February 7, 1996). The introduced
Arctic grayling occur in lakes apart from
native fluvial environments and from
lakes where native adfluvial grayling
occur. These introduced populations
have not been used for any conservation
purpose and could pose genetic risks to
the native Arctic grayling population.
We find that the Arctic grayling of the
upper Missouri River basin constitute a
distinct population segment. We define
the historical range of this population
segment to include the major streams,
lakes, and tributary streams of the upper
Missouri River (mainstem Missouri,
Smith, Sun, Beaverhead, Jefferson, Big
Hole, and Madison Rivers, as well as
their key tributaries, as well as a few
small lakes where Arctic grayling are or
were believed to be native (Elk Lake,
Red Rock Lakes, Miner Lake, and
Mussigbrod Lake, all in Beaverhead
County, Montana). We define the
current range of the DPS to consist of
extant native populations in the Big
Hole River, Miner Lake, Mussigbrod
Lake, Madison River–Ennis Reservoir,
and Red Rock Lakes. We refer to this
DPS as the native Arctic grayling of the
upper Missouri River. The remainder of
this finding will thus focus on the
population status of and threats to this
entity.
Population Status and Trends for
Native Arctic Grayling in the Upper
Missouri River
We identified a DPS for Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
basin that includes five extant
populations: (1) Big Hole River, (2)
Miner Lake, (3) Mussigbrod Lake, (4)
Madison River-Ennis Reservoir, and (5)
Red Rock Lakes. In general, we
summarize what is known about the
historical distribution and abundance of
each of these populations, describe their
current distributional extent, summarize
any available population monitoring
data, identify the best available
information that we use to infer the
current population status, and
summarize the current population status
and trends.
TABLE 4. EXTENT AND CURRENT ESTIMATED EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZES (Ne) OF NATIVE ARCTIC GRAYLING
POPULATIONS IN THE MISSOURI RIVER BASIN. VALUES IN PARENTHESES REPRESENT 95 PERCENT CONFIDENCE INTERVALS.
Estimated Adult Population Size Assuming:
Population Name
Population Extenta
Ne
Biological Date of
Population Size c
b
Ne/N ratio 0.25
d
Ne/N ratio 0.14
e
Big Hole River
158 mi
208 (176 to 251)
2000–2003
828 (704 to 1,004)
1,486 (1,257 to 1,793)
Miner Lakes
26.9 ha
286 (143 to 4,692)
2001–2003
1,144 (572 to 18,768)
2,043 (1,021 to 33,514)
Mussigbrod Lake
42.5 ha
1,497 (262 to ∞)
2001–2003
5,988 (1,048 to ∞)
10,693 (1,871 to ∞)
Madison River–Ennis
Reservoir
1,469 ha
162 (76 to ∞)
1991–1993
648 (304 to ∞)
1,157 (543 to ∞)
890 ha
228 (141 to 547)
2000–2002
912 (564 to 2,188)
1,629 (1,007 to 3,907)
Red Rock Lakes
a
Approximate maximum spatial extent over which Arctic grayling are encountered in a given water.
b Effective population size estimates from Peterson and Ardren (2009, p.1767). Confidence intervals that include infinity (∞) can result from
statistical artifacts of the linkage disequilibrium method (Waples and Do 2007, p. 10; Russell and Fewster 2009, pp. 309–310). The usual interpretation is that there is no evidence for any disequilibrium caused by genetic drift due to a finite number of parents—it can all be explained by
sampling error (Waples and Do 2007, p. 10). Thus, the effective size is infinitely large. Small sample sizes may influence estimates in some
cases (e.g., Madison River-Ennis Reservoir).
c Approximate date to which the N estimate refers. For example, N for the Big Hole River based on genotyping a sample of fish from 2005–
e
e
2006, but the interpretation of Ne is the number of breeding adults that produced the fish in the observed sample. Thus the true biological date of
the Ne estimate is one generation before 2005–2006, or approximately 2000–2003.
d Adult population size estimated from N assuming N /N = 0.25. This value was the midpoint of a range of values (0.2–0.3) commonly cited
e
e
for Ne /N ratios in salmonid fishes (Allendorf et al. 1997, p. 143; McElhahey et al. 2000, p. 63; Rieman and Allendorf 2001, p. 762; Palm et al.
2003, p. 260).
e Adult population size estimated from N assuming N /N = 0.14. This value was the median N /N ratio based on a meta analysis of 83 stude
e
e
ies for 65 different species (Palstra and Ruzzante 2008, p. 3428).
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Big Hole River
Historically, Arctic grayling
presumably had access to and were
distributed throughout much of the Big
Hole River, including the lower reaches
of many tributary streams, such as Big
Lake, Deep, Doolittle, Fishtrap, Francis,
Governor, Johnson, LaMarche, Miner,
Mussigbrod, Odell, Pintlar, Rock, Sand
Hollow, Swamp, Seymour, Steel,
Swamp, and Wyman Creeks, as well as
the Wise River (Liknes 1981, p. 11;
Liknes and Gould 1987, p. 124; Kaya
1990, pp. 36–40). Presently, Arctic
grayling are found primarily in the
mainstem Big Hole River between the
towns of Glen and Jackson, Montana, a
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
distance of approximately 181 river km
(113 mi), and in 11 tributaries, totaling
an additional 72 river km (45 mi)
(Magee 2010a, pers. comm.; see Table 4
above). The total current maximum
extent of Arctic grayling occurrence in
the Big Hole River is approximately 250
river km (156 mi). However, the fish are
not continuously distributed across this
distance, and instead tend to be
concentrated in discrete patches (Magee
et al. 2006, pp. 27–28; Rens and Magee
2007, p. 15) typically associated with
spawning and rearing habitats or coldwater sites that provide a thermal refuge
from high summer water temperatures.
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Kaya (1992, pp. 50–52) noted the
general lack of monitoring data for the
Big Hole River fluvial Arctic grayling
population prior to the late 1970s, but
data collected since that time indicate
the overall range has contracted over the
last 2 decades. During 1978 and 1979
Arctic grayling were observed in
Governor Creek (in the headwaters of
the Big Hole River) and downstream in
the Big Hole River near Melrose,
Montana (Liknes 1981, p. 11). Arctic
grayling have not recently been
encountered in Governor Creek (Rens
and Magee 2007, p. 15; Montana Fish,
Wildife and Parks (MFWP),
unpublished data), but are occasionally
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
54723
encountered in the Big Hole River
downstream of Divide, Montana, at very
low densities and as far downstream as
Melrose or Glen, Montana (Oswald
2005a, pers. comm.). More recently,
Arctic grayling have become less
abundant in historical spawning and
rearing locations in the upper watershed
near Wisdom, Montana, and also in
downstream river segments with deep
pool habitats considered important for
overwintering (Magee and Lamothe
2003, pp. 18–21; MFWP unpublished
data). Comparatively, greater numbers of
Arctic grayling are encountered in the
lower reaches of tributaries to the upper
Big Hole River, including LaMarche,
Fishtrap, Steel, and Swamp Creeks
(Rens and Magee 2007, p. 13).
Based on the best available data, the
adult population declined by one half
between the early 1990s and the early
2000s (see Figure 3, USFWS
unpublished data), which is equivalent
to a decline of 7 percent per year, on
average. Monitoring data collected by
MFWP also support the conclusion that
the Arctic grayling population in the Big
Hole River declined during this time
period (Byorth 1994a, p. 11; Rens and
Magee 2007, entire; MFPW,
unpublished data).
FIGURE 3. Effective population size
(Ne) of Big Hole River Arctic grayling
based on microsatellite DNA genotypes
from fish collected in three time periods
(USFWS, unpublished data). The Ne are
estimated using the linkage
disequilibrium method of Waples and
Do (2008, entire), and error bars
represent 95% confidence intervals
estimated by the jackknife method.
which has a total surface area of 26.7
hectares (ha) or 0.267 km2 (66 acres
(ac)). Arctic grayling primarily reside in
the lake, and presumably move into the
inlet or outlet tributary to spawn.
Surveys conducted upstream and
downstream of the Lower Miner Lakes
in 1992 and 1994, respectively, captured
no Arctic grayling (Downing 2006, pers.
comm.). Apparently, adults do not
remain in the stream long after
spawning and young-of-the-year (YOY)
move into Lower Miner Lakes.
The MFWP conducted limited
surveys in Lower Miner Lakes, but the
abundance of the population has not
been estimated by traditional fishery
methods. Arctic grayling are classified
as ‘‘common’’ in Lower Miner Lakes
(MFISH 2010). Introduced brook trout
also are present.
The best available information on the
abundance of Miner Lakes Arctic
grayling comes from a genetic
assessment of that population. Based on
a sample of fish from 2006, Peterson and
Ardren (2009, p. 1767) estimated an
effective population size of 286. This
estimate represents an approximation of
abundance of breeding adults at a single
point in time, and there are no data on
which to base an assessment of the
population trend.
The Miner Lakes are a complex of
small lakes in the upper Big Hole River
drainage. Lower Miner Lakes are two
small lakes in the middle of the Miner
Creek drainage connected by a narrow
section approximately 100 m (330 ft) in
length, functionally representing a
single lake for fish populations. Arctic
grayling occur in Lower Miner Lakes
(hereafter Miner Lakes population),
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Mussigbrod Lake
Mussigbrod Lake has a surface area of
42.5 ha (105 ac), and is found in the
middle reaches of Mussigbrod Creek, a
tributary to the North Fork Big Hole
River. Arctic grayling primarily reside
in the lake. We do not know whether
Arctic grayling spawn in the inlet
stream or within the lake (Magee and
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
EP08SE10.002
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Miner Lakes
54724
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Olsen 2010, pers. comm.). Arctic
grayling occasionally pass over a
diversion structure downstream at the
outlet of Mussigbrod Lake, and become
trapped in a pool that is isolated
because of stream dewatering. The
MFWP periodically capture grayling in
this pool and return them to the lake.
Data for the Mussigbrod Lake
population of Arctic grayling is
minimal. The MFWP has conducted
very limited surveys and the abundance
of the population has not been
estimated by traditional fishery
methods. Genetic data indicate that
Arctic grayling are comparatively
abundant (see Table 4 above). Based on
a sample from 2006, Peterson and
Ardren (2009, p. 1767) estimated an
effective size of 1,497. The best
available data indicate that the
Mussigbrod Lake population is
comparatively large, but we have no
data about the population trend.
Madison River – Ennis Reservoir
Historically, Arctic grayling were
reported to be abundant in the middle
and upper Madison River, but have
undergone a dramatic decline in the
past 100 years with the species
becoming rare by the 1930s (Vincent
1962, pp. 11, 85–87). Native Arctic
grayling are thought be extirpated from
the upper Madison River. A major
impact to fish in that area was the
construction of Hebgen Dam, which
flooded Horsethief Springs, a small
tributary that was reportedly one of the
most important streams for Arctic
grayling (Vincent 1962, pp. 40–41, 128).
In the middle Madison River, Arctic
grayling were apparently common to
plentiful in the mainstem River near
Ennis, Montana, and some associated
tributaries (Jack, Meadow, and O’Dell
Creeks) (Vincent 1962, p. 128). In 1906,
construction of Ennis Dam blocked all
upstream movement of fishes, and
apparently had a large negative effect on
Arctic grayling. Vincent (1962) noted
that ‘‘early settlers reported scooping up
boxes full of grayling at the base of
Ennis Dam the year after it was
constructed’’ (p. 128), and that the
species apparently became quite rare by
the late 1930s (Vincent 1962, p. 85).
The current distribution of Arctic
grayling in the Madison River is
primarily restricted to the Ennis
Reservoir and upstream into the river
approximately 6.5 km (approximately 4
mi) to the Valley Garden Fishing Access
Site (Byorth and Shepard 1990, p. 21).
Arctic grayling are occasionally
encountered in the Madison River
downstream and upstream from Ennis
Reservoir (Byorth and Shepard 1990, p.
25; Clancey 2004, p. 22; 2008, p. 21).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Arctic grayling migrate from the
reservoir into the river to spawn, then
return to the reservoir (Byorth and
Shepard 1990, pp. 21–22; Rens and
Magee 2007, pp. 20–21). The YOY
Arctic grayling spawned in the Madison
River migrate downstream into Ennis
Reservoir about 1 month after
emergence, but while they are in the
river, they are typically encountered in
backwater or slackwater habitat (Jeanes
1996, pp. 31–34).
The MFWP has sporadically
monitored Arctic grayling in the
Madison River near Ennis Reservoir
since about 1990. Despite sparse data,
declining catches for both spawning
adults and YOY indicate the population
is less abundant now compared to the
early 1990s. The highest numbers of
YOY Arctic grayling were encountered
in the early 1990s, and no more than
two have been captured in any given
year since that time. Our interpretation
of this information is that Arctic
grayling in the Madison River–Ennis
Reservoir population have declined
during the past 20 years and are
presently at very low abundance.
Abundance of the Madison River–
Ennis Reservoir Arctic grayling has been
estimated twice. In 1990, the adult
population was estimated to be 545, but
the authors cautioned that the accuracy
of the estimate was questionable as it
was based on recapturing only. From a
sample of fish collected mostly in 1996,
the effective size of the population
(breeding adults) was estimated as 162
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1767).
The average number of Arctic grayling
captured per unit effort (CPUE) declined
by approximately a factor of 10 between
the early 1990s and recent samples
(Clancey 1998, p. 10; Clancey 2007,
p.16; Clancey 2008, pp. ii, 21, A2-2;
Clancey and Lohrenz 2009, pp. 30, B2;
Clancey 2010a, pers. comm.; Clancey
2010b, pers. comm.). Adult Arctic
grayling may currently exist at only 10
to 20 percent of the abundance observed
in the early 1990s. Based on the best
available data, we conclude that this
Arctic grayling population has been in
a decline during the past 20 years and
may only consist of a few hundred
adults.
Red Rocks Lakes
Arctic grayling are native to waters of
the upper Beaverhead River system,
including the Red Rock River drainage.
During the past 50 to 100 years, both the
distribution and abundance of Arctic
grayling in the Centennial Valley,
Beaverhead County, Montana (which
contains the Red Rock River), has
severely declined (Vincent 1962, pp.
115–121; Unthank 1989, pp. 13–17;
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Mogen 1996, pp. 2–5, 75–84). As of
about 50 years ago, Arctic grayling
spawned in at least 12 streams in the
Centennial Valley (Mogen 1996, p. 17),
but they appear to have been extirpated
from all but 2 streams (Boltz 2006, p. 6).
Presently, Arctic grayling spawn in two
locations within the Red Rock River
drainage: Odell Creek, a tributary to
Lower Red Rock Lake; and Red Rock
Creek, the primary tributary to Upper
Red Rock Lake (Mogen 1996, pp. 47–48;
Boltz 2006, p. 1). Lower and Upper Red
Rock Lakes are connected by a short
segment of river, and both lakes are
contained within the boundaries of the
Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife
Refuge (NWR). The upper lake appears
to be the primary rearing and
overwintering habitat for Arctic
grayling. Red Rock Creek is the only
stream where Arctic grayling spawn in
appreciable numbers (Mogen 1996, pp.
45–48). Collectively, we refer to this
population as the Red Rocks Lakes
Arctic grayling, and characterize it as
having the adfluvial ecotype.
Arctic grayling in the Red Rock Lakes
have been monitored intermittently
since the 1970s. Most of that effort
focused on Red Rock Creek, but periodic
sampling also occurred in Odell Creek.
The MFWP and the Service occasionally
sampled for Arctic grayling in Odell
Creek, where grayling abundance
declined over the past few decades. On
average, the minimum sizes of the
spawning runs in Red Rock Creek since
1994 are about half of those recorded 4
decades ago (i.e., 623 vs. 308 per year)
(data summarized from Mogen 1996, p.
70 and Boltz 2006, p. 7). The spawning
runs into Red Rock Creek fluctuated
during the 1990s and early 2000s, but
about 450 or fewer adult Arctic grayling
have been captured in 6 of 7 years in
which weirs traps were operated.
Electrofishing surveys conducted in Red
Rock Creek by MFWP seem to
corroborate a decline in the spawning
population, as total catches decreased
even as sampling effort increased (Rens
and Magee 2007, pp. 16–18).
Based on a sample of fish from Red
Rock Creek in 2005, Peterson and
Ardren (2009, pp. 1761, 1767) estimated
an effective size of 228, which is
interpreted as the number of breeding
adults that produced the fish sampled in
2005. The best available data indicate
that the Red Rock Lakes Arctic grayling
population has declined over the past 2
decades.
Population viability analysis (PVA) of
native Missouri River Arctic grayling
To gauge the probability that the
different native populations of Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
basin will go extinct from unpredictable
events in the foreseeable future, we
conducted a simple population viability
analysis (PVA) (see Dennis et al. (1991,
entire) in Morris and Doak 2002, pp. 85–
87 for details on the PVA model and the
software code to run the model). We
assumed that a population with 50 or
fewer adults is likely influenced by
demographic stochasticity (chance
variation in the fates of individuals
within a given year) and genetic
stochasticity (random changes in a
population’s genetic makeup), and
would not be expected to persist long as
a viable population. For the different
PVA scenarios, we assume either the
population has stabilized, or the
estimated decline will continue at a
constant rate.
We considered the probability of
extinction individually by population,
as populations appear to be
reproductively isolated. The relative
risk of extinction in the foreseeable
future (30 years based on the
observation that the variability in
predictions for extinction risk from the
PVA model increases substantially after
30 years) varies among the different
populations, with the largest
population, Mussigbrod Lake, having a
very low probability of extinction (less
than 1 percent) in the foreseeable future,
even given a population decline. The
other four populations have
comparatively greater probabilities of
extinction in the foreseeable future,
with all being roughly similar in
magnitude (13-55 percent across
populations) when considering only
stochastic (random or chance)
processes. The Madison River has the
greatest probability of extinction by
stochastic processes (36-55 percent),
followed by Big Hole (33-42 percent),
Red Rocks (31-40 percent), and Miner
(13-37 percent).
Overall, the PVA analyses indicate
that four populations (Madison, Big
Hole, Red Rocks, and Miner) appear to
be at risk from chance environmental
variation because of low population
abundance. This is a general conclusion,
and the actual risk may vary
substantially among populations
(USFWS unpublished data). For
example, Arctic grayling in the Big Hole
River population spawn in different
locations, which would reduce the risk
that an environmental catastrophe
would simultaneously kill all breeding
adults, relative to a situation where
adults appear to be primarily in a single
location or reach of river (e.g., Red
Rocks and Madison populations).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Arctic Grayling Conservation Efforts
Native Arctic Grayling Genetic Reserves
and Translocation
Given concern over the status of
native Arctic grayling, the Montana
Arctic Grayling Recovery Program
(AGRP) was formed in 1987, to address
conservation concerns for primarily the
fluvial ecotype in Big Hole River, and to
a lesser extent the native adflvuial
population in Red Rock Lakes
(Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
2007, p. 2). The AGW was established
as an ad hoc technical workgroup of the
AGRP. In 1995, the AGW finalized a
restoration plan that outlined an agenda
of restoration tasks and research,
including management actions to secure
the Big Hole River population, brood
stock development, and a program to reestablish four additional fluvial
populations (AGW 1995, pp. 7–17).
Consequently, the State of Montana
established genetic reserves of Big Hole
River grayling (Leary 1991, entire), and
has used the progeny from those
reserves in efforts to re-establish
additional fluvial populations within
the historical native range in the
Missouri River basin (Rens and Magee
2007, pp. 21–38). Currently, brood
(genetic) reserves of Big Hole River
grayling are held in two closed-basin
lakes in south-central Montana (Rens
and Magee 2007, p. 22). These fish are
manually spawned to provide gametes
for translocation efforts in Montana
(Rens and Magee 2007, p. 22).
Functionally, these brood reserves are
hatchery populations maintained in a
natural setting, and we do not consider
them wild populations for the purposes
of evaluating the status of native Arctic
grayling in the Missouri River basin.
However, they are important to recovery
efforts.
For more than 13 years, MFWP has
attempted to re-establish populations of
fluvial Arctic grayling in various
locations in the Missouri River basin,
including the Ruby, Sun, Beaverhead,
Missouri, Madison, Gallatin, and
Jefferson Rivers (Lamothe and Magee
2004a, pp. 2, 28). A self-sustaining
population has not yet been established
from these reintroductions (Lamothe
and Magee 2004a, p. 28; Rens and
Magee 2007, pp. 35–36, 38). Recent
efforts have focused more intensively on
the Ruby and Sun Rivers, and have used
methods that should improve
reintroduction success (Rens and Magee
2007, pp. 24–36). Encouragingly, natural
reproduction by Arctic grayling in the
Ruby River was confirmed during fall
2009 (Magee 2010b, pp. 6–7, 22).
Monitoring will continue in subsequent
years to determine whether the
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54725
population has become a stable and
viable population, as defined by the
guidance and implementation
documents of the translocation
programs (AGW 1995, p. 1;
Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)
1996, p. 2). Consequently, we do not
consider the Ruby River to represent a
self-sustaining population for the
purposes of evaluating the population
status of Missouri River grayling in this
finding. Arctic grayling presumably
from previous translocations are
occasionally encountered near
translocation sites in other waters (Rens
and Magee 2007, pp. 35–38; MFWP,
unpublished data). There is no evidence
that these individuals represent progeny
from a re-established population, so we
cannot consider them elements of a
stable and viable population for the
purposes of evaluating the population
status of Missouri River Arctic grayling
in this finding.
Big Hole River Candidate Conservation
Agreement with Assurances
On August 1, 2006, the Service issued
ESA section 10(a)(1)(A) enhancement of
survival permit (TE-104415-0) to
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks
(MFWP) to implement a Candidate
Conservation Agreement with
Assurances for Arctic grayling in the
upper Big Hole River (Big Hole Grayling
CCAA) (MFWP et al. 2006, entire). This
permit is valid through August 1, 2026.
The goal of the Big Hole Grayling CCAA
is to secure and enhance a population
of fluvial Arctic grayling within the
upper reaches of their historic range in
the Big Hole River drainage by working
with non-Federal property owners to
implement conservation measures on
their lands. The guidelines of this CCAA
will be met by implementing
conservation measures that improve
stream flows, protect and restore
riparian habitats, identify and reduce or
eliminate entrainment (inadvertent
capture) of grayling in irrigation ditches,
and remove human-made barriers to
grayling migration (MFWP et al. 2006,
p. 3). Currently, 32 landowners
representing 64,822 ha (160,178 ac) in
the upper Big Hole River drainage are
participating in the CCAA (Lamothe
2009, p. 5). The MFWP leads the Big
Hole Grayling CCAA implementation
effort, and is supported by Montana
Department of Natural Resources and
Conservation (MDNRC), USDA Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS),
and the Service. Other groups helping
implement the CCAA include the Big
Hole Watershed Committee, the Big
Hole River Foundation, Montana Trout
Unlimited, the Western Water Project
(affiliated with Trout Unlimited), and
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54726
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
The Nature Conservancy (Lamothe
2008, p. 23). Detailed information on
conservation actions and restoration
projects implemented under the plan
are available in various reports (AGW
2010, p. 4; Everett 2010, entire; Lamothe
et al. 2007, pp. 6–35; Lamothe 2008, pp.
7–21; Lamothe 2009, entire; Lamothe
2010, entire; Magee 2010b, entire;
Roberts 2010, entire).
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Biological Effectiveness of the Ongoing
Conservation Programs
The current and anticipated effects of
the aforementioned conservation
programs on the biological status and
threats to Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River are discussed elsewhere
in the document (see Summary of
Information Pertaining to the Five
Factors and Finding sections, below).
We continue to encourage and promote
collaborative efforts to secure existing
populations, and to increase the
distribution of the Arctic grayling
within its historical range in the upper
Missouri River basin.
Summary of Information Pertaining to
the Five Factors
Section 4 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1533)
and implementing regulations (50 CFR
424) set forth procedures for adding
species to the Federal Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants. Under section 4(a)(1) of the
ESA, a species may be determined to be
endangered or threatened based on any
of the following five factors: (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 finding, information
pertaining to the Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling in relation to the five
factors provided in section 4(a)(1) of the
Act is discussed below.
In considering what factors might
constitute threats to a species, we must
look beyond the exposure of the species
to a factor to evaluate whether the
species may respond to the factor in a
way that causes actual impacts to the
species. If there is exposure to a factor
and the species responds negatively, the
factor may be a threat and we attempt
to determine how significant a threat it
is. The threat is significant if it drives,
or contributes to, the risk of extinction
of the species such that the species
warrants listing as endangered or
threatened as those terms are defined in
the Act.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
A. The Present or Threatened
Destruction, Modification, or
Curtailment of Its Habitat or Range
Curtailment of Range and Distribution
The number of river kilometers
(miles) occupied by the fluvial ecotype
of Arctic grayling in the Missouri River
has been reduced by approximately 95
percent during the past 100 to 150 years
(Kaya 1992, p. 51). The fluvial life
history is only expressed in the
population residing in the Big Hole
River; the remnant population in the
Madison River near Ennis Reservoir has
apparently diverged toward an adfluvial
life history. Arctic grayling distribution
within the Centennial Valley in the
upper Beaverhead River also has been
severely curtailed during the last 50 to
100 years, such that the only remaining
example of the species in that drainage
is an adfluvial population associated
with the Red Rock Lakes. Indigenous
populations in the Big Hole River,
Madison River, and Red Rock Lakes all
exist at reduced densities on both
contemporary and historical timescales.
The Miner Lakes and Mussigbrod Lake
populations appear to have been
reproductively isolated for hundreds of
years (USFWS, unpublished data), so a
restricted distribution may represent the
natural historical condition for these
populations. The curtailment of range
and distribution is a current threat,
because the probability of extirpation of
the DPS is related to the number of
populations and their resilience. Since
the DPS currently exists as a set of
generally small, isolated populations
that cannot naturally re-found or
‘rescue’ another population. Thus, the
curtailment of range and distribution
will remain a threat in the foreseeable
future, absent the reestablishment of
additional populations within the DPS’
historical range. Reintroduction
attempted under the auspices of the
1995 Restoration Plan (AGW 1995,
entire) have been underway since 1997,
but have not yet resulted in reestablishment of populations or the
expansion of the DPS’ current range.
Dams on Mainstem Rivers
The majority of the historical range of
the Upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling has been altered by the
construction of dams and reservoirs that
created barriers obstructing migrations
to spawning, wintering, or feeding areas;
inundated grayling habitat; and
impacted the historical hydrology of
river systems (Kaya 1990, pp. 51–52;
Kaya 1992, p. 57). The construction of
large dams on mainstem river habitats
throughout the upper Missouri River
system fragmented river corridors
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
necessary for the expression of
migratory life histories. Construction of
dams that obstructed fish passage on the
mainstem Missouri River (Hauser,
Holter, Canyon Ferry, and Toston),
Madison River (Madison–Ennis,
Hebgen), Beaverhead River and its
tributary Red Rock River (Clark Canyon,
Lima), Ruby River (Ruby), and Sun
River (Gibson) all contributed to the
rangewide decline of this DPS (Vincent
1962, pp. 127–128; Kaya 1992, p. 57; see
Figure 2).
Dams also may continue to impact the
extant population in the Madison River.
The Madison Dam (also known as Ennis
Dam), as with the aforementioned dams,
is a migration barrier with no fish
passage facilities. Anglers have reported
encountering Arctic grayling in pools
below the dam, implying that fish
occasionally pass (downstream) over or
through the dam. These fish would be
‘‘lost’’ to the population residing above
the dam because they cannot return
upstream, but have apparently not
established populations downstream.
Operational practices of the Madison
Dam also have been shown to affect the
resident fishes. A population decline of
Arctic grayling coincided with a
reservoir drawdown in winter 1982–
1983 that was intended to reduce the
effects of aquatic vegetation on the
hydroelectric operations at the dam
(Byorth and Shepard 1990, pp. 52–53).
This drawdown likely affected the
forage base, rearing habitat, and
spawning cycle of Arctic grayling in the
reservoir.
The presence of mainstem dams is a
historical, current, and future threat to
the DPS. Lack of fish passage at these
dams contributed to the extirpation of
Arctic grayling from some waters by
blocking migratory corridors (Vincent
1962, p. 128), curtailing access to
important spawning and rearing
habitats, and impounding water over
former spawning locations (Vincent
1962, p. 128). These dams are an
impediment to fish migration and limit
the ability of fish to disperse between
existing populations or recolonize
habitat fragments, and will continue to
act in this manner for the foreseeable
future. We believe the presence of a
mainstem dam is an immediate and
imminent threat to the Madison River
population, as the remaining grayling
habitat is adjacent to Ennis Dam (see
Figure 2). We not aware of any plans to
retrofit the Ennis Dam or any other
mainstem dam to provide upstream fish
passage, so we expect the current
situation to continue. The Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)
license for hydroelectric generation at
Ennis Dam will not expire until the year
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
2040 (FERC 2010, entire). The upper
Missouri River basin dam having the
FERC license with the latest expiration
date is Clark Canyon Dam, which will
not expire until 2059 (FERC 2010,
entire). Thus, mainstem dams will
remain a threat in the foreseeable future,
which is 30 to 50 years based on the
duration of existing FERC licenses in
the upper basin.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Agriculture and Ranching
The predominant use of private lands
in the upper Missouri River basin is
irrigated agriculture and ranching, and
these activities had and continue to
have significant effects on aquatic
habitats. In general, these effects relate
to changes in water availability and
alteration to the structure and function
of aquatic habitats. The specific
activities and their impacts are
discussed below.
Smaller Dams and Fish Passage Barriers
Smaller dams or diversions associated
with irrigation structures within specific
watersheds continue to pose problems
to Arctic grayling migratory behavior,
especially in the Big Hole River
drainage. In the Big Hole River,
numerous diversion structures have
been identified as putative fish
migration barriers (Petersen and
Lamothe 2006, pp. 8, 12–13, 29) that
may limit the ability of Arctic grayling
to migrate to spawning, rearing, or
sheltering habitats under certain
conditions. The Divide Dam on the Big
Hole River near the town of Divide,
Montana, has existed for nearly 80 years
and is believed to be at least a partial
barrier to upstream movement by fishes
(Kaya 1992, p. 58). As with the larger
dams, these smaller fish passage barriers
can reduce reproduction (access to
spawning habitat is blocked), reduce
growth (access to feeding habitat is
blocked), and increase mortality (access
to refuge habitat is blocked). A number
of planned or ongoing conservation
actions to address connectivity issues
on the Big Hole River and its tributaries
may reduce the threat posed by
movement barriers for Arctic grayling in
that habitat. The Divide Dam is being
replaced with a new structure that
provides fish passage, and construction
began in July 2010 (Nicolai 2010, pers.
comm.). At least 17 fish ladders have
been installed at diversion structures in
the Big Hole River since 2006 as part of
the Big Hole Grayling CCAA (AGW
2010, p. 4), and a culvert barrier at a
road crossing on Governor Creek
(headwaters of Big Hole River) was
replaced with a bridge that is expected
to provide upstream passage for aquatic
organisms under all flow conditions
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
(Everett 2010, pp. 2–6). Non-Federal
landowners who control approximately
50 to 70 percent of the points of
irrigation diversion in the upper Big
Hole River are enrolled in the CCAA
(Roberts and Lamothe 2010, pers.
comm.), so the threats posed by fish
passage barriers should be substantially
reduced in the Big Hole River during the
next 10 to 20 years (foreseeable future)
based on the minimum duration of sitespecific plans for landowners enrolled
in the CCAA and the duration of the
ESA section 10(a)(1)(A) enhancement of
survival permit (TE 104415-0)
associated with the CCAA (MFWP et al.
2006, p. 75).
Fish passage barriers also have been
noted in the Red Rock Lakes system
(Unthank 1989, p. 9). Henshall (1907, p.
5) noted that spawning Arctic grayling
migrated from the Jefferson River
system, through the Beaverhead River
and Red Rock River through the Red
Rock Lakes and into the upper drainage,
and then returned downstream after
spawning. The construction of a water
control structure (sill) at the outlet of
Lower Red Rock Lake in 1930 (and
reconstructed in 1957 (USFWS 2009, p.
74)) created an upstream migration
barrier that blocked these migrations
(Unthank 1989, p. 10; Gillin 2001, p. 44). This structure, along with mainstem
dams at Lima and Clark Canyon,
extirpated spawning runs of Arctic
grayling that historically migrated
through the Beaverhead and Red Rock
Rivers (see Figure 2; USFWS 2009, p.
72). All of these structures preclude
upstream movement by fishes, and
continue to prohibit immigration of
Arctic grayling from the Big Hole River
(see Figure 2). Because recovery of
Arctic grayling will necessitate
expansion into unoccupied habitat, and
the Big Hole River includes some of the
best remaining habitat for the species,
these dams constitute a threat to Arctic
grayling now and in the foreseeable
future, which is 30 to 50 years based on
the duration of existing FERC licenses
in the upper basin.
In Mussigbrod Lake, Arctic grayling
occasionally pass downstream over a
diversion structure at the lake outlet,
and become trapped in a pool that is
isolated because of stream dewatering
(Magee and Olsen 2010, pers. comm.).
However, the potential for mortality in
these fish is partially mitigated by
MFWP, which periodically captures
Arctic grayling in this pool and returns
them to the lake.
In the Red Rock Lakes system, the
presence of fish passage barriers
represents a past and present threat. The
magnitude of the threat may be reduced
in the next 15 years as a result of
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54727
implementation of the Red Rock Lakes
NWR Comprehensive Conservation Plan
(CCP) (USFWS 2009, entire — see
Factor D discussion below), but we
conclude that not all barriers that
potentially affect the population will
addressed during this time (e.g., Lower
Red Rock Lake Water Control Structure)
(USFWS 2009, p. 43). Thus, fish passage
barriers will remain a threat to the Red
Rock Lakes grayling in the foreseeable
future.
In the Big Hole River, fish passage
barriers represent a past and present
threat. The magnitude of the threat in
the Big Hole River should decrease
appreciably during the next 10 to 20
years, which represents the foreseeable
future in terms of the potential for the
Big Hole Grayling CCAA to address the
threat. Additional projects, such as the
replacement of the Divide Dam, also
should reduce the threat in the
foreseeable future.
Dewatering From Irrigation and
Consequent Increased Water
Temperatures
Demand for irrigation water in the
semi-arid upper Missouri River basin
has dewatered many rivers formerly or
currently occupied by Arctic grayling.
The primary effects of this dewatering
are: 1) Increased water temperatures,
and 2) reduced habitat capacity. In
ectothermic species like salmonid
fishes, water temperature sets basic
constraints on species distribution and
physiological performance, such as
activity and growth (Coutant 1999, pp.
32–52). Increased water temperatures
can reduce the growth and survival of
Arctic grayling (physiological stressor).
Reduced habitat capacity can
concentrate fishes and thereby increase
competition and predation (ecological
stressor).
In the Big Hole River system, surfacewater (flood) irrigation has substantially
altered the natural hydrologic function
of the river and has led to acute and
chronic stream dewatering (Shepard and
Oswald 1989, p. 29; Byorth 1993, p. 14;
1995, pp. 8–10; Magee et al. 2005, pp.
13–15). Most of the Big Hole River
mainstem exceeds water quality
standards under the Clean Water Act
(33. U.S.C. 1251 et seq.; see discussion
under Factor D, below) because of high
summer water temperatures (Flynn et
al. 2008, p. 2). Stream water
temperature is affected by flow volume,
stream morphology, and riparian
shading, along with other factors, but an
inverse relationship between flow
volume and water temperature is
apparent in the Big Hole River (Flynn et
al. 2008, pp. 18–19). Summer water
temperatures exceeding 21 °C (70 °F) are
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54728
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
considered to be physiologically
stressful for cold-water fish species,
such as Arctic grayling (Hubert et al.
1985, pp. 7, 9). Summer water
temperatures consistently exceed 21 °C
(70 °F) in the mainstem of Big Hole
River (Magee and Lamothe 2003, pp.
13–14; Magee et al. 2005, p. 15; Rens
and Magee 2007, p. 11). Recently,
summer water temperatures have
consistently exceeded the upper
incipient lethal temperature (UILT) for
Arctic grayling (e.g., 25 °C or 77 °F)
(Lohr et al. 1996) at a number of
monitoring stations throughout the Big
Hole River (Magee and Lamothe 2003,
pp. 13–14; Magee et al. 2005, p. 15; Rens
and Magee 2007, p. 11). The UILT is the
temperature that is survivable
indefinitely (for periods longer than 1
week) by 50 percent of the ‘‘test
population’’ in an experimental setting.
Fish kills are a clear result of high water
temperature and have been documented
in the Big Hole River (Lohr et al. 1996,
p. 934). Consequently, water
temperatures that are high enough to
cause mortality of fish in the Big Hole
River represent a clear threat to Arctic
grayling because of the potential to
directly and quickly reduce the size of
the population.
Water temperatures below that which
can lead to instant mortality also can
affect individual fish. At water
temperatures between 21 °C (70 °F) and
25 °C (77 °F), Arctic grayling can
survive but experience chronic stress
that can impair feeding and growth,
reduce physiological performance, and
ultimately reduce survival and
reproduction. As described above, the
Big Hole River periodically experiences
summer water temperatures high
enough to cause morality and chronic
stress to Arctic grayling. Increased water
temperature also appears to be a threat
to Arctic grayling in the Madison River
and Red Rock watershed. Mean and
maximum summer water temperatures
can exceed 21 °C (70 °F) in the Madison
River below Ennis Reservoir (U.S.
Geological Survey (USGS) 2010), and
have exceeded 22 °C (72 °F) in the
reservoir, and 24 °C (75 °F) in the
reservoir inlet (Clancey and Lohrenz
2005, p. 34). Similar or higher
temperatures have been noted at these
same locations in recent years (Clancey
2002, p. 17; 2003, p. 25; 2004, pp. 29–
30). Surface water temperatures in
Upper Red Rock Lake as high as 24 °C
(75 °F) have been recorded (Gillin 2001,
p. 4-6), and presence of Arctic grayling
in the lower 100 m (328 ft) of East
Shambow Creek in 1994 was attributed
to fish seeking refuge from high water
temperatures in the lake (Mogen 1996,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
p. 44). Mean summer water
temperatures in Red Rock Creek can
occasionally exceed 20°C or 68°F during
drought conditions (Mogen 1996, pp.
19, 45). Arctic grayling can survive but
experience chronic stress that can
impair feeding and growth, reduce
physiological performance, and
ultimately reduce survival and
reproduction.
Experimental data specifically linking
hydrologic alteration and dewatering to
individual and population-level effects
for Arctic grayling is generally lacking
(Kaya 1992, p. 54), but we can infer
effects from observations that the
abundance and distribution of Arctic
grayling has declined concurrent with
reduced streamflows (MFWP et al. 2006,
pp. 39–40) and increased water
temperatures associated with low
streamflows.
In the Big Hole River system, earlyseason (April through May) irrigation
withdrawals may dewater grayling
spawning sites (Byorth 1993, p. 22),
preventing spawning or causing egg
mortality; can prevent juvenile grayling
from accessing cover in the vegetation
along the shoreline; and may reduce
connectivity between necessary
spawning, rearing, and refuge habitats.
Severe dewatering reduces habitat
volume and may concentrate fish,
increasing the probability of
competition and predation among and
between species. Nonnative trout
species presently dominate the
salmonid community in the Big Hole
River, so dewatering would tend to
concentrate Arctic grayling in habitats
where interactions with these nonnative
trout would be likely.
Especially in the Big Hole River,
dewatering from irrigation represents a
past and present threat to Arctic
grayling. Thermal loading has
apparently been a more frequent
occurrence in the Big Hole River than in
other locations containing native Arctic
grayling (e.g., Red Rock Creek and
Madison River–Ennis Reservoir).
Implementation of the Big Hole Grayling
CCAA during the next 20 years, which
requires conservation measures to
increase stream flows and restore
riparian habitats (MFWP 2006, pp. 22–
48), should significantly reduce the
threat of thermal loading for Big Hole
River grayling in the foreseeable future.
While we expect agricultural and
ranching-related use of water to
continue, we expect that the threat will
be reduced, but not eliminated, in the
foreseeable future in the Big Hole River
as a consequence of the CCAA. The
ability of the Big Hole Grayling CCAA
to augment streamflows should be
substantial, as non-Federal landowners
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
who control approximately 50 to 70
percent of the points of irrigation
diversion in the upper Big Hole River
are enrolled in the CCAA (Roberts and
Lamothe 2010, pers. comm.). However,
the Big Hole River constitutes one
population in the DPS and high water
temperatures are likely to continue to
affect grayling in the Madison River and
Red Rock Lakes. Thus, stream
dewatering and high water temperatures
are expected to remain a threat to the
DPS in the foreseeable future.
Entrainment
Entrainment can permanently remove
individuals from the natural population
and strand them in a habitat that lacks
the required characteristics for
reproduction and survival. Irrigation
ditches may dry completely when
irrigation headgates are closed, resulting
in mortality of entrained grayling.
Entrainment of individual Arctic
grayling in irrigation ditches occurs in
the Big Hole River (Skarr 1989, p. 19;
Streu 1990, pp. 24–25; MFWP et al.
2006, p. 49; Lamothe 2008, p. 22). Over
1,000 unscreened diversion structures
occur in the upper Big Hole River
watershed, and more than 300 of these
are located in or near occupied grayling
habitat (MFWP et al. 2006, pp. 48–49).
The magnitude of entrainment at
unscreened diversions can depend on a
variety of physical and biological
factors, including the volume of water
diverted (Kennedy 2009, p. iv, 36–38;
but see Post et al. 2007, p. 885), speciesspecific differences in the timing of
migratory behavior relative to when
water is being diverted (Carlson and
Rahel 2007, pp. 1340–1341), and
differences in vulnerability among body
size or life-stage (Gale 2005, pp. 30–47;
Post et al. 2006, p. 975; Carlson and
Rahel 2007 pp. 1340–1341). Studies of
other salmonid species in a river basin
in southwestern Wyoming determined
that ditches typically entrain a small
proportion (less than 4 percent) of the
total estimated trout in the basin
(Carlson and Rahel 2007, p. 1335) and
that this represented a very small
percentage of the total mortality for
those populations (Post et al. 2006, pp.
875, 884; Carlson and Rahel 2007, pp.
1335, 1339). Whether or not this amount
of mortality can cause population
instability is unclear (Post et al. 2006, p.
886; Carlson and Rahel 2007, pp. 1340–
1341). However, in some cases, even
small vital rate changes in a trout
population can theoretically cause
population declines (Hilderbrand 2003,
pp. 260–261).
The overall magnitude and
population-level effect of entrainment
on Arctic grayling in the Big Hole River
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
is unknown but possibly significant
given the large number of unscreened
surface-water diversions in the system
and the large volumes of water diverted
for irrigation. Given the low abundance
of the species, even a small amount of
entrainment may be biologically
significant and is unlikely to be offset by
compensatory effects (i.e., higher
survival in Arctic grayling that are not
entrained).
Entrainment also may be a problem
for Arctic grayling at some locations
within the Red Rock Lakes system
(Unthank 1989, p. 10; Gillin 2001, pp.
2-4, 3-18, 3-25), particularly outside of
the Red Rock Lakes NWR (Boltz 2010,
pers. comm.).
Entrainment has been a past threat to
Arctic grayling in the Big Hole River
and the Red Rock Lakes system. It
remains a current threat as most, if not
all, irrigation diversions located in
occupied habitat do not have any
devices to exclude fish (i.e., fish
screens). Entrainment will remain a
threat in the foreseeable future unless
diversion structures are modified to
exclude fish. The Big Hole Grayling
CCAA has provisions to reduce
entrainment at diversions operated by
enrolled landowners (MFWP et al. 2006,
pp. 50–52). Non-Federal landowners
enrolled in the CCAA control
approximately 50 to 70 percent of the
points of irrigation diversion in the
upper Big Hole River (Roberts and
Lamothe 2010, pers. comm.), so the
threat of entrainment in the Big Hole
River should be significantly reduced in
the foreseeable future. We consider the
foreseeable future to represent
approximately 20 years based on the
duration of the Big Hole Grayling
CCAA. Under the auspices of the Red
Rock Lakes NWR CCP, a fish screen is
planned to be installed on at least one
diversion on the Red Rock Creek
(USFWS 2009, p. 72), which is the
primary spawning tributary for Arctic
grayling in the Red Rock Lakes system.
Overall, we anticipate it may take years
to design and install fish screens on all
the diversions that can entrain grayling
in the Big Hole River and Red Rock
Lakes systems; thus we conclude that
entrainment remains a current threat
that will continue to exist, but will
decline in magnitude during the
foreseeable future (next 10 to 20 years)
because of implementation of the CCAA
and CCP.
Degradation of Riparian Habitat
Riparian corridors are important for
maintaining habitat for Arctic grayling
in the upper Missouri River basin, and
in general are critical for the ecological
function of aquatic systems (Gregory et
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
al. 1991, entire). These riparian zones
are important for Arctic grayling
because of their effect on water quality
and role in creating and maintaining
physical habitat features (pools) used by
the species.
Removal of willows and riparian
clearing concurrent with livestock and
water management along the Big Hole
River has apparently accelerated in
recent decades, and, in conjunction
with streamside cattle grazing, has led
to localized bank erosion, channel
instability, and channel widening
(Confluence Consulting et al. 2003, pp.
24–26; Petersen and Lamothe 2006, pp.
16–17; Bureau of Land Management
(BLM) 2009a, pp. 14–21). Arctic
grayling abundance in the upper Big
Hole River is positively related to the
presence of overhanging vegetation,
primarily willows, which are associated
with pool habitat (Lamothe and Magee
2004b, pp. 21–22). Degradation of
riparian habitat in the upper Big Hole
River has led to a shift in channel form
(from multiple threads to a single wide
channel), increased erosion rates,
reduced cover, increased water
temperatures, and reduced recruitment
of large wood into the active stream
channel (Confluence Consulting et al.
2003, pp. 24–26). All of these combine
to reduce the suitability of the habitat
for species like Arctic grayling, and
likely reduce grayling growth, survival,
and reproduction.
Livestock grazing both within the Red
Rock Lakes NWR and on adjacent
private lands has negatively affected the
condition of riparian habitats on
tributaries to the Red Rock Lakes
(Mogen 1996, pp. 75–77; Gillin 2001,
pp. 3-12, 3-14). In general, degraded
riparian habitat limits the creation and
maintenance of aquatic habitats,
especially pools, that are preferred
habitats for adult Arctic grayling
(Lamothe and Magee 2004b, pp. 21–22;
Hughes 1992, entire). Loss of pools
likely reduces growth and survival of
adult grayling. Loss of riparian
vegetation increases bank erosion,
which can lead to siltation of spawning
gravels, which may in turn harm
grayling by reducing the extent of
suitable spawning habitat and reducing
survival of Arctic grayling embryos
already present in the stream gravels.
The condition of riparian habitats
upstream from the Upper and Lower
Red Rock Lakes may have improved
during the 1990s (Mogen 1996, p. 77),
and ongoing efforts to improve grazing
management and restore riparian
habitats are ongoing both inside the Red
Rock Lakes NWR (USFWS 2009, pp. 67,
75) and upstream (AGW 2010, p. 7; Korb
2010, pers. comm.). However, the
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54729
existing condition of riparian habitats
continues to constitute a threat to Arctic
grayling because the loss of pool habitat
and the deposition of fine sediments
may take some time to be reversed after
the recovery of riparian vegetation.
Much of the degradation of riparian
habitats in the Big Hole River and Red
Rock Lakes systems has occurred within
the past 50 to 100 years, but the
influence of these past actions continues
to affect the structure and function of
aquatic habitats in these systems. Thus,
while the actual loss of riparian
vegetation has presumably slowed
during the past 10 years, the effect of
reduced riparian vegetation continues to
promote channel widening and
sedimentation, and limits the creation
and maintenance of pool habitats. Thus,
degradation of riparian habitats is a
current threat. Degradation of riparian
habitats will remain a threat in the
foreseeable future until riparian
vegetation recovers naturally or through
direct restoration, which may occur
during the next 20 years in the Big Hole
River and portions of the Red Rock
Lakes system. Protection and direct
restoration of riparian habitats in the Big
Hole River is occurring on a fairly large
scale under the provisions of the Big
Hole Grayling CCAA (Lamothe et al.
2007, pp. 13–26; Everett 2010, pp. 10–
23), which should substantially reduce
threats from riparian habitat degradation
on private lands. Protection and
restoration of riparian habitats
implemented under the Red Rock Lakes
NWR’s CCP (see discussion under
Factor D, below) should reduce threats
from riparian habitat degradation within
the NWR’s boundary, but similar actions
need to be taken on private lands
adjacent to it (AGW 2010, p. 7; Korb
2010, pers. comm.) to appreciably
reduce these threats in the foreseeable
future and to expand the distribution of
the species into formerly occupied
habitat within that drainage.
Sedimentation
Sedimentation has been proposed as a
mechanism behind the decline of Arctic
grayling and its habitat in the Red Rock
Lakes (Unthank 1989, p. 10; Mogen
1996, p. 76). Livestock grazing upstream
has led to accelerated sediment
transport in tributary streams, and
deposition of silt in both stream and
lakes has likely led to loss of fish habitat
by filling in pools, covering spawning
gravels, and reducing water depth in
Odell and Red Rock Creeks, where
Arctic grayling are still believed to
spawn (MFWP 1981, p. 105; Mogen
1996, pp. 73–76).
Sedimentation in the Upper and
Lower Red Rock Lakes is believed to
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54730
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
affect Arctic grayling by, in winter,
reducing habitat volume (e.g., lakes
freezing to the bottom) and promoting
hypoxia (low oxygen), which generally
concentrates fish in specific locations
which have suitable depth, and thus
increases the probability of competition
and predation, and, in summer, causing
thermal loading stress (see Dewatering
From Irrigation and Consequent
Increased Water Temperatures
discussion, above). Depths in the Red
Rock Lakes have decreased
significantly, with a decline in
maximum depth from 7.6 to 5.0 m (25
to 16.4 ft) to less than 2 m (6.5 ft) noted
in Upper Red Rock Lake over the past
century (Mogen 1996, p. 76). Lower Red
Rock Lake has a maximum depth of
approximately 0.5 m (1.6 ft), and freezes
within a few inches of the bottom or
freezes solid (Unthank 1989, p. 10).
Consequently, the Lower Red Rock Lake
does not appear to provide suitable
overwintering habitat for adfluvial
Arctic grayling and may be devoid of
grayling except for the few individuals
that may migrate between Odell Creek
and Upper Red Rock Lake (Mogen,
1996, p. 47).
Dissolved oxygen levels in Upper Red
Rock Lake during winter 1994-1995
dropped as low as 0.5 to 0.15 parts per
million (ppm; Gangloff 1996, pp. 41–42,
72), well below the critical minimum of
1.3 to 1.7 ppm measured for adult Arctic
grayling acclimated to water
temperatures less than or equal to 8 °C
(46 °F) (Feldmeth and Eriksen 1978, pp.
2042–2043). Thus, lethally low oxygen
levels can occur during winter in Upper
Red Rock Lake, the primary
overwintering area for adfluvial Arctic
grayling in the system. Winter kill of
invertebrates and fishes (e.g., suckers
Catostomus spp.) has been recorded in
Upper Red Rock Lake (Gangloff 1996,
pp. 39–40). Gangloff (1996, pp. 71, 79)
hypothesized that Arctic grayling in
Upper Red Rock Lake exhibit behavioral
mechanisms or physiological
adaptations that permit them to survive
otherwise lethally low oxygen levels.
Oxygen conditions in the lake during
winter are related to the effect of
snowpack and ice cover on light
penetration and the density of
macrophytes (rooted aquatic plants)
during the preceding growing season
(Gangloff 1996, pp. 72-74). Arctic
grayling under winter ice seek areas of
higher oxygen concentration (oxygen
refugia) within the lake or near inlet
streams of Upper Red Rock Lake
(Gangloff 1996, pp. 78-79).
Consequently, we expect factors leading
to reduced lake depth due to upstream
erosion and sedimentation within the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
lake, or factors that promote
eutrophication due to macrophyte
growth, to lead to more frequent winter
hypoxia (low dissolved oxygen
concentrations detrimental to aquatic
organsims) in Upper Red Rock Lake,
which is the most important
overwintering habitat for adfluvial
Arctic grayling in the system.
The effects of erosion and
sedimentation on spawning gravels and
reduction of habitat volume in Upper
and Lower Red Rock Lakes are past and
current threats. Improved land use may
be reducing the rates of erosion in
tributary streams (USFWS 2009, pp. 75–
76; Korb 2010, pers. comm.). However,
sedimentation of the lakes will likely
remain a threat (because of reduced
overwintering habitat, and high water
temperatures in summer) in the
foreseeable future unless some event
mobilizes these sediments and
transports them out of the lakes.
Protection and restoration of riparian
habitats implemented under the Red
Rock Lakes NWR’s CCP (see discussion
under Factor D, below) should reduce
the magnitude of sedimentation within
the NWR’s boundaries, but similar
actions need to be taken on private
lands adjacent to it (AGW 2010, p. 7;
Korb 2010, pers. comm.) to appreciably
reduce threats in the foreseeable future.
Summary of Factor A
Based on the best available
information, we find that the historical
range of the Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling has been greatly
reduced, and the remaining native
populations continue to face significant
threats to their habitat. Large-scale
habitat fragmentation by dams was
likely a significant historical factor
causing the range-wide decline of the
DPS. The most significant current
threats to the DPS are from land and
water use activities that have affected
the structure and function of aquatic
systems, namely stream dewatering
from irrigation withdrawals, which
reduces habitat volume and increases
summer water temperatures; potential
loss of individuals in irrigation ditches
(entrainment); degraded riparian
habitats promoting erosion,
sedimentation, increased water
temperatures, and loss of pool habitat;
and migration barriers that restrict
movement to and from spawning,
feeding, and sheltering habitats. These
are among the significant current threats
to Arctic grayling populations in the Big
Hole River, Madison River–Ennis
Reservoir, and Red Rock Lakes system.
The habitat-related threats to the Big
Hole River population should be
reduced in the foreseeable future by
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
implementation of the Big Hole Grayling
CCAA, a formalized conservation plan
with 32 private landowners currently
enrolled. The Big Hole Grayling CCAA
is expected to reduce threats from
dewatering, high water temperatures,
barriers to fish passage, and entrainment
in irrigation ditches that are associated
with land and water use in the upper
Big Hole River watershed during the
foreseeable future (next 20 years based
on the duration of the CCAA). NonFederal landowners enrolled in the Big
Hole Grayling CCAA control or own
approximately 50 to 70 percent of the
points of irrigation diversion in the
upper Big Hole River, so these
landowners should have the ability to
reduce habitat-related threats to Arctic
grayling in the Big Hole River by a
corresponding amount. However, the
present or threatened destruction,
modification, or curtailment of habitat
remains a threat to the DPS overall. This
factor is expected to continue to be a
threat to the species in the foreseeable
future because it is not comprehensively
addressed for other populations,
especially those in the Madison River
and Red Rock Lakes systems where
ongoing habitat-related threats
(described above) may be making
unoccupied habitat unsuitable for Arctic
grayling, and may thus limit the
recovery potential of the DPS.
B. Overutilization for Commercial,
Recreational, Scientific, or Educational
Purposes
Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri
River are handled for recreational
angling; and for scientific, population
monitoring, and restoration purposes.
Recreational Angling
Arctic grayling are highly susceptible
to capture by angling (ASRD 2005, pp.
19–20), and intense angling pressure
can reduce densities and influence the
demography of exploited populations
(Northcote 1995, pp. 171–172).
Overfishing likely contributed to the
rangewide decline of the DPS in the
upper Missouri River system (Vincent
1962, pp. 49–52, 55; Kaya 1992, pp. 54–
55). In 1994, concern over the effects of
angling on fluvial Arctic grayling led the
State of Montana to implement catchand-release regulations for Arctic
grayling captured in streams and rivers
within its native range, and those
regulations remain in effect (MFWP
2010, p. 52). Catch-and-release
regulations for Arctic grayling in the Big
Hole River have been in effect since
1988 (Byorth 1993, p. 8). Catch-andrelease regulations also are in effect for
Ennis Reservoir on the Madison River
(MFWP 2010, p. 61). Angling is not
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
permitted in either of the Red Rock
Lakes to protect breeding waterfowl and
trumpeter swans (Cygnus buccinator)
(USFWS 2009, p. 147), and catch-andrelease regulations remain in effect for
any Arctic grayling captured in streams
(e.g., Odell Creek or Red Rock Creek) in
the Red Rock Lakes system (MFWP
2010, p. 56).
In Miner and Mussigbrod Lakes,
anglers can keep up to 5 Arctic grayling
per day and have up to 10 in possession,
in accordance with standard daily and
possession limits for that angling
management district (MFWP 2010, p.
52). The current abundance of Arctic
grayling in Mussigbrod Lake (see Table
4 above) suggests that present angling
exploitation rates are not a threat to that
population. Miner Lakes grayling are
less abundant compared to Mussigbrod
Lake, but we are not sure whether
angling exploitation constitutes a threat
to Miner Lakes grayling.
Repeated catch-and-release angling
may harm individual fish, causing
physiological stress and injury (i.e.,
hooking wounds). Catch-and-release
angling also can result in mortality at a
rate dependent on hooking location,
hooking duration, fish size, water
quality, and water temperature
(Faragher et al. 2004, entire;
Bartholomew and Bohnsack 2005, p.
140). Repeated hooking (up to five
times) of Arctic grayling in Alaska did
not result in significant additional
mortality (rates 0 to 1.4 percent; Clark
1991, pp. 1, 25–26). In Michigan,
hooking mortality of Arctic grayling in
lakes averaged 1.7 percent per capture
event based on 355 individuals captured
with artificial flies and lures (Nuhfer
1992, pp. 11, 29). Higher mortality rates
(5 percent) have been reported for Arctic
grayling populations in the Great Slave
Lake area, Canada (Falk and Gillman
1975, cited in Casselman 2005, p. 23).
Comparatively high catch rates for
Arctic grayling have been observed in
the Big Hole River, Montana (Byorth
1993, pp. 26–27, 36), and average
hooking wound rates ranged from 15 to
30 percent among study sections
(Byorth 1993, p. 28). However, overall
hooking mortality from single capture
events was low (1.4 percent), which led
Byorth to conclude that the Big Hole
River population was not limited by
angling (Byorth 1994b, entire).
Compared to the average catch-andrelease mortality rates of 4.2 to 4.5
percent in salmonids as reported by
Schill and Scarpella (1997, p. 873), and
the mean and median catch-and-release
mortality rates of 18 percent and 11
percent from a meta-analysis of 274
studies (Bartholomew and Bohnsack
2005, pp. 136–137), the catch-and-
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
release mortality rates for Arctic
grayling are comparatively low (Clark
1991, pp. 1, 25–26; Nuhfer 1992, pp. 11,
29; Byorth 1994b, entire). We are
uncertain whether these lower observed
rates reflect an innate resistance to
effects of catch-and-release angling in
Arctic grayling or whether they reflect
differences among particular
populations or study designs used to
estimate mortality. Even if catch-andrelease angling mortality is low (e.g., 1.4
percent as reported in Byorth 1994b,
entire), the high catchability of Arctic
grayling (ASRD 2005, pp. 19–20) raises
some concern about the cumulative
mortality of repeated catch-and-release
captures. For example, based on the
Arctic grayling catch rates and angler
pressure reported by Byorth (1993, pp.
25–26) and the population estimate for
the Big Hole River reported in Byorth
(1994a, p. ii), a simple calculation
suggests that age 1 and older grayling
susceptible to recreational angling may
be captured and released 3 to 6 times
per year.
The MFWP closes recreational angling
in specific reaches of the Big Hole River
when environmental conditions are
considered stressful. Specific
streamflow and temperature thresholds
initiate mandatory closure of the fishery
(Big Hole Watershed Committee 1997,
entire). Such closures have been
implemented in recent years. For
example, the upper segment of the Big
Hole River between Rock Creek Road to
the confluence of the North Fork Big
Hole River has been closed to angling at
various times during 2004 (Magee et al.
2005, p. 7), 2005 (Magee et al. 2006, p.
20), and 2006 (Rens and Magee 2007, p.
8).
In conclusion, angling harvest may
have significantly reduced the
abundance and distribution of the upper
Missouri River DPS of Arctic grayling
during the past 50 to 100 years, but
current catch-and-release fishing
regulations (or angling closures) in most
waters occupied by extant populations
have likely ameliorated the past threat
of overharvest. Although we have some
concerns about the potential for
cumulative mortality caused by
repeated catch-and-release of individual
Arctic grayling in the Big Hole River, we
have no strong evidence indicating that
repeated capture of Arctic grayling
under catch-and-release regulations is
currently limiting that population or the
DPS. Moreover, fishing is restricted in
the Big Hole River, an important
recreational fishing destination in
southwestern Montana, when
streamflow and temperature conditions
are likely to increase stress to captured
grayling. Anglers can still capture and
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54731
keep Arctic grayling in Miner and
Mussigbrod Lakes in accordance with
State fishing regulations, but we have no
evidence that current levels of angling
are affecting these populations. We thus
have no evidence that recreational
angling represents a current threat to the
DPS. If we assume that future fishing
regulations would be at least as
conservative as current regulations, and
that the current levels of angling
pressure will continue, then recreational
angling does not represent a threat in
the foreseeable future.
Monitoring and Scientific Study
The MFWP consistently monitors the
Arctic grayling population in the Big
Hole River and its tributaries, and to a
lesser extent those populations in the
Madison River and Red Rock Lakes
system (Rens and Magee 20007, entire).
Electrofishing (use of electrical current
to temporarily and non-lethally
immobilize a fish for capture) is a
primary sampling method to monitor
Arctic grayling in the Big Hole River,
Madison River, and Red Rock Lakes
(Rens and Magee 2007, pp. 13, 17, 20).
A number of studies have investigated
the effects of electrofishing on various
life stages of Arctic grayling. Dwyer and
White (1997, p. 174) found that
electrofishing reduced the growth of
juvenile Arctic grayling and concluded
that long-term, sublethal effects of
electrofishing were possible. Hughes
(1998, pp. 1072, 1074–1075) found
evidence that electrofishing and tagging
affected the growth rate and movement
behavior of Arctic grayling in the Chena
River, Alaska. Roach (1999, p. 923)
studied the effects of electrofishing on
fertilized Arctic grayling eggs and found
that while electrofishing could result in
egg mortality, the population-level
effects of such mortality were not likely
to be significant. Lamothe and Magee
(2003, pp. 16, 18–19) noted mortality of
Arctic grayling in the Big Hole River
during a radio-telemetry study, and
concluded that handling stress or
predation were possible causes of
mortality. Population monitoring
activities in the Big Hole River are
curtailed when environmental
conditions become unsuitable (Big Hole
Watershed Committee 1997, entire), and
recent monitoring reports (Magee and
Lamothe 2004, entire; Magee et al. 2005,
entire; Rens and Magee 2007, entire)
provide no evidence that electrofishing
is harming the Arctic grayling
population in the Big Hole River.
A study in the Big Hole River is
investigating the availability and use of
coldwater thermal refugia for Arctic
grayling and other resident fishes
(Vatland and Gressewell 2009, entire).
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54732
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
The study uses fish tagged with passive
integrated transponder (PIT) tag
technology to record movement past
receiving antennas. The PIT tags are
small (23 mm or less than 1 in. long)
and implanted into the body cavity of
the fish during a quick surgical
procedure. During 2007–2008, a total of
81 Arctic grayling from the Big Hole
River and its tributaries were implanted
with these PIT tags (Vatland and
Gressewell 2009, p. 12). A short-term
study on the potential effects of PIT tag
implantation on Arctic grayling found
100 percent retention of tags and 100
percent survival of tagged individuals
during a 4–day trial (Montana State
University 2008, p. 7). Based on the
results of the controlled trials, we have
no evidence to indicate that PIT tagging
the wild Arctic grayling in the Big Hole
River constitutes a significant threat to
the population.
Traps, electrofishing, and radio
telemetry have been used to monitor
and study Arctic graying in the Red
Rock Lakes system (Gangloff 1996, pp.
13–14; Mogen 1996, pp. 10–13, 15;
Kaeding and Boltz 1999, p. 4; Rens and
Magee 2007, p. 17); however, there is no
data to indicate these monitoring
activities reduce the growth and
survival of individual Arctic grayling or
otherwise constitute a current or future
threat to the population.
The Arctic grayling population in the
Madison River–Ennis Reservoir is not
monitored as intensively as the Big Hole
River population (Rens and Magee 2007,
pp. 20–21). When electrofishing surveys
targeting Arctic grayling in the Madison
River do occur, they are conducted
during the spawning run for that
population (Clancey 1996, p. 6). Capture
and handling during spawning
migrations or during actual spawning
could affect the reproductive success of
individual Arctic grayling. However,
under recent monitoring frequencies,
any population-level effect of these
activities is likely negligible, and we
have no data to indicate these
monitoring activities reduce the growth
and survival of individual Arctic
grayling or otherwise constitute a
current or future threat to the Madison
River population.
The Miner Lakes and Mussigbrod
Lake populations of Arctic grayling are
infrequently monitored (Olsen 2010,
pers. comm.). Since monitoring of these
populations has been minimal, we do
not believe that monitoring or scientific
study constitutes a current or
foreseeable threat to these particular
populations.
The intensity of monitoring and
scientific investigation varies among the
different populations in the DPS, but we
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
have no evidence suggesting that
monitoring or scientific study has
influenced the decline of Arctic grayling
in the Missouri River basin. We also
have no evidence indicating these
activities constitute a current threat to
the DPS that would result in
measurable, population-level effects. We
expect similar levels of population
monitoring and scientific study in the
future, and we have no basis to
conclude that these activities represent
a threat in the foreseeable future.
Reintroduction Efforts
Attempts to restore or re-establish
native populations of both fluvial and
adfluvial Arctic grayling may result in
the mortality of embryos and young fish.
The MFWP attempted to restore fluvial
Arctic graying to historic waters in the
upper Missouri River using a
combination of stocking and embryo
incubating devices (remote site
incubators) placed in target streams
(Rens and Magee 2007, pp. 24–38).
Currently, gametes (eggs and sperm)
used to re-establish the fluvial ecotype
come from captive brood reserves of Big
Hole River grayling maintained in
Axolotl and Green Hollow II Lakes
(Rens and Magee 2007, pp. 22–24).
Removal of gametes from the wild Big
Hole River population was necessary to
establish this brood reserve (Leary 1991,
entire). The previous removal of
gametes for conservation purposes may
have reduced temporarily the
abundance of the wild population if the
population was unable to compensate
for this effective mortality by increased
survival of remaining individuals.
However, the establishment of a brood
reserve provides a conservation benefit
from the standpoint that gametes from
the reserve can be harvested to use for
translocation efforts to benefit the
species. Unfortunately, these
translocations have not yet resulted in
establishment of any fluvial
populations. Ultimately, we do not have
any data to indicate that past gamete
collection from the Big Hole River
population harmed the wild population.
Consequently, we have no basis to
conclude that gamete collection from
the wild Big Hole River Arctic grayling
population constitutes a current or
future threat to the population.
Efforts to re-establish native,
genetically pure populations of
adfluvial Arctic grayling in the Red
Rock Lakes system and to maintain a
brood reserve for that population have
resulted in the direct collection of eggs
from Arctic grayling spawning runs in
Red Rock Creek. During 2000–2002, an
estimated 315,000 Arctic grayling eggs
were collected from females captured in
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Red Rock Creek (Boltz and Kaeding
2002, pp. v, 8). The Service placed over
180,000 of these eggs in remote site
incubators in streams within the Red
Rock Lakes NWR that historically
supported Arctic grayling spawning
runs (Boltz and Kaeding 2002, pp. v,
10). Despite preliminary observations of
grayling spawning in historically
occupied waters within the Red Rock
Lakes NWR following the use of remote
site incubators (Kaeding and Boltz 2004,
pp. 1036), spawning runs at these
locations have apparently not become
established (Boltz 2006, pers. comm.).
Attempts to establish a brood reserve of
adfluvial Arctic grayling within the
NWR’s boundaries (MacDonald Pond)
were not successful (Boltz and Kaeding
2002, pp. 21–22). Red Rock Lakes NWR
plans to re-establish Arctic grayling in
Elk Springs and Picnic Creeks and
establish a brood stock in Widgeon
Pond as part of its CCP (USFWS 2009,
pp. 72, 75). The MFWP and the Service
are currently collaborating on an effort
to re-establish an Arctic grayling
spawning run in Elk Springs Creek and
to establish a genetically pure brood
reserve of Red Rock Lakes grayling in
Elk Lake as no such population exists
for use in conservation and recovery
(Jordan 2010, pers. comm.). These
actions will require the collection of
gametes (approximately 360,000 eggs)
from Arctic grayling captured in Red
Rock Creek (Jordan 2010, pers. comm.).
Approximately 10 percent of these eggs
will be returned to Red Rock Creek and
incubated in that stream (using a remote
site incubation method that results in
high survivorship of embryos) (Kaeding
and Boltz 2004, entire) to mitigate for
collection of gametes from the wild
spawning population (Jordan 2010, pers.
comm.). We presume these ongoing
actions may necessitate the collection of
gametes from wild Arctic grayling in
Red Rock Creek, so the potential effect
of such collections on the extant wild
population should be evaluated and
mitigation for the use of these gametes
(e.g., using remote site incubators at the
collection source or another method)
should continue.
Overall, we have no evidence to
indicate that collection of gametes from
the wild populations in the Big Hole
River and Red Rock Lakes systems have
contributed to population-level declines
in those populations, or that the
previous collections represent
overexploitation. Future plans to collect
gametes from Arctic grayling in the Big
Hole River and Red Rock Lakes should
be carefully evaluated in light of the
status of those populations at the
anticipated time of the collections. We
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
encourage the agencies involved to
coordinate their efforts and develop a
strategy for broodstock development
and recovery efforts that minimizes any
potential impacts to wild native
populations. However, at present, we do
not have any data indicating collection
of gametes for conservation purposes
represents a current threat to the Big
Hole River and Red Rock Lakes
populations. We have no evidence to
indicate that gamete collection will
increase in the future, so we have no
basis to conclude that this represents a
threat in the foreseeable future.
Summary of Factor B
Based on the information available at
this time, we conclude that
overexploitation by angling may have
contributed to the historical decline of
the upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling, but we have no evidence to
indicate that current levels of
recreational angling, population
monitoring, scientific study, or
conservation actions constitute
overexploitation; therefore, we do not
consider them a threat. We expect
similar levels of these activities to
continue in the future, and we do not
believe they represent a threat in the
foreseeable future.
C. Disease or Predation
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Disease
Arctic grayling are resistant to
whirling disease, which is responsible
for population-level declines of other
stream salmonids (Hedrick et al. 1999,
pp. 330, 333). However, Arctic grayling
are susceptible to bacterial kidney
disease (BKD). Some wild populations
in pristine habitats test positive for BKD
(Meyers et al. 1993, pp. 186–187), but
clinical effects of the disease are more
likely to be evident in captive
populations (Meyers et al. 1993, entire;
Peterson 1997, entire). To preclude
transmission of BKD between grayling
during brood reserve, hatchery, and
wild grayling translocation efforts,
MFWP tests kidney tissue and ovarian
fluid for the causative agent for BKD as
well as other pathogens in brood
populations (Rens and Magee 2007, pp.
22–24).
Information on the prevalence of the
BKD or other diseases in native Arctic
grayling populations in Montana is
generally lacking. One reason is that
some disease assays are invasive or
require the sacrifice of individual fish
(e.g., removal of kidney tissue to test for
BKD pathogen.) Therefore, such testing
is typically avoided in native
populations of Missouri River Arctic
grayling that are low in abundance.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Arctic grayling in captive brood reserves
(e.g., Axolotl Lake, Green Hollow Lake)
and introduced populations (e.g.,
Sunnyslope Canal, Rogers Lake) have all
tested negative for infectious
hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV),
infectious pancreatic necrosis virus
(IPNV), Myxobolus cerebralis (the
pathogen that causes whirling disease),
Renibacterium salmoninarum (the
pathogen that causes BKD), and
Aeromonas salmonicida (the pathogen
that causes furunculosis) (USFWS
2010a). Consequently, we have no
evidence at this time that disease
threatens native Arctic grayling of the
upper Missouri River. We have no basis
to conclude that disease will become a
future threat, so we conclude that
disease does not constitute a threat in
the foreseeable future.
Predation By and Competition With
Nonnative Trout
Brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis),
brown trout (Salmo trutta), and rainbow
trout have been introduced across the
United States to provide recreational
fishing opportunities, and are now
widely distributed and abundant in the
western United States, including the
upper Missouri River system (Schade
and Bonar 2005, p. 1386). One or more
of these nonnative trout species cooccur with every native Arctic grayling
population in the basin. Ecological
interactions (predation and competition)
with the brook trout, brown trout, and
rainbow trout are among the longstanding hypotheses to explain decline
of Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River system and the extirpation of
populations from specific waters
(Nelson 1954, p. 327; Vincent 1962, pp.
81–96; Kaya 1992, pp. 55–56).
The potential for interspecific
interactions should be greatest among
species with similar life histories and
ecologies that did not co-evolve (Fausch
and White 1986, p. 364). Arctic grayling
in the Missouri River basin have similar
ecologies to brook trout, rainbow trout,
and brown trout, yet they do not share
a recent evolutionary history. The
evidence for predation and competition
by nonnative trout on Arctic grayling in
the upper Missouri River basin is largely
circumstantial, and inferred from the
reduced abundance and distribution of
Arctic grayling following encroachment
by nonnative trout (Kaya 1990, pp. 52–
54; Kaya 1992, p. 56; Magee and Byorth
1995, p. 54), as well as the difficulty in
establishing Arctic grayling populations
in waters already occupied by nonnative
trout, especially brown trout (Kaya
2000, pp. 14–15). Presumably,
competition with ecologically-similar
species for food, shelter, and spawning
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54733
locations can lead to reduced growth,
reproduction, and survival of Arctic
grayling (i.e., where they are
outcompeted by nonnative trout). The
strength of competition is very difficult
to measure in wild trout populations
(Fausch 1988, pp. 2238, 2243; 1998, pp.
220, 227). Few studies have evaluated
competition between Arctic grayling
and these nonnative species. Brook trout
do not appear to negatively affect
habitat use or growth of juvenile,
hatchery-reared Arctic grayling (Byorth
and Magee 1998, p. 921), but further
studies are necessary to determine
whether competition or predation occur
at other life stages or with brown or
rainbow trout (Byorth and Magee 1998,
p. 929).
Predation represents direct mortality
that can limit populations, and YOY
Arctic grayling may be particularly
susceptible to predation by other fishes
because they are smaller and weaker
swimmers than trout fry (Kaya 1990, pp.
52–53).
The incidence of competition and
predation between nonnative trout and
Arctic grayling likely depends on
environmental context (e.g., habitat type
and quality, environmental conditions
such as temperature, and so forth).
Nonetheless, it is widely accepted that
biotic interactions with nonnative
species are to some extent responsible
for the decline of many native fishes in
the western United States (Dunham et
al. 2002, pp. 373–374 and references
therein; Fausch et al. 2006, pp. 9–11 and
references therein).
In the Big Hole River, brook trout,
rainbow trout, and brown trout have
been established for some time (Kaya
1992, pp. 50–51) and are much more
abundant than Arctic grayling (Rens and
Magee 2007, p. 42). In general, brook
trout is the most abundant nonnative
trout species in the Big Hole River
upstream from Wisdom, Montana (Rens
and Magee 2007, pp. 7, 42; Lamothe et
al. 2007, pp. 35–38), whereas rainbow
trout and brown trout are comparatively
more abundant in the reaches
immediately above and downstream
from the Divide Dam (Kaya 1992, p. 56;
Oswald 2005b, pp. 22–29; Lamothe et
al. 2007, pp. 35–38; Rens and Magee
2007, p. 10). Rainbow trout are
apparently more abundant than brown
trout above the Divide Dam (Olsen 2010,
pers. comm.), but brown trout are more
abundant than rainbow trout below the
dam (Oswald 2005b, pp. 22–33). Recent
observations of increased brown trout
abundance and distribution in the upper
Big Hole River indicate that the species
may be encroaching further upstream
(AGW 2008, p. 1). Overall, at least one
nonnative species occurs in the
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54734
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
mainstem Big Hole River and tributary
locations where Arctic grayling are
present (Lamothe et al. 2007, p. 37; Rens
and Magee 2007, p. 42). The Big Hole
Grayling CCAA recognizes that the
potential for competition with and
predation by nonnative trout may limit
the effectiveness of its conservation
actions (MFWP et al. 2006, pp. 54–55).
The MFWP is the lead agency
implementing the Big Hole Grayling
CCAA under an agreement with the
Service, and MFWP establishes fishing
regulations for most waters in Montana.
Different regulations may apply on
NWR lands administered by the Service.
The MFWP has agreed to continue
catch-and-release regulations for Arctic
grayling in the Big Hole River, to
increase daily possession limits for
nonnative brook trout (MFWP et al.
2006, p. 55; MFWP 2010, p. 52), and to
consider whether additional
management actions are necessary to
address threats from nonnative trout
based on recommendations of a
technical committee of the AGW
(MFWP et al. 2006, p. 55). However, we
are not aware of data that shows angling
regulations currently, or are expected to,
reduce threats from brook trout. We also
are not aware of any evaluations
provided by the technical committee or
of any additional management actions
taken by MFWP to address potential
threats from nonnative trout. Nonnative
trout are widely distributed and
abundant in the Big Hole River, and
eradication may be impossible. The Big
Hole Grayling CCAA focuses primarily
on habitat-related threats (not nonnative
trout), so we presume that nonnative
trout will remain a threat to Arctic
grayling for the foreseeable future.
Arctic grayling in Miner and
Mussigbrod Lakes co-occur with one or
more species of nonnative trout, but we
have no quantitative information on the
relative abundance of the introduced
species. Brook trout and rainbow trout
are both characterized as ‘‘common’’ in
lower Miner Lakes (MFISH 2010), and
brook trout in Mussigbrod Lake are
similarly categorized as ‘‘common’’
(MFISH 2010). Brook trout have been
present in the Big Hole River for at least
60 years (Liknes 1981, p. 34). The date
when brook trout were introduced into
Miner and Mussibrod Lakes is unknown
(Liknes 1981, p. 33), but the cooccurrence of the brook trout with
Arctic grayling in these habitats suggests
that displacement of Arctic grayling by
brook trout is not inevitable.
In the Madison River in and near
Ennis Reservoir, brown trout and
rainbow trout are abundant and are the
foundation of an important recreational
fishery (e.g., Byorth and Shepard 1990,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
p. 1). Nonnative rainbow trout and
brown trout substantially outnumber
Arctic grayling in the Madison River
near Ennis Reservoir (Clancey and
Lohrenz 2005, pp. 26, 29–31; 2009, pp.
91, 93).
In the Red Rock Lakes system, brook
trout and hybrid cutthroat trout
(Yellowstone cutthroat trout
(Oncorhynchus clarkii bouvieri)
rainbow trout; Mogen 1996, p. 42) have
well-established populations and
dominate the abundance and biomass of
the salmonid community (Katzman
1998, pp. 2–3; Boltz 2010, pp. 2–3).
Competition and predation risk for the
Arctic grayling may be particularly
acute in the shallow Upper Red Rock
Lake when all fish species are forced to
congregate in a few discrete deeper sites
in response to environmental
conditions, such as ice formation in
winter (Boltz 2010, pers. comm.).
Removal of nonnative trout from certain
waters on the Red Rock Lakes NWR is
part of the CCP (USFWS 2009, pp. 72,
75), so the frequency of predation of and
competition with Arctic grayling by
these species may be reduced at a
limited spatial scale during the 15–year
timeframe of the CCP.
Studies attempting to specifically
measure the strength of competition
with and magnitude of predation by
nonnative trout on Arctic grayling in
Montana have yielded mixed results.
Only one study attempted to measure
competition between brook trout and
Arctic grayling (Byorth and Magee 1998,
entire), and their study did not find
strong evidence for presumed effects of
competition, such as differences in
microhabitat use or growth rate (Byorth
and Magee 1998, p. 1998). However, the
authors cautioned that further studies
were needed to determine whether or
not competition may be occurring
between fish of different sizes or ages
(other than those tested) or whether
competition with or predation by
rainbow trout or brown trout is
occurring (Byorth and Magee, 1998, p.
929). Measuring the strength of
competition and determining the
relevant mechanisms (e.g., competition
for food vs. space) is difficult to measure
in fish populations (Fausch 1998, pp.
220, 227), so the lack of definitive
evidence for the mechanisms of
competition may simply be due to the
inherent difficulties in measuring these
effects and determining their influence
on the population. Similarly, predation
by brook trout on Arctic grayling eggs
and fry has been observed in both the
Big Hole River and Red Rock Lakes
systems (Nelson 1954, entire; Streu
1990, p. 17; Katzman 1998, pp. 35, 47,
114), but such observations have not
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
been definitively linked with a
population decline of Arctic grayling.
To our knowledge, no studies have
investigated or attempted to measure
predation by brown trout or rainbow
trout on Arctic grayling in Montana.
Experimental evidence
notwithstanding, the decline of Arctic
grayling concurrent with encroachment
by nonnative trout, combined with the
difficulty in establishing grayling
populations where nonnatives trout are
present (Kaya 1992, pp. 55–56, 61; Kaya
2000, pp. 14–16), provides strong
circumstantial evidence that a
combination of predation and
competition by nonnative trout has
negatively affected Arctic grayling
populations in the upper Missouri
River. The lack of direct evidence for
competition (e.g., with brook trout) or
predation (e.g., by brown trout) most
likely indicates that these mechanisms
can be difficult to detect and measure in
wild populations and that additional
scientific investigation is needed. We
recognize that displacement of Arctic
grayling is not a certain outcome where
the species comes into contact with
brook trout (e.g., Big Hole River), but the
circumstances that facilitate long-term
co-existence vs. transitory co-existence
are unknown. Ultimately, circumstantial
evidence from Montana and the western
United States suggests that the presence
of nonnative trout species represents a
substantial threat to native fishes
including Arctic grayling. At least one
species of nonnative trout is present in
all waters occupied by native Arctic
grayling populations in the upper
Missouri River, so the threat is
widespread and imminent, and we
expect that nonnative trout will remain
a part of the biological community.
Thus, we expect that nonnative trout are
a threat to Missouri River Arctic
grayling in the foreseeable future.
Predation by Birds and Mammals
In general, the incidence and effect of
predation by birds and mammals on
Arctic grayling is not well understood
because few detailed studies have been
completed (Northcote 1995, p. 163).
Black bear (Ursus americanus), mink
(Neovison vison), and river otter (Lontra
canadensis) are present in southwestern
Montana, but direct evidence of
predatory activity by these species is
often lacking (Kruse 1959, p. 348).
Osprey (Pandion halaietus) can capture
Arctic grayling during the summer
(Kruse 1959, p. 348). In the Big Hole
River, Byorth and Magee (1998, p. 926)
attributed the loss of Arctic grayling
from artificial enclosures used in a
competition experiment to predation by
minks, belted kingfisher (Ceryl alcyon),
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
osprey, and great blue heron (Ardea
herodia). In addition, American white
pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) are
seasonally present in the Big Hole River,
and they also may feed on grayling. The
aforementioned mammals and birds can
be effective fish predators, but we have
no data demonstrating any of these
species historically or currently
consume Arctic grayling at levels
sufficient to exert a measureable,
population-level impact on native
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River system. We expect the current
situation to continue, so we conclude
that predation by birds and mammals
does not constitute a substantial threat
to Missouri River Arctic grayling in the
foreseeable future.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Summary of Factor C
Based on the information available at
this time, we conclude disease does not
represent a past or current threat to the
Missouri River DPS of Arctic grayling.
We have no factual basis for concluding
that disease may become a future threat,
but anticipate that the likelihood of
disease in native populations will
depend on and interact with other
factors (e.g., habitat condition, climate
change) that may cumulatively stress
individual fish and reduce their ability
to withstand infection by diseasecausing pathogens.
Circumstantial evidence indicates that
ecological interactions with nonnative
trout species have led to the
displacement of Arctic grayling from
portions of its historic range in the
upper Missouri River basin. Nonnative
trout species, such as brook trout, brown
trout, and rainbow trout, remain widely
distributed and abundant in habitats
currently occupied by native Arctic
grayling populations. Consequently, we
determined that the presence of
nonnative trout represents a substantial
current and foreseeable threat to native
Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri
River.
Little is known about the effect of
predation on Arctic grayling by birds
and mammals. Such predation likely
does occur, but in contrast to the pattern
of displacement observed concurrent
with encroachment by nonnative trout,
we are not aware of any situation where
an increase in fish-eating birds or
mammals has coincided with the
decline of Arctic grayling.
Consequently, the available information
does not support a conclusion that
predation by birds or mammals
represents a substantial past, present, or
foreseeable threat to native Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
D. Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory
Mechanisms
The ESA requires us to examine the
adequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms with respect to those extant
threats that place the species in danger
of becoming either endangered or
threatened. Thus, the scope of this
analysis generally focuses on the extant
native populations of Arctic grayling
and potential current and foreseeable
threats based on the inadequacy of
existing regulatory mechanisms.
Federal Laws and Regulations
Native Arctic grayling are present in
or adjacent to land managed by the U.S.
Forest Service (USFS) (Big Hole River,
Miner, and Mussigbrod Lakes:
Beaverhead–Deerlodge National Forest),
National Park Service (NPS) (Big Hole
River: Big Hole National Battlefield),
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) (Big
Hole River: Dillon Resource Area),
USFWS (Red Rock Lakes NWR); and the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(Madison River–Ennis Reservoir: Ennis
Dam, operated under Project 2188
license).
National Environmental Policy Act
All Federal agencies are required to
adhere to the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) of 1970 (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.) for projects they fund,
authorize, or carry out. The Council on
Environmental Quality’s regulations for
implementing NEPA (40 CFR 1500–
1518) state that, when preparing
environmental impact statements,
agencies shall include a discussion on
the environmental impacts of the
various project alternatives, any adverse
environmental effects which cannot be
avoided, and any irreversible or
irretrievable commitments of resources
involved (40 CFR 1502). The NEPA
itself is a disclosure law, and does not
require subsequent minimization or
mitigation measures by the Federal
agency involved. Although Federal
agencies may include conservation
measures for Arctic grayling as a result
of the NEPA process, any such measures
are typically voluntary in nature and are
not required by NEPA.
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act
The BLM’s Federal Land Policy and
Management Act (FLPMA) of 1976 (43
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.), as amended, states
that the public lands shall be managed
in a manner that will protect the quality
of scientific, scenic, historical,
ecological, environmental, air and
atmospheric, water resource, and
archeological values.
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54735
The BLM considers the fluvial Arctic
grayling a sensitive species requiring
special management consideration for
planning and environmental analysis
(BLM 2009b, entire). The BLM has
recently developed a Resource
Management Plan (RMP) for the Dillon
Field Office Area that provides guidance
for the management of over 900,000
acres of public land administered by
BLM in southwest Montana (BLM
2006a, p. 2). The Dillon RMP area thus
includes the geographic area that
contains the Big Hole, Miner,
Mussigbrod, Madison River, and Red
Rock populations of Arctic grayling. A
RMP planning area encompasses all
private, State, and Federal lands within
a designated geographic area (BLM
2006a, p. 2), but the actual
implementation of the RMP focuses on
lands administered by the BLM that
typically represent only a fraction of the
total land area within that planning area
(BLM 2006b, entire). Restoring Arctic
grayling habitat and ensuring the longterm persistence of both fluvial and
adfluvial ecotypes are among the RMP’s
goals (BLM 2006a, pp. 30–31). However,
there is little actual overlap between the
specific parcels of BLM land managed
by the Dillon RMP and the current
distribution of Arctic grayling (BLM
2006b, entire).
The BLM also has a RMP for the Butte
Field Office Area, which includes more
than 300,000 acres in south-central
Montana (BLM 2008, entire), including
portions of the Big Hole River in
Deerlodge and Silver Bow counties
(BLM 2008, p. 8; 2009c, entire). The
Butte RMP considers conservation and
management strategies and agreements
for Arctic grayling in its planning
process and includes a goal to
opportunistically enhance or restore
habitat for Arctic grayling (BLM 2008,
pp. 10, 30, 36). However, the Butte RMP
does not mandate specific actions to
improve habitat for Arctic grayling in
the Big Hole River.
National Forest Management Act
Under the USFS’ National Forest
Management Act (NFMA) of 1976, as
amended (16 U.S.C. 1600–1614), the
USFS shall strive to provide for a
diversity of plant and animal
communities when managing national
forest lands. Individual national forests
may identify species of concern that are
significant to each forest’s biodiversity.
The USFS Northern Rocky Mountain
Region (R1) considers fluvial Arctic
grayling a sensitive species (USFS 2004,
entire) for which population viability is
a concern, as evidenced by a significant
downward trend in population or a
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54736
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
significant downward trend in habitat
capacity.
Much of the headwaters of the Big
Hole River drainage are within the
boundary of the Beaverhead–Deerlodge
National Forest. The Miner and
Mussigbrod Lakes Arctic grayling
populations are entirely within Forest
boundaries. The Beaverhead–Deerlodge
National Forest is currently revising its
forest plan. The USFS does not propose
to designate key fish watersheds solely
to benefit grayling, but fluvial Arctic
grayling will remain a sensitive species
with Forest-wide standards and
objectives to meet the species’ habitat
requirements (USFS 2009a, p. 19). With
respect to fluvial Arctic grayling, the
USFS is proposing a Controlled Surface
Use (CSU) stipulation in the Ruby River
(an ongoing reintroduction site) and
certain tributaries of the Big Hole River
(USFS 2009b, pp. 29, B-13) to avoid
impacts from mineral, gas, and oil
extraction (USFS 2009b, pp. 27–28).
These CSU stipulations define the
minimum extent of buffer areas adjacent
to streams. In general, the preferred
forest plan alternative (Alternative 6,
USFS 2009a, p. 6) is deemed by the
USFS to provide management direction
designed to ensure the persistence of
grayling populations Forest-wide, and to
meet viability requirements of this
species (USFS 2009a, p. 146). The forest
plan revision has not yet been finalized
through a record of decision (ROD), so
we are unable to specifically evaluate its
potential effect on native Arctic grayling
populations.
National Park Service Organic Act
The NPS Organic Act of 1916 (16
U.S.C. 1 et seq.), as amended, states that
the NPS ‘‘shall promote and regulate the
use of the Federal areas known as
national parks, monuments, and
reservations ... to conserve the scenery
and the national and historic objects
and the wild life therein and to provide
for the enjoyment of the same in such
manner and by such means as will leave
them unimpaired for the enjoyment of
future generations.’’ Native populations
of Arctic grayling have been extirpated
from Yellowstone National Park, but the
Big Hole National Battlefield is adjacent
to the North Fork of the Big Hole River
(NPS 2006, entire), and Arctic grayling
are occasionally encountered
downstream from the Battlefield (Rens
and Magee 2007, pp. 7, 13).
Consequently, a very small amount of
currently occupied grayling habitat is in
the vicinity of lands managed by the
NPS; therefore, the NPS Organic Act is
not thought to have any significant
effect on native Arctic grayling
populations.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
National Wildlife Refuge System
Improvement Act of 1997
The National Wildlife Refuge Systems
Improvement Act (NWRSIA) of 1997
(Pub. L. 105-57) amends the National
Wildlife Refuge System Administration
Act of 1966 (16 U.S.C. 668dd et seq.).
The NWRSIA directs the Service to
manage the Refuge System’s lands and
waters for conservation. The NWRSIA
also requires monitoring of the status
and trends of refuge fish, wildlife, and
plants. The NWRSIA requires
development of a Comprehensive
Conservation Plan (CCP) for each refuge
and management of each refuge
consistent with its plan.
The Service has developed a final
CCP to provide a foundation for the
management and use of Red Rock Lakes
NWR (USFWS 2009, entire). Red Rocks
NWR is 2,033-2,865 m (6,670-9,400 ft)
above sea level, comprises 48,955 ac,
and lies east of the Continental Divide
near the uppermost reach of the
Missouri drainage (USFWS 2009, pp. v,
2). The Red Rocks NWR encompasses
Lower and Upper Red Rock Lakes,
which contain native grayling. The Red
Rocks NWR CCP outlines a set of broad
goals and specific objectives or
strategies with respect to conservation
of Arctic grayling that focuses on habitat
improvements, reestablishment of
populations, and removal of nonnative
trout where necessary (USFWS 2009,
pp. 67, 75–76). We expect that
implementation of the CCP during the
next 15 years will address a number of
significant resource issues that affect
grayling (e.g., riparian habitat condition,
entrainment in irrigation ditches,
increasing the extent of occupancy in
the system). Nonetheless, actions
similar to those planned inside the
NWR will be needed on adjacent
properties to reduce threats to the
existing population of grayling in the
Red Rock Lakes system.
Federal Power Act
The Federal Power Act of 1920 (16
U.S.C. 791-828c, as amended) provides
the legal authority for the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC),
as an independent agency, to regulate
hydropower projects. In deciding
whether to issue a license, FERC is
required to give equal consideration to
mitigation of damage to, and
enhancement of, fish and wildlife (16
U.S.C. 797(e)). A number of FERClicensed dams exist in the Missouri
River basin in current (i.e., Ennis Dam
on the Madison River) and historical
Arctic grayling habitat (e.g., Hebgen
Dam on the Madison River; Hauser,
Holter, and Toston dams on the
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
mainstem Missouri River; and Clark
Canyon Dam on the Beaverhead River).
The FERC license expiration dates for
these dams range from 2024 (Toston) to
2059 (Clark Canyon) (FERC 2010,
entire). None of these structures provide
upstream passage of fish, and such dams
are believed to be one of the primary
factors leading to the decline of Arctic
grayling in the Missouri River basin (see
discussion under Factor A, above).
Consequently, we conclude that
historically the Federal Power Act has
not adequately protected Arctic grayling
or its habitat. We anticipate this will
remain a threat it in the foreseeable
future because of future expiration dates
of the FERC-licensed dams in the upper
Missouri River basin.
Clean Water Act
The Clean Water Act (CWA) of 1972
(33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.) establishes the
basic structure for regulating discharges
of pollutants into the waters of the
United States and regulating quality
standards for surface waters. The CWA’s
general goal is to ‘‘restore and maintain
the chemical, physical, and biological
integrity of the Nation’s waters’’ (33
U.S.C. 1251 (a)). The CWA requires
States to adopt standards for the
protection of surface water quality and
establishment of Total Maximum Daily
Load (TMDL) guidelines for rivers. The
Big Hole River has approved TMDL
plans for its various reaches (MDEQ
2009a, entire; 2009b, entire); thus,
complete implementation of this plan
should improve water quality (by
reducing water temperatures, and
reducing sediment and nutrient inputs)
in the Big Hole River in the foreseeable
future. As of November 2009, the Red
Rocks watershed was in the pre-TMDL
planning and assessment phase, but
there was no significant TMDL plan
development activity in the Madison
River (see MDEQ 2010). Consequently,
implementation of the CWA through an
EPA-approved TMDL plan began in
2009 for the Big Hole River watershed,
but has yet to begin in other waters
occupied by native Arctic grayling in
the upper Missouri River. The CWA
does not appear to be adequate to
protect the Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling, but implementation of TMDL
plans should improve habitat conditions
for Big Hole River grayling in the
foreseeable future.
Montana State Laws and Regulations
Arctic grayling is considered a species
of special concern by Montana, but this
is not a statutory or regulatory
classification (Montana Natural Heritage
Program 2010).
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
State Comprehensive Wildlife
Conservation Strategies
These strategies, while not State or
national legislation, can help prioritize
conservation actions within each State.
Species and habitats named within each
Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation
Strategy (CWCS) may receive focused
attention. The MFWP considers Arctic
grayling as a Tier I conservation species
under its CWCS and the Big Hole River
also is a Tier I Aquatic Conservation
Focus Area (Montana’s Comprehensive
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Strategy
(MCFWCS) 2005, pp. 75–76).
Montana Environmental Policy Act
The legislature of Montana enacted
the Montana Environmental Policy Act
(MEPA) as a policy statement to
encourage productive and enjoyable
harmony between humans and their
environment, to protect the right to use
and enjoy private property free of undue
government regulation, to promote
efforts that will prevent or eliminate
damage to the environment and
biosphere and stimulate the health and
welfare of humans, to enrich the
understanding of the ecological systems
and natural resources important to the
State, and to establish an environmental
quality council (MCA 75-1-102). Part 1
of the MEPA establishes and declares
Montana’s environmental policy. Part 1
has no legal requirements, but the
policy and purpose provide guidance in
interpreting and applying statutes. Part
2 requires State agencies to carry out the
policies in Part 1 through the use of
systematic, interdisciplinary analysis of
State actions that have an impact on the
human environment. This is
accomplished through the use of a
deliberative, written environmental
review. In practice, MEPA provides a
basis for the adequate review of State
actions in order to ensure that
environmental concerns are fully
considered (MCA 75-1-102). Similar to
NEPA, the MEPA is largely a disclosure
law and a decision-making tool that
does not specifically require subsequent
minimization or mitigation measures.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Laws Affecting Physical Aquatic
Habitats
A number of Montana State laws have
a permitting process applicable to
projects that may affect stream beds,
river banks, or floodplains. These
include the Montana Stream Protection
Act (SPA), the Streamside Management
Zone Law (SMZL), and the Montana
Natural Streambed and Land
Preservation Act (Montana Department
of Natural Resources (MDNRC) 2001,
pp. 7.1–7.2). The SPA requires that a
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
permit be obtained for any project that
may affect the natural and existing
shape and form of any stream or its
banks or tributaries (MDNRC 2001, p.
7.1). The Montana Natural Streambed
and Land Preservation Act (i.e.,
MNSLPA or 310 permit) requires
private, nongovernmental entities to
obtain a permit for any activity that
physically alters or modifies the bed or
banks of a perennially-flowing stream
(MDNRC 2001, p. 7.1). The SPA and
MNSLPA laws do not mandate any
special recognition for species of
concern, but in practice, biologists that
review projects permitted under these
laws usually stipulate restrictions to
avoid harming such species (Horton
2010, pers. comm.). The SMZL regulates
forest practices near streams (MDNRC
2001, p. 7.2). The Montana Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (MPDES)
Stormwater Permit applies to all
discharges to surface water or
groundwater, including those related to
construction, dewatering, suction
dredges, and placer mining, as well as
to construction that will disturb more
than 1 acre within 100 ft (30.5 m) of
streams, rivers, or lakes (MDNRC 2001,
p. 7.2).
Review of applications by MFWP,
MTDEQ, or MDNRC is required prior to
issuance of permits under the above
regulatory mechanisms (MDNRC 2001,
pp. 7.1–7.2). Although these regulatory
mechanisms would be expected to limit
impacts to aquatic habitats in general,
the decline of Arctic grayling in the Big
Hole River, Madison River, and certain
waters in the Red Rock Lakes system
does not provide evidence that past
implementation of these laws,
regulations, and permitting processes
has effectively limited impacts to Arctic
grayling habitat. Thus, we have no basis
for concluding that these same
regulatory mechanisms are adequate to
protect the Arctic grayling and its
habitat now or in the foreseeable future.
Montana Water Use Act
The implementation of Montana
Water Use Act (Title 85: Chapter 2,
Montana Codes Annotated) may not
adequately address threats to Arctic
grayling in basins where the allocation
of water rights exceeds the available
water (overallocation) and the water
rights holders fully execute their rights
(i.e., use all water legally available for
diversion). The Missouri River system is
generally believed to be
overappropriated, and water for
additional consumptive uses is only
available for a few months during very
wet years (MDNRC 1997, p. 12). The
Upper Missouri River basin and
Madison River basin have been closed
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54737
to new water appropriations because of
water availability problems,
overappropriation, and a concern for
protecting existing water rights (MDNRC
2009, p. 45). In addition, recent
compacts (a legal agreement between
Montana, a Federal agency, or an Indian
tribe determining the quantification of
federally or tribally claimed water
rights) have been signed that close
appropriations in specific waters in or
adjacent to Arctic grayling habitats. For
example, the USFWS–Red Rock Lakes–
Montana Compact includes a closure of
appropriations for consumptive use in
the drainage basins upstream of the
most downstream point on the Red Rock
Lakes NWR and the Red Rock Lakes
Wilderness Area (MDNRC 2009, pp. 18,
47). The NPS–Montana Compact
specifies that certain waters will be
closed to new appropriations when the
total appropriations reach a specified
level, and it applies to Big Hole National
Battlefield and adjacent waters (North
Fork of the Big Hole River and its
tributaries including Ruby and Trail
Creeks), and the portion of Yellowstone
National Park that is in Montana
(MDNRC 2009, p. 48).
The State of Montana is currently
engaged in a state-wide effort to
adjudicate (finalize) water rights
claimed before July 1, 1973. The final
product of adjudication in a river basin
is a final decree. To reach completion,
a decree progresses through several
stages: (1) Examination, (2) temporary
preliminary decree, (3) preliminary
decree, (4) public notice, (5) hearings,
and (6) final decree (MDNRC 2009, pp.
9–14). As of February 2010, the Red
Rock River system is currently being
examined, and the Big Hole and
Madison Rivers have temporary decrees
(MDNRC 2010, entire). We anticipate
the final adjudication of all the river
basins in Montana that currently
contain native Arctic grayling will be
completed in the foreseeable future, but
we do not know if this process will
eliminate the overallocation of water
rights.
Fishing Regulations
Arctic grayling is considered a game
fish (MFWP 2010, p. 16), but is subject
to special catch-and-release regulations
in streams and rivers within its native
range (MFWP 2010, p. 52). Catch-andrelease regulations also are in effect for
Ennis Reservoir on the Madison River
(MFWP 2010, p. 61). Arctic grayling in
Miner and Mussigbrod Lakes are subject
to more liberal regulations; anglers can
keep up to 5 per day and have up to 10
in possession in accordance with
standard daily and possession limits for
that angling management district
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54738
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
(MFWP 2010, p. 52). We have no
evidence to indicate that current fishing
regulations are inadequate to protect
native Arctic grayling in the Missouri
River basin (see discussion under Factor
B, above).
Summary of Factor D
We infer that current Federal and
State regulatory mechanisms are
inadequate to protect native Arctic
grayling of the upper Missouri River.
We conclude this because the regulatory
mechanisms may only apply to specific
populations (or parts of populations)
depending on land ownership and
jurisdiction, they have no track record
of addressing significant threats to
habitat, and they do not address the
threat posed by nonnative trout.
Regulatory mechanisms on Federal
lands may be adequate to protect certain
fragments of Arctic grayling habitat or
isolated populations (e.g., Miner and
Mussigbrod Lakes). However, the
extirpation of more than one lake
population within the Beaverhead–
Deerlodge National Forest (e.g., Elk Lake
– Oswald 2000, p. 10; Hamby Lake –
Oswald 2005a, pers. comm.) suggests
the existing regulatory mechanisms may
not be sufficient. Difficulties in
coordinating land and water use across
jurisdictional boundaries (State,
Federal, private) within a watershed
also present challenges for coordinated
management of Arctic grayling. In the
Big Hole River, fluvial Arctic grayling
generally occupy waters adjacent to
private lands (MFWP et al. 2006, p. 13;
Lamothe et al. 2007, p. 4), so Federal
regulations may have limited scope to
protect the species.
Conceivably, application of existing
regulations concerning occupied Arctic
grayling habitat in the upper Missouri
River basin (e.g., CWA, FLPMA, NFMA,
SMZL, SPA) should promote and ensure
the persistence of Arctic grayling
because these regulations were
promulgated, to some extent, to limit
impacts of human activity on the
environment. However, based on the
current status of the DPS and the
degradation of habitat and declines in
populations observed in the past 20 to
30 years, during which time many of the
above regulatory mechanisms have been
in place, we have no basis to conclude
that they have adequately protected
grayling up to this time. In other words,
existing regulations theoretically limit
threats to Arctic grayling, but in practice
have not done so. We suspect that
incomplete or inconsistent application
of these regulatory mechanisms and
jurisdictional difficulties (State vs.
Federal regulations, private vs. public
lands) relative to the distribution of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Arctic grayling may be partially
responsible. Other regulatory
mechanisms simply require disclosure
(e.g., NEPA) and do not necessarily
mandate protection for a species or its
habitat. Consequently, we believe that
existing regulatory mechanisms that
deal with land and water management
have not demonstrably reduced threats
to Arctic grayling in the past, and we
have no basis to conclude that they are
adequate now or will be in the future.
Existing regulatory mechanisms do
not directly address threats posed by
nonnative brook trout, brown trout, or
rainbow trout (see Factor C discussion,
above). One exception is that the Red
Rock Lakes NWR CCP does consider
removal of nonnative trout to be a
possible action to benefit Arctic
grayling, but this may not apply to
occupied habitat outside the NWR, so
the CCP is likely to only address this
threat for a portion of the population.
For the reasons described above, we
conclude that the inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms poses a current
threat to native Arctic grayling of the
upper Missouri River. We do not
anticipate any changes to the existing
regulatory mechanisms, thus we
conclude that the inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms is a threat in the
foreseeable future.
E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors
Affecting Its Continued Existence
Drought
Drought appears to be a significant
natural factor that threatens Arctic
grayling populations in streams and
rivers in the upper Missouri River basin.
Drought can affect fish populations by
reducing stream flow volumes. This
leads to dewatering and high
temperatures that can limit connectivity
among spawning, rearing, and sheltering
habitats; to a reduced volume of
thermally suitable habitat; and to an
increased frequency of water
temperatures above the physiological
limits for optimum growth and survival
in Arctic grayling. Drought is a natural
occurrence in the interior western
United States (see National Drought
Mitigation Center 2010). The duration
and severity of drought in Montana
appears to have increased during the
last 50 years, and precipitation has
tended to be lower than average in the
last 20 years (National Climatic Data
Center 2010). In addition, drought can
interact with human-caused stressors
(e.g., irrigation withdrawals, riparian
habitat degradation) to further reduce
stream flows and increase water
temperatures.
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Reduced stream flows and elevated
water temperatures during drought have
been most apparent in the Big Hole
River system (Magee and Lamothe 2003,
pp. 10-14; Magee et al. 2005, pp. 23-25;
Rens and Magee 2007, pp. 11-12, 14).
Although the response of stream and
river habitats to drought is expected to
be most pronounced because of the
strong seasonality of flows in those
habitats, effects in lake environments do
occur. For example, both the Upper and
Lower Red Rock Lakes are very shallow
(Mogen 1996, p. 7). Reduced water
availability during drought would result
in further shallowing (loss of habitat
volume) that can lead to increased
temperatures in summer and the
likelihood of complete freezing or
anoxia (lack of oxygen) in winter.
In the Big Hole River, evidence for the
detrimental effects of drought on Arctic
grayling populations is primarily
inferential; observed declines in fluvial
Arctic grayling and nonnative trout
abundances in the Big Hole River
coincide with periods of drought (Magee
and Lamothe 2003, pp. 22–23, 28) and
fish kills (Byorth 1995, pp. 10–11, 31).
Similarly, lack of success with fluvial
Arctic grayling restoration efforts
elsewhere in the upper Missouri River
basin also has been attributed, in part,
to drought (Lamothe and Magee 2004a,
p. 28).
Given the climate of the
intermountain West, we conclude that
drought has been and will continue to
be a natural occurrence. We assume that
negative effects of drought on Arctic
grayling populations, such as reduced
connectivity among habitats or
increased water temperatures at or
above physiological thresholds for
growth and survival, are more frequent
in stream and river environments and in
very shallow lakes relative to larger,
deeper lakes. Therefore, we expect the
threat of drought to be most pronounced
for Arctic grayling populations in the
Big Hole River, Madison River–Ennis
Reservoir, and Red Rock Lakes. We do
not know whether drought has or is
currently limiting Arctic grayling
populations in Miner and Mussigbrod
Lakes, as there are few monitoring data
for these populations. Arctic grayling in
Miner and Mussigbrod Lakes
presumably use inlet or outlet streams
for spawning; thus, if severe drought
occurs during spawning and before
subsequent emigration of YOY grayling
to the rearing lakes, then populationlevel effects are possible. Overall, we
conclude that drought has been a past
threat, is a current threat, and will
continue to be a threat to Arctic grayling
of the upper Missouri River basin,
especially for those populations in the
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Big Hole River, Madison River–Ennis
Reservoir, and Red Rock Lakes.
Successful implementation of the Big
Hole Grayling CCAA may partially
ameliorate the effects of drought in the
Big Hole River, by reducing the
likelihood that human-influenced
actions or outcomes (irrigation
withdrawals, destruction of riparian
habitats, and fish passage barriers) will
interact with the natural effects of
drought (reduced stream flows and
increased water temperatures) to
negatively affect suitable habitat for
Arctic grayling. We expect the
magnitude of the threat from drought to
increase in the foreseeable future under
the anticipated air temperature and
precipitation trends projected by
climate change models (discussed in
detail below).
Climate Change
Climate is influenced primarily by
long-term patterns in air temperature
and precipitation. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) has concluded that
climate warming is unequivocal, and is
now evident from observed increases in
global average air and ocean
temperatures, widespread melting of
snow and ice, and rising global mean
sea level (IPCC 2007, pp. 30–31).
Continued greenhouse gas emissions at
or above current rates are expected to
cause further warming (IPCC 2007, p.
30). Eleven of the 12 years from 1995
through 2006 rank among the 12
warmest years in the instrumental
record of global average near-surface
temperature since 1850 (ISAB 2007, p.7;
IPCC 2007, p. 30). During the last
century, mean annual air temperature
increased by approximately 0.6 °C (1.1
°F) (IPCC 2007, p. 30). Warming appears
to be accelerating in recent decades, as
the linear warming trend over the 50
years from 1956 to 2005 (average 0.13 °C
or 0.24 °F per decade) is nearly twice
that for the 100 years from 1906 to 2005
(IPCC 2007, p. 30). Climate change
scenarios estimate that the mean air
temperature could increase by over 3 °C
(5.4 °F) by 2100 (IPCC 2007, pp. 45–46).
The IPCC also projects that there will
likely be regional increases in the
frequency of hot extremes, heat waves,
and heavy precipitation, as well as
greater warming in high northern
latitudes (IPCC 2007, p. 46). We
recognize that there are scientific
differences of opinion on many aspects
of climate change, including the role of
natural variability in climate. In our
analysis, we rely primarily on synthesis
documents (IPCC 2007; ISAB 2007; Karl
et al. 2009) that present the consensus
view of a large number of experts on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
climate change from around the world.
We found that these synthesis reports,
as well as the scientific papers used in
those reports, or resulting from those
reports, represent the best available
scientific information we can use to
inform our decision. Where possible, we
used empirical data or projections
specific to the western United States,
which includes the range of Arctic
grayling in the Missouri River basin,
and focused on observed or expected
effects on aquatic systems.
Water temperature and hydrology
(stream flow) are sensitive to climate
change, and influence many of the basic
physical and biological processes in
aquatic systems. For ectothermic
organisms like fish, temperature sets
basic constraints on species’
distribution and physiological
performance, such as activity and
growth (Coutant 1999, pp. 32–52).
Stream hydrology not only affects the
structure of aquatic systems across
space and time, but influences the lifehistory and phenology (timing of lifecycle events) of aquatic organisms, such
as fishes. For example, the timing of
snowmelt runoff can be an
environmental cue that triggers
spawning migrations in salmonid fishes
(Brenkman et al. 2001, pp. 981, 984),
and the timing of floods relative to
spawning and emergence can strongly
affect population establishment and
persistence (Fausch et al. 2001, pp.
1438, 1450). Significant trends in water
temperature and stream flow have been
observed in the western United States
(Stewart et al. 2005, entire; Kaushal et
al. 2010, entire), and climatic forcing
caused by increased air temperatures
and changes in precipitation are
partially responsible.
Warming patterns in the western
United States are not limited to streams.
In California and Nevada, water surface
temperatures have increased by an
average of 0.11 °C (0.2 °F) per year since
1992 and at a rate twice that of the
average minimum air surface
temperature (Schneider et al. 2009, p.
L22402). In the western United States,
runoff from snowmelt occurs 1 to 4
weeks earlier (Regonda et al. 2005, p.
380; Stewart et al. 2005, pp. 1136, 1141;
Hamlett et al. 2007, p. 1468),
presumably as a result of increased
temperatures (Hamlet et al. 2007, p.
1468), increased frequency of melting
(Mote et al. 2005, p. 45), and decreased
snowpack (Mote et al. 2005, p. 41).
Trends in decreased water availability
also are apparent across the Pacific
Northwest. For example, Luce and
Holden (2009, entire) found a tendency
toward more extreme droughts at 72
percent of the stream flow gages they
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54739
examined across Idaho, Montana,
Oregon, and Washington.
Climate forcing may be directly or
indirectly altering those habitats. Longterm water temperature data are not
available for sites currently occupied by
native Arctic grayling populations (e.g.,
Big Hole River, Red Rock Creek);
however, if trends in air temperature are
consistently related to increases in
water temperature (Isaak et al. 2010, p.
1), then a regional pattern of increased
water temperature is likely, and it is
reasonable to assume that Arctic
grayling in the Big Hole River, Red Rock
Creek, and Madison River near Ennis
Reservoir also have experienced the
same trend. Mean annual air
temperature recorded at Lakeview,
Montana, near the Red Rock Lakes
between 1948 and 2005 did not increase
significantly, although mean
temperatures in March and April did
show a statistically significant increase
consistent with earlier spring warming
observed elsewhere in North America
during recent decades (USFWS 2009,
pp. 36–39).
The effect of such warming would be
similar to that described for increased
temperatures associated with stream
dewatering (see discussion under Factor
A), namely there has been an increased
frequency of high water temperatures
that may be above the physiological
limits for survival or optimal growth for
Arctic grayling, which is considered a
cold-water (stenothermic) species
(Selong et al. 2001, p. 1032). Changes in
water temperature also may influence
the distribution of nonnative trout
species (Rahel and Olden 2008, p. 524)
and the outcome of competitive
interactions between those species and
Arctic grayling. Brown trout are
generally considered to be more tolerant
of warm water than many salmonid
species common in western North
America (Coutant 1999, pp. 52–53;
Selong et al. 2001, p. 1032), and higher
water temperatures may favor brown
trout where they compete against
salmonids with lower thermal
tolerances (Rahel and Olden 2008, p.
524). Recently observed increases in the
abundance and distribution of brown
trout in the upper reaches of the Big
Hole River may be consistent with the
hypothesis that stream warming is
facilitating encroachment. Further study
is needed to evaluate this hypothesis.
Observations on flow timing in the
Big Hole River, upper Madison River,
and Red Rock Creek indicate a tendency
toward earlier snowmelt runoff (USFWS
2010b). These hydrologic alterations
may be biologically significant for
Arctic grayling in the Missouri River
basin because they typically spawn
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54740
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
prior to the peak of snowmelt runoff
(Shepard and Oswald 1989, p. 7; Mogen
1996, pp. 22–23; Rens and Magee 2007,
pp. 6–7). A trend toward earlier
snowmelt runoff could thus result in
earlier average spawning dates, with
potential (and presently unknown)
implications for spawning success and
growth and survival of fry. Water
availability has measurably decreased in
some watersheds occupied by Arctic
grayling. For example, mean annual
precipitation recorded at Lakeview,
Montana, near the Red Rock Lakes,
decreased significantly between 1948
and 2005 (USFWS 2009, pp. 36–39).
The western United States appears to
be warming faster than the global
average. In the Pacific Northwest,
regionally averaged temperatures have
risen 0.8 °C (1.5 °F) over the last century
and as much as 2 °C (4 °F) in some
areas. They are projected to increase by
another 1.5 to 5.5 °C (3 to 10 °F) over
the next 100 years (Karl et al. 2009, p.
135). For the purposes of this finding,
we consider the foreseeable future for
anticipated climate changes as
approximately 40 years, because various
global climate models (GCM) and
emissions scenarios give consistent
predictions within that timeframe (Ray
et al. 2010, p. 11). We used a similar
foreseeable future to consider climate
change projects in other 12–month
findings (see American pika (Ochotona
princeps) – 75 FR 6448, February 9,
2010). While projected patterns of
warming across North America are
generally consistent across different
GCMs and emissions scenarios (Ray et
al. 2010, p. 22), there tends to be less
agreement among models for whether
mean annual precipitation will increase
or decrease, but the models seem to
indicate an increase in precipitation in
winter and a decrease in summer (Ray
et al. 2010, pp. 22–23). In the
foreseeable future, natural variation will
likely confound a clear prediction for
precipitation based on current climate
models (Ray et al. 2010, p. 29).
Although there is considerable
uncertainty about how climate will
evolve at any specific location,
statistically downscaled climate
projection models (models that predict
climate at finer spatial resolution than
GCMs) for the Pacific Northwest also
support widespread warming, with
warmer temperature zones shifting to
the north and upward in elevation (Ray
et al. 2010, pp. 23–24).
The land area of the upper Missouri
River basin also is predicted to warm
(Ray et al. 2010, p. 23), although
currently occupied Arctic grayling
habitat tends be in colder areas of
moderate-to-high elevation. Four out of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
five populations are at approximately
1,775 to 2,125 m (5,860 to 7,012 ft)
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1761).
Presumably, any existing trends in
water temperature increase and earlier
snowmelt runoff in streams and rivers
that is being forced by increases in air
temperature should continue. To the
extent that these trends in water
temperature and hydrology already exist
in habitats occupied by native Arctic
grayling, they should continue into the
foreseeable future. In general, climate
change is expected to substantially
reduce the thermally suitable habitat for
coldwater fish species (Keleher and
Rahel 1996, pp. 1, 6–11; Mohseni et al.
2003, pp. 389, 401; Flebbe et al. 2006,
p. 1371, 1378; Rieman et al. 2007, pp.
1552, 1559). The range of native Arctic
grayling in the upper Missouri River has
already contracted significantly during
the past 50 to 100 years (Vincent 1962,
pp. 96–121; Kaya 1992, pp. 49–51). The
currently occupied native Arctic
grayling habitat tends be in colder areas
of moderate-to-high elevation that may,
to some extent, be more resistant to
large or rapid changes in hydrology
(Regonda et al. 2005, p. 380; Stewart et
al. 2005, p. 1142) or perhaps stream
warming.
Nonetheless, we do not expect these
habitats to be entirely immune from
effects of climate warming, so we expect
that climate change could lead to further
range contractions of Arctic grayling of
the upper Missouri River and may
increase the species’ risk of extinction
over the next 30 to 40 years as climate
impacts interact with existing stressors
(Karl et al. 2009, p. 81), such as habitat
degradation, stream dewatering,
drought, and interactions with
nonnative trout that are already
affecting the DPS. We anticipate that
implementation of the Big Hole Grayling
CCAA may partially compensate for, or
reduce the severity of, likely effects of
climate change on Arctic grayling in the
Big Hole River. However, if current
projections are realized, climate change
is likely to exacerbate the existing
primary threats to Arctic grayling
outside the Big Hole River. The IPCC
projects that the changes to the global
climate system in the 21st century will
likely be greater than those observed in
the 20th century (IPCC 2007, p. 45);
therefore, we anticipate that these
effects will continue and likely increase
into the foreseeable future. We do not
consider climate change in and of itself
to be a significant factor in our
determination of whether Arctic
grayling of the upper Missouri River is
warranted for listing because of the
greater imminence and magnitude of
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
other threats (e.g., Factor A: habitat
degradation, Factor C: nonnative trout).
However, we expect the severity and
scope of key threats (habitat degradation
and fragmentation, stream dewatering,
and nonnative trout) to increase in the
foreseeable future because of climate
change effects that are already
measureable (i.e., increased water
temperature, increased frequency of
extreme drought, changes in runoff
patterns). Thus, we consider that
climate change will potentially intensify
some of the significant current threats to
all Arctic grayling populations in the
DPS. After approximately 40 years, the
variation in GCM projections based on
the various emissions scenarios begins
to increase dramatically (Ray et al. 2010
pp. 12–13), so 40 years represents the
foreseeable future in terms of the extent
to which the effects of climate change (a
major environmental driver) can reliably
be modeled or predicted. Thus we
conclude that climate change
constitutes a threat in the Missouri DPS
of Arctic grayling in the foreseeable
future.
Stochastic (Random) Threats
A principle of conservation biology is
that the presence of larger and more
productive (resilient) populations can
reduce overall extinction risk. To
minimize extinction risk due to
(random) stochastic threats, life-history
diversity should be maintained,
populations should not all share
common catastrophic risks, and both
widespread and spatially close
populations are needed (Fausch et al.
2006, p. 23; Allendorf et al. 1997,
entire). Based on these principles, the
upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling may face current and future
threats from stochastic processes that
act on small, reproductively isolated
populations.
The upper Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling exists as a collection of
small, isolated populations (Figure 2;
Peterson and Ardren 2009, entire).
Patterns of dispersal among extant
Arctic grayling populations have been
constrained dramatically by the
presence of dams. The inability of fish
to move between populations limits
genetic exchange, the maintenance of
local populations (demographic
support; Hilderbrand 2003, p. 257), and
recolonization of habitat fragments
(reviewed by Fausch et al. 2006, pp. 89). Isolated populations cannot offset
the random loss of genetic variation
(Fausch et al. 2006, p. 8). This in turn
can lead to loss of phenotypic variation
and evolutionary potential (Allendorf
and Ryman 2002, p. 54). Relative to the
presumed historical condition of
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
connectivity among most of the major
rivers in the upper Missouri River basin,
the extant native Arctic grayling
populations face both genetic and
demographic threats from isolation,
both currently and in the foreseeable
future.
Four of the five individual
populations in the upper Missouri River
DPS of Arctic grayling are at low-tomoderate abundance (see Population
Status and Trends for Native Arctic
Grayling of the Upper Missouri River,
above). Individually, small populations
need to maintain enough adults to
minimize loss of variability through
genetic drift and inbreeding (Rieman
and McIntyre 1993, pp. 10–11). The
point estimates for genetic effective
population sizes observed in the Big
Hole River, Miner Lakes, Madison River,
and Red Rock Lakes populations are
above the level at which inbreeding is
an immediate concern, but below the
level presumed to provide the genetic
variation necessary to conserve longterm adaptive potential (Peterson and
Ardren 2009, pp. 1767, 1769).
Historically, effective population sizes
of Arctic grayling in the Missouri River
were estimated to be 1 or 2 orders of
magnitude greater (10 to 100 times) than
those currently observed (Peterson and
Ardren 2009, pp. 1767). Loss of genetic
variation relative to the historical
condition thus represents a threat to
Arctic grayling in the foreseeable future.
Only the Big Hole River population
expresses the migratory fluvial ecotype
that presumably dominated in the upper
Missouri River basin (Kaya 1992, pp.
47–50); therefore, the DPS lacks
functional redundancy in ecotypes.
Conservation of life-history diversity is
important to the persistence of species
confronted by habitat change and
environmental perturbations (Beechie et
al. 2006, entire). Therefore, the lack of
additional fluvial populations
represents a current threat to the upper
Missouri River DPS. Reintroduction
efforts have been ongoing to reduce this
threat, but have not yet produced a selfsustaining population at any of the
reintroduction sites (Rens and Magee
2007, pp. 21–38). Future successful
reintroductions may reduce this threat,
but at the present time we consider the
threat to extend into the foreseeable
future.
Populations of Arctic grayling in the
upper Missouri River DPS are for the
most part widely separated from one
another, particularly those populations
in the Big Hole, Madison, and Red Rock
drainages (see Figure 2). Thus, they do
not appear to all share a common risk
of being extirpated by a rare, highmagnitude environmental disturbance
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
(i.e., catastrophe). Three of the five
populations are within the same
watershed (Big Hole River, Miner Lakes,
and Mussigbrod Lake populations), so
collectively these three populations
would be at greater risk. Individually,
each population appears to be at
substantial risk of extirpation by
catastrophe from one or more factor,
such as restricted distribution (Miner
Lakes, Mussigbrod Lake), low
population abundance (Madison Lake,
Red Rocks Lakes , Big Hole River), and
concentration of spawning primarily in
a single, discrete location (Red Rock
Lakes). The Big Hole River population
may be at a comparatively lower risk
from catastrophe because individuals
still spawn at multiple locations within
the drainage (Rens and Magee 2007, p.
13).
The population viability analysis
(PVA) demonstrates that four of the five
extant populations in the upper
Missouri River DPS of Arctic grayling
are at moderate (at least 13 percent) to
high risk (more than 50 percent) of
extinction from random environmental
variation. In this context, random
environmental variation is simply
considered to be common
environmental fluctuations, such as
drought, floods, debris flows, changes in
food availability, etc. that affect
population size and population growth.
These PVA analyses assume that
variation in annual population growth
increases as population size decreases
(Rieman and McIntyre 1993, pp. 43–46),
which seems a reasonable assumption
given the large inter-annual variability
in relative abundance and recruitment
observed in some Arctic grayling
populations in Montana (e.g., Big Hole
River) (Magee et al. 2005, pp. 27–28).
Simply stated, smaller populations are
more likely to go extinct even if they are
stable because they are already close to
the extinction threshold, and random
environmental events can drive their
abundance below that threshold.
Consequently, we believe that
extinction risk from random
environmental variation (droughts,
floods, etc.) represents a significant
threat in the foreseeable future based on
the PVA.
We are unsure whether chance
variation in the fates of individuals
within a given year (demographic
stochasticity) is a current threat to the
upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling. The magnitude of demographic
stochasticity is inversely related to
population size (Morris and Doak 2002,
pp. 22–23), but we do not know whether
any of the Arctic grayling populations
currently exist at or below an
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54741
abundance where demographic
stochasticity is likely.
Overall, we conclude that the upper
Missouri River DPS of Arctic grayling
faces threats from population isolation,
loss of genetic diversity, and small
population size, which all interact to
increase the likelihood that random
environmental variation or a catastrophe
can extirpate an individual population.
The uncertainty of PVA predictions
increases dramatically after about 25 to
30 years, so we feel this represents a
foreseeable future in terms of stochastic
threats to the DPS. Lack of connectivity
among extant populations and lack of
replicate populations for the fluvial
ecotype represent current threats.
Threats from reduced genetic diversity,
environmental variation, or catastrophe
are threats in the foreseeable future,
because their effects may take longer to
play out (i.e., link between genetic
diversity and adaptation) and are based
on probabilistic inference concerning
the magnitude of variation in
population growth, environmental
fluctuation, and periodic disturbance.
Summary of Factor E
Based on the information available at
this time, we conclude that drought
represents a current and future threat to
native Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River system. Drought can
affect fish populations by reducing
stream flow volumes, which leads to
dewatering and high temperatures that
can limit connectivity among spawning,
rearing, and sheltering habitats; a
reduced volume of thermally suitable
habitat; and an increased frequency of
water temperatures above the
physiological limits for optimum growth
and survival.
Climate projections suggest that the
frequency and severity of drought is
expected to increase; thus the
magnitude of drought-related threats
and impacts also may increase. We
anticipate the effects of drought to be
most pronounced in streams, rivers, and
shallow lakes; therefore, the Big Hole
River, Madison River–Ennis Reservoir,
and Red Rock Lakes populations are
likely to be most threatened by drought.
There is evidence for increasing air
temperatures and changing hydrologic
pattern resulting from climate change in
the Pacific Northwest and
intermountain West, and we conclude
that climate change is a secondary threat
that can interact with and magnify the
effects of primary threats, such as
drought, stream dewatering from
irrigation withdrawals, and the outcome
of interactions with nonnative trout
species that have higher thermal
tolerances. We anticipate that climate
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54742
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
change will remain a threat in the
foreseeable future, but that conservation
programs that increase connectivity
among refuge habitats and improve
stream flows (e.g., Big Hole Grayling
CCAA) will to some extent mitigate or
lessen the effects of climate change.
Climate change effects should be most
pronounced in those same habitats and
populations most strongly affected by
water availability (Big Hole River,
Madison River–Ennis Reservoir, Red
Rock Lakes), but lake habitats also can
be affected (Schneider et al. 2009,
entire), so threats likely extend to the
other populations in the DPS (Miner
and Mussigbrod Lakes).
The Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling currently exists as a collection
of small, isolated populations that face
some current and foreseeable threats
from a collection of random (stochastic)
processes characteristic of small
populations, such as loss of genetic
diversity because of habitat
fragmentation and isolation, and
individual populations face increased
risk of extirpation from random
environmental variation (results of PVA)
and catastrophe.
Finding
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
As defined by the DPS Policy, we
determined that the native Arctic
grayling of the upper Missouri River
constitutes a listable entity under the
ESA. We also considered the
appropriateness of listing separate
distinct population segments based on
each of the ecotypes (fluvial and
adfluvial) that occur naturally in Arctic
grayling populations in the Missouri
River basin. The best scientific
information indicates these ecotypes
share a recent evolutionary history and
the populations do not cluster
genetically by life-history type.
Maintaining life-history diversity
increases the likelihood that a species
(or DPS) will maintain both the genetic
diversity and evolutionary flexibility to
deal with future environmental
challenges. Consequently we feel that
preservation of both native ecotypes in
their native habitats is essential to
conservation of the DPS; thus we have
determined that a single DPS that
includes both ecotypes is most
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
appropriate from both a practical
management and conservation
perspective. We refer to this DPS as the
Missouri River DPS of Arctic grayling.
As discussed above, we do not include
the nonnative Arctic grayling in the
DPS, based on intent of the Act, IUCN
guidelines, and NMFS policy. The
Service does not currently have a
specific policy concerning nonnative
species, therefore we will investigate
this topic in more detail during the
proposed rulemaking process.
As required by the ESA, we
considered the five factors in assessing
whether the Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling is endangered or
threatened throughout all or a
significant portion of its range. We
carefully examined the best scientific
and commercial information available
regarding the past, present, and future
threats faced by the DPS. We reviewed
the petition, information available in
our files, other available published and
unpublished information, and we
consulted with recognized species
experts and other Federal, State, and
tribal agencies. On the basis of the best
scientific and commercial information
available, we find that listing the DPS as
endangered or threatened is warranted.
We will make a determination on the
status of the species as endangered or
threatened when we do a proposed
listing determination. However, as
explained in more detail below (see
Preclusion and Expeditious Progress
section), an immediate proposal of a
regulation implementing this action is
precluded by higher priority listing
actions, and progress is being made to
add or remove qualified species from
the Lists of Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife and Plants.
The historical range of Arctic grayling
in the upper Missouri River basin has
declined dramatically in the past
century. The five remaining indigenous
populations are isolated from one
another by dams or other factors.
Moreover, three of these five
populations (Big Hole, Madison–Ennis,
Red Rocks) appear to be at low
abundance (perhaps no more than 650
to 2,000 adults per population) and have
declined in abundance during the past
few decades. The Big Hole River
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
contains the only remaining example of
the fluvial ecotype in the DPS, and the
effective number of breeding adults
declined by half during the past 15
years. Populations of Arctic grayling in
two small lakes in the Big Hole River
drainage (Miner and Mussigbrod)
appear to be more abundant, and
perhaps more secure than the other
native populations.
This status review identified threats
to the DPS related to Factors A, C, D,
and E (see Table 5). All populations face
potential threats from competition with
and predation by nonnative trout
(Factor C) now and in the foreseeable
future. The magnitude of this threat
likely varies by Arctic grayling
population, and is greater in locations
where multiple species of nonnative
trout are present, abundant, and
comprise a large proportion of the
salmonid biomass (e.g., Big Hole River,
Madison River–Ennis Reservoir, Red
Rock Lakes). Most populations face
threats that result from the alteration of
their habitats (Factor A), such as habitat
fragmentation from large dams or
smaller irrigation diversion structures,
stream dewatering, high summer water
temperatures, loss of riparian habitats,
and entrainment in irrigation ditches
(see Table 5). Severe drought (Factor E)
likely affects all populations by
reducing water availability and reducing
the extent of thermally suitable habitat,
but we presume the effects of drought
are most pronounced for Arctic grayling
that reside primarily in streams and
rivers (Big Hole River) or shallow lakes
(Madison River–Ennis Reservoir, Red
Rock Lakes). We did not consider
climate change (Factor E) in and of itself
to be a significant current threat, but if
current climate changes projections are
realized, we expect that climate change
will influence severity and scope of key
threats (habitat degradation and
fragmentation, stream dewatering,
interactions with nonnative trout,
drought). As applied, existing regulatory
mechanisms (Factor D) do not appear to
be adequate to address primary threats
to grayling (e.g., stream dewatering, loss
of riparian habitats), as at least three
native Arctic grayling populations have
continued to decline in abundance in
recent decades.
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
54743
TABLE 5. CURRENT AND FORESEEABLE THREATS TO INDIVIDUAL POPULATIONS OF NATIVE ARCTIC GRAYLING IN THE
UPPER MISSOURI RIVER DPS.
Threat
Factor
Big Hole River
Miner Lakes
A
Dams/habitat
fragmentationa
Dewateringa
Thermal stressa
Entrainmenta
Riparian habitat lossa
C
Predation & competition
with nonnative trout
D
E
Mussigbrod Lake
Madison River–Ennis
Reservoir
Red Rocks Lakes
Dams/habitat
fragmentation
Dams/habitat
fragmentation
Thermal stress
Dams/habitat
fragmentation
Dewatering
Thermal stress
Entrainment
Riparian habitat loss
Sediments
Predation & competition
with nonnative trout
Predation & competition
with nonnative trout
Predation & competition
with nonnative trout
Predation & competition
with nonnative trout
Inadequate regulationsb
(nonnative trout,
continued population
decline)
Inadequate regulationsb
(nonnative trout,
extirpation of other lake
populations of
grayling)
Inadequate regulationsb
(nonnative trout,
extirpation of other lake
populations of
grayling)
Inadequate regulationsb
(nonnative trout,
federally-permitted dam,
continued population
decline)
Inadequate regulationsb
(nonnative trout,
continued population
decline)
Reduced genetic
diversity, low
abundance, random
events
Drought
Climate changec
No replicate of fluvial
ecotype
Reduced genetic
diversity, low
abundance, random
events
Drought
Climate changec
Drought
Climate changec
Reduced genetic
diversity, low
abundance, random
events
Drought
Climate changec
Reduced genetic
diversity, low
abundance, random
events
Drought
Climate changec
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
a The magnitude of current threats to the majority of the extant population or its habitat are expected be reduced in the foreseeable future from
implementation of a formalized conservation plan (i.e., Big Hole Grayling CCAA).
b Terms in parenthesis characterize the inadequacy of the regulatory mechanisms in terms of not addressing specific threats (e.g., nonnative
trout, Factor C; dams, Factor A) or having no observed record of success with protecting existing populations (continued population decline, extirpation of other similarly situated populations).
c Threats believed to be of secondary importance or that interact with primary threats.
In the Big Hole River, ongoing
implementation of a formalized
conservation program (Big Hole
Grayling CCAA) with substantial
participation from non-Federal
landowners and State and Federal
agency partners should significantly
reduce many of the habitat-related
threats to that population in the
foreseeable future. In the Red Rock
Lakes NWR, implementation of a CCP
should reduce many of the primary
threats to Arctic grayling that occur
within the NWR’s boundary, but threats
to Arctic grayling and its habitat also
exist outside the administrative
boundary of the CCP.
Four of five populations appear to be
at risk of extirpation in the foreseeable
future (next 20 to 30 years) from random
fluctuations in environmental
conditions (e.g., precipitation, food
availability, density of competitors,
etc.), simply because they are at low
abundance and cannot receive
demographic support from other native
populations (Factor E). Low abundance
and isolation also raises concerns that
the loss of genetic variation from chance
events (genetic drift) also may be a
threat in some populations. Maintaining
life-history diversity is important for
species conservation given anticipated
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
environmental challenges such as those
anticipated under climate change, so
having only a single population of the
fluvial ecotype represents a significant
threat to that ecotype’s long-term
persistence. A reintroduction program
designed to address this threat has been
implemented for more than a decade
and has made some recent technical
advances in the production of Arctic
grayling fry. Natural reproduction by
grayling has been observed at a reintroduction site in the Ruby River. At
least 5 to 10 more years of monitoring
is needed for us to establish that the
reintroduced fish in the Ruby River
constitute a viable population.
We reviewed the available
information to determine if the existing
and foreseeable threats render the
species at risk of extinction now such
that issuing an emergency regulation
temporarily listing the species under
section 4(b)(7) of the ESA is warranted.
We determined that issuing an
emergency regulation temporarily
listing the DPS is not warranted at this
time because there are five populations
in the DPS and the probability of
simultaneous extinction of all five
populations is low, as the populations
are physically discrete and isolated from
one another such that a natural or
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
human-caused catastrophe is not likely
to extirpate all populations at once. In
addition, the remaining population that
expresses the fluvial ecotype (Big Hole
River) is subject to ongoing
implementation of a formalized
conservation agreement (Big Hole
Grayling CCAA) with adaptive
management stipulations if Arctic
grayling population goals are not being
met (MFWP et al. 2006, pp. 60–61), and
provisions to rescue Arctic grayling or
address alteration to habitat in the event
of a large-magnitude disturbance such
as a debris flow or flood (MFWP 2006,
pp. 85–86).
Listing Priority Number
The Service adopted guidelines on
September 21, 1983 (48 FR 43098), to
establish a rational system for utilizing
available resources for the highest
priority species when adding species to
the Lists of Endangered or Threatened
Wildlife and Plants or reclassifying
species listed as threatened to
endangered status. These guidelines,
titled ‘‘Endangered and Threatened
Species Listing and Recovery Priority
Guidelines’’ address the immediacy and
magnitude of threats, and the level of
taxonomic distinctiveness by assigning
priority in descending order to
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
54744
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
monotypic genera (genus with one
species), full species, and subspecies (or
equivalently, distinct population
segments of vertebrates).
As a result of our analysis of the best
available scientific and commercial
information, we assigned the native
Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri
River a Listing Priority Number (LPN) of
3 based on our finding that the DPS
faces threats that are of high magnitude
and are imminent. These primary
threats include the present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat; competition
with and predation by nonnative trout;
inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms to address all threats;
extinction risk from small population
size and isolation; drought; and lack of
replication of the fluvial life history.
Under the Service’s guidelines, the
magnitude of threat is the first criterion
we look at when establishing a listing
priority. The guidance indicates that
species with the highest magnitude of
threat are those species facing the
greatest threats to their continued
existence. These species receive the
highest listing priority. We consider the
threats that the native Arctic grayling of
the upper Missouri River faces to be
high in magnitude because many of the
threats that we analyzed are present
throughout the range and currently
impact the DPS to varying degrees (e.g.,
habitat fragmentation, nonnative trout,
inadequate regulatory mechanisms), and
will continue to impact the DPS into the
future. The threats that are of high
magnitude include present or
threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat; competition
with and predation by nonnative trout;
inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms to address all threats;
extinction risk from small population
size and isolation and vulnerability to
catastrophes; drought; and lack of
replication of the fluvial life-history.
Also, the small number (five) and size
and isolation of the populations may
magnify the impact of the other threats
under Factors A and C.
The DPS consists of only five
populations, so loss of any individual
population would incrementally
increase the risk that the DPS will not
persist. However, we presume that loss
of the Big Hole River population would
create the highest risk, as this
population contains much of the genetic
diversity present in the species within
the Missouri River basin (Peterson and
Ardren 2009, pp. 1763, 1768, 1770) and
is the only example of the fluvial
ecotype. A conservation program (Big
Hole Grayling CCAA) is being
implemented to address habitat-related
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
threats to the Big Hole River population,
but the scope of the threat posed by
nonnative trout remains high. Due to the
scope and scale of the high magnitude
threats and current isolation of already
small populations, we conclude that the
magnitude of threats to native Arctic
grayling of the upper Missouri River is
high.
Under our LPN guidelines, the second
criterion we consider in assigning a
listing priority is the immediacy of
threats. This criterion is intended to
ensure that the species facing actual,
identifiable threats are given priority
over those for which threats are only
potential or that are intrinsically
vulnerable but are not known to be
presently facing such threats. Not all the
threats facing the DPS are imminent. For
example, threats from climate change
and catastrophe are reasonably certain
to occur, and their effects may be
particularly acute for small, isolated
populations, but the specific nature and
influence of these effects, although
ongoing, are uncertain at this point.
With relative certainty, we can project
that climate change effects will
exacerbate other ongoing effects
throughout the DPS. In contrast, we
have factual information that some
threats are imminent because we have
factual information that the threats are
identifiable and that the DPS is
currently facing them in many areas of
its range. These other threats are
covered in detail in the discussions
under Factors A and C of this finding
and include habitat fragmentation,
stream dewatering, and riparian
degradation from agriculture and
ranching; dams; and competition with
and predation by nonnative trout.
Therefore, based on our LPN Policy, the
threats are imminent (ongoing).
The third criterion in our LPN
guidelines is intended to devote
resources to those species representing
highly distinctive or isolated gene pools
as reflected by taxonomy. We
determined the native Arctic grayling of
the upper Missouri River to be a valid
DPS according to our DPS Policy.
Therefore, under our LPN guidance, the
native Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River is assigned a lower
priority than a species in a monotypic
genus or a full species that faces the
same magnitude and imminence of
threats. Therefore, we assigned the
native Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River an LPN of 3 based on our
determination that the DPS faces threats
that are overall of high magnitude and
are imminent. An LPN of 3 is the
highest priority that can be assigned to
a distinct population segment. We will
continue to monitor the threats to the
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
native Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River, and the DPS’ status on
an annual basis, and should the
magnitude or the imminence of the
threats change, we will revisit our
assessment of LPN.
Preclusion and Expeditious Progress
Preclusion is a function of the listing
priority of a species in relation to the
resources that are available and
competing demands for those resources.
Thus, in any given fiscal year (FY),
multiple factors dictate whether it will
be possible to undertake work on a
proposed listing regulation or whether
promulgation of such a proposal is
warranted but precluded by higher
priority listing actions.
The resources available for listing
actions are determined through the
annual Congressional appropriations
process. The appropriation for the
Listing Program is available to support
work involving the following listing
actions: Proposed and final listing rules;
90–day and 12–month findings on
petitions to add species to the Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants (Lists) or to change the status
of a species from threatened to
endangered; annual determinations on
prior ‘‘warranted but precluded’’ petition
findings as required under section
4(b)(3)(C)(i) of the ESA; critical habitat
petition findings; proposed and final
rules designating critical habitat; and
litigation-related, administrative, and
program-management functions
(including preparing and allocating
budgets, responding to congressional
and public inquiries, and conducting
public outreach regarding listing and
critical habitat). The work involved in
preparing various listing documents can
be extensive and may include, but is not
limited to: Gathering and assessing the
best scientific and commercial data
available and conducting analyses used
as the basis for our decisions; writing
and publishing documents; and
obtaining, reviewing, and evaluating
public comments and peer review
comments on proposed rules and
incorporating relevant information into
final rules. The number of listing
actions that we can undertake in a given
year also is influenced by the
complexity of those listing actions; that
is, more complex actions generally are
more costly. For example, during the
past several years, the cost (excluding
publication costs) for preparing a 12–
month finding, without a proposed rule,
has ranged from approximately $11,000
for one species with a restricted range
and involving a relatively
uncomplicated analysis to $305,000 for
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
another species that is wide-ranging and
involving a complex analysis.
We cannot spend more than is
appropriated for the Listing Program
without violating the Anti-Deficiency
Act (see 31 U.S.C. 1341(a)(1)(A)). In
addition, in FY 1998 and for each FY
since then, Congress has placed a
statutory cap on funds which may be
expended for the Listing Program, equal
to the amount expressly appropriated
for that purpose in that FY. This cap
was designed to prevent funds
appropriated for other functions under
the ESA (for example, recovery funds
for removing species from the Lists), or
for other Service programs, from being
used for Listing Program actions (see
House Report 105-163, 105th Congress,
1st Session, July 1, 1997).
Recognizing that designation of
critical habitat for species already listed
would consume most of the overall
Listing Program appropriation, Congress
also put a critical habitat subcap in
place in FY 2002 and has retained it
each subsequent year to ensure that
some funds are available for other work
in the Listing Program: ‘‘The critical
habitat designation subcap will ensure
that some funding is available to
address other listing activities’’ (House
Report No. 107 - 103, 107th Congress, 1st
Session, June 19, 2001). In FY 2002 and
each year until FY 2006, the Service has
had to use virtually the entire critical
habitat subcap to address courtmandated designations of critical
habitat, and consequently none of the
critical habitat subcap funds have been
available for other listing activities. In
FY 2007, we were able to use some of
the critical habitat subcap funds to fund
proposed listing determinations for
high-priority candidate species. In FY
2009, while we were unable to use any
of the critical habitat subcap funds to
fund proposed listing determinations,
we did use some of this money to fund
the critical habitat portion of some
proposed listing determinations so that
the proposed listing determination and
proposed critical habitat designation
could be combined into one rule,
thereby being more efficient in our
work. In FY 2010, we are using some of
the critical habitat subcap funds to fund
actions with statutory deadlines.
Thus, through the listing cap, the
critical habitat subcap, and the amount
of funds needed to address courtmandated critical habitat designations,
Congress and the courts have in effect
determined the amount of money
available for other listing activities.
Therefore, the funds in the listing cap,
other than those needed to address
court-mandated critical habitat for
already listed species, set the limits on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
our determinations of preclusion and
expeditious progress.
Congress also recognized that the
availability of resources was the key
element in deciding, when making a 12–
month petition finding, whether we
would prepare and issue a listing
proposal or instead make a ‘‘warranted
but precluded’’ finding for a given
species. The Conference Report
accompanying Public Law 97-304,
which established the current statutory
deadlines and the warranted-butprecluded finding, states (in a
discussion on 90–day petition findings
that by its own terms also covers 12–
month findings) that the deadlines were
‘‘not intended to allow the Secretary to
delay commencing the rulemaking
process for any reason other than that
the existence of pending or imminent
proposals to list species subject to a
greater degree of threat would make
allocation of resources to such a petition
[that is, for a lower-ranking species]
unwise.’’
In FY 2010, expeditious progress is
that amount of work that can be
achieved with $10,471,000, which is the
amount of money that Congress
appropriated for the Listing Program
(that is, the portion of the Listing
Program funding not related to critical
habitat designations for species that are
already listed). However these funds are
not enough to fully fund all our courtordered and statutory listing actions in
FY 2010, so we are using $1,114,417 of
our critical habitat subcap funds in
order to work on all of our required
petition findings and listing
determinations. This brings the total
amount of funds we have for listing
actions in FY 2010 to $11,585,417. Our
process is to make our determinations of
preclusion on a nationwide basis to
ensure that the species most in need of
listing will be addressed first and also
because we allocate our listing budget
on a nationwide basis. The $11,585,417
is being used to fund work in the
following categories: compliance with
court orders and court-approved
settlement agreements requiring that
petition findings or listing
determinations be completed by a
specific date; section 4 (of the ESA)
listing actions with absolute statutory
deadlines; essential litigation-related,
administrative, and listing programmanagement functions; and highpriority listing actions for some of our
candidate species. In 2009, the
responsibility for listing foreign species
under the ESA was transferred from the
Division of Scientific Authority,
International Affairs Program, to the
Endangered Species Program. Starting
in FY 2010, a portion of our funding is
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
54745
being used to work on the actions
described above as they apply to listing
actions for foreign species. This has the
potential to further reduce funding
available for domestic listing actions,
although there are currently no foreign
species issues included in our highpriority listing actions at this time. The
allocations for each specific listing
action are identified in the Service’s FY
2010 Allocation Table (part of our
administrative record).
In FY 2007, we had more than 120
species with an LPN of 2, based on our
September 21, 1983, guidance for
assigning an LPN for each candidate
species (48 FR 43098). Using this
guidance, we assign each candidate an
LPN of 1 to 12, depending on the
magnitude of threats (high vs. moderate
to low), immediacy of threats (imminent
or nonimminent), and taxonomic status
of the species (in order of priority:
monotypic genus (a species that is the
sole member of a genus); species; or part
of a species (subspecies, distinct
population segment, or significant
portion of the range)). The lower the
listing priority number, the higher the
listing priority (that is, a species with an
LPN of 1 would have the highest listing
priority). Because of the large number of
high-priority species, we further ranked
the candidate species with an LPN of 2
by using the following extinction-risk
type criteria: IUCN Red list status/rank,
Heritage rank (provided by
NatureServe), Heritage threat rank
(provided by NatureServe), and species
currently with fewer than 50
individuals, or 4 or fewer populations.
Those species with the highest IUCN
rank (critically endangered), the highest
Heritage rank (G1), the highest Heritage
threat rank (substantial, imminent
threats), and currently with fewer than
50 individuals, or fewer than 4
populations, comprised a group of
approximately 40 candidate species
(‘‘Top 40’’). These 40 candidate species
have had the highest priority to receive
funding to work on a proposed listing
determination. As we work on proposed
and final listing rules for these 40
candidates, we are applying the ranking
criteria to the next group of candidates
with an LPN of 2 and 3 to determine the
next set of highest priority candidate
species.
To be more efficient in our listing
process, as we work on proposed rules
for these species in the next several
years, we are preparing multi-species
proposals when appropriate, and these
may include species with lower priority
if they overlap geographically or have
the same threats as a species with an
LPN of 2. In addition, available staff
resources also are a factor in
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54746
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
determining high-priority species
provided with funding. Finally,
proposed rules for reclassification of
threatened species to endangered are
lower priority, since as listed species,
they are already afforded the protection
of the ESA and implementing
regulations.
We assigned the upper Missouri River
DPS of Arctic grayling an LPN of 3,
based on our finding that the DPS faces
immediate and high magnitude threats
from the present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat; competition
with and predation by nonnative trout;
and the inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms. One or more of
the threats discussed above occurs in
each known population in the Missouri
River basin. These threats are ongoing
and, in some cases (e.g., nonnative
species), considered irreversible. Under
our 1983 Guidelines, a ‘‘species’’ facing
imminent high-magnitude threats is
assigned an LPN of 1, 2, or 3, depending
on its taxonomic status. Work on a
proposed listing determination for the
upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling is precluded by work on higher
priority candidate species (i.e., species
with LPN of 2); listing actions with
absolute statutory, court ordered, or
court-approved deadlines; and final
listing determinations for those species
that were proposed for listing with
funds from previous FYs. This work
includes all the actions listed in the
tables below under expeditious
progress.
As explained above, a determination
that listing is warranted but precluded
also must demonstrate that expeditious
progress is being made to add or remove
qualified species to and from the Lists
of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants. (Although we do not discuss
it in detail here, we also are making
expeditious progress in removing
species from the Lists under the
Recovery program, which is funded by
a separate line item in the budget of the
Endangered Species Program. As
explained above in our description of
the statutory cap on Listing Program
funds, the Recovery Program funds and
actions supported by them cannot be
considered in determining expeditious
progress made in the Listing Program.)
As with our ‘‘precluded’’ finding,
expeditious progress in adding qualified
species to the Lists is a function of the
resources available and the competing
demands for those funds. Given that
limitation, we find that we are making
progress in FY 2010 in the Listing
Program. This progress included
preparing and publishing the
determinations presented in Table 6.
TABLE 6. FY2010 COMPLETED LISTING ACTIONS
Publication Date
Title
Actions
FR Pages
Listing Lepidium papilliferum (Slickspot Peppergrass) as a
Threatened Species Throughout Its Range
Final Listing,
Threatened
74 FR 52013-52064
10/27/2009
90-day Finding on a Petition To List the American Dipper in the
Black Hills of South Dakota as Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Not
Substantial
74 FR 55177-55180
10/28/2009
Status Review of Arctic Grayling (Thymallus arcticus) in the Upper
Missouri River System
Notice of Intent to
Conduct Status Review
74 FR 55524-55525
11/03/2009
Listing the British Columbia Distinct Population Segment of the
Queen Charlotte Goshawk Under the ESA: Proposed rule.
Proposed Listing
Threatened
74 FR 56757-56770
11/03/2009
Listing the Salmon-Crested Cockatoo as Threatened Throughout
Its Range with Special Rule
Proposed Listing
Threatened
74 FR 56770-56791
11/23/2009
Status Review of Gunnison sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus)
Notice of Intent to
Conduct Status Review
74 FR 61100-61102
12/03/2009
12-Month Finding on a Petition to List the Black-tailed Prairie Dog
as Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding, Not
warranted
74 FR 63343-63366
12/03/2009
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List Sprague’s Pipit as Threatened
or Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
74 FR 63337-63343
12/15/2009
90-Day Finding on Petitions To List 9 Species of Mussels From
Texas as Threatened or Endangered With Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
74 FR 66260-66271
12/16/2009
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
10/08/2009
Partial 90-Day Finding on a Petition to List 475 Species in the
Southwestern United States as Threatened or Endangered With
Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Not
Substantial & Substantial
74 FR 66865-66905
12/17/2009
12–month Finding on a Petition To Change the Final Listing of the
Distinct Population Segment of the Canada Lynx To Include New
Mexico
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding,
Warranted but Precluded
74 FR 66937-66950
01/05/2010
Listing Foreign Bird Species in Peru & Bolivia as Endangered
Throughout Their Range
Proposed Listing, Endangered
75 FR 605-649
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
54747
TABLE 6. FY2010 COMPLETED LISTING ACTIONS—Continued
Publication Date
Title
Actions
FR Pages
Listing Six Foreign Birds as Endangered Throughout Their Range
Proposed Listing, Endangered
75 FR 286-310
01/05/2010
Withdrawal of Proposed Rule to List Cook’s Petrel
Proposed rule, Withdrawal
75 FR 310-316
01/05/2010
Final Rule to List the Galapagos Petrel & Heinroth’s Shearwater as
Threatened Throughout Their Ranges
Final Listing, Threatened
75 FR 235-250
01/20/2010
Initiation of Status Review for Agave eggersiana & Solanum
conocarpum
Notice of Intent to
Conduct Status Review
75 FR 3190-3191
02/09/2010
12–month Finding on a Petition to List the American Pika as
Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding, Not
Warranted
75 FR 6437-6471
02/25/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition To List the Sonoran Desert
Population of the Bald Eagle as a Threatened or Endangered Distinct Population Segment
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding, Not
Warranted
75 FR 8601-8621
02/25/2010
Withdrawal of Proposed Rule To List the Southwestern Washington/Columbia River Distinct Population Segment of Coastal
Cutthroat Trout (Oncorhynchus clarki clarki) as Threatened
Withdrawal of Proposed Rule to List
75 FR 8621-8644
03/18/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Berry Cave salamander as
Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 13068-13071
03/23/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Southern Hickorynut Mussel (Obovaria jacksoniana) as Endangered or Threatened
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Not
Substantial
75 FR 13717-13720
03/23/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Striped Newt as Threatened
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 13720-13726
03/23/2010
12-Month Findings for Petitions to List the Greater Sage-Grouse
(Centrocercus urophasianus) as Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding,
Warranted but Precluded
75 FR 13910-14014
03/31/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition to List the Tucson Shovel-Nosed
Snake (Chionactis occipitalis klauberi) as Threatened or Endangered with Critical Habitat
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding,
Warranted but Precluded
75 FR 16050-16065
04/05/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition To List Thorne’s Hairstreak Butterfly
as or Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 17062-17070
04/06/2010
12–month Finding on a Petition To List the Mountain Whitefish in
the Big Lost River, Idaho, as Endangered or Threatened
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding, Not
Warranted
75 FR 17352-17363
04/06/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List a Stonefly (Isoperla jewetti) & a
Mayfly (Fallceon eatoni) as Threatened or Endangered with Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Not
Substantial
75 FR 17363-17367
04/07/2010
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
01/05/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition to Reclassify the Delta Smelt From
Threatened to Endangered Throughout Its Range
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding,
Warranted but Precluded
75 FR 17667-17680
04/13/2010
Determination of Endangered Status for 48 Species on Kauai &
Designation of Critical Habitat
Final Listing, Endangered
75 FR 18959-19165
04/15/2010
Initiation of Status Review of the North American Wolverine in the
Contiguous United States
Notice of Initiation of
Status Review
75 FR 19591-19592
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54748
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 6. FY2010 COMPLETED LISTING ACTIONS—Continued
Title
Actions
04/15/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition to List the Wyoming Pocket Gopher
as Endangered or Threatened with Critical Habitat
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding, Not
Warranted
75 FR 19592-19607
04/16/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List a Distinct Population Segment
of the Fisher in Its United States Northern Rocky Mountain
Range as Endangered or Threatened with Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding,
Substantial
75 FR 19925-19935
04/20/2010
Initiation of Status Review for Sacramento splittail (Pogonichthys
macrolepidotus)
Notice of Initiation of
Status Review
75 FR 20547-20548
04/26/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Harlequin Butterfly as Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding,
Substantial
75 FR 21568-21571
04/27/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition to List Susan’s Purse-making
Caddisfly (Ochrotrichia susanae) as Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 12–month
Petition Finding, Not
Warranted
75 FR 22012-22025
04/27/2010
90–day Finding on a Petition to List the Mohave Ground Squirrel
as Endangered with Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 22063-22070
05/04/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List Hermes Copper Butterfly as
Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 23654-23663
6/1/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition To List Castanea pumila var.
ozarkensis
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 30313-30318
6/1/2010
12–month Finding on a Petition to List the White-tailed Prairie Dog
as Endangered or Threatened
Notice of 12–month
petition finding, Not
warranted
75 FR 30338-30363
6/9/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition To List van Rossem’s Gull-billed Tern
as Endangered orThreatened.
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 32728-32734
6/16/2010
90-Day Finding on Five Petitions to List Seven Species of Hawaiian Yellow-faced Bees as Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 34077-34088
6/22/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition to List the Least Chub as Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 12–month
petition finding,
Warranted but precluded
75 FR 35398-35424
6/23/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Honduran Emerald Hummingbird as Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 35746-35751
6/23/2010
Listing Ipomopsis polyantha (Pagosa Skyrocket) as Endangered
Throughout Its Range, and Listing Penstemon debilis (Parachute
Beardtongue) and Phacelia submutica (DeBeque Phacelia) as
Threatened Throughout Their Range
Proposed Listing Endangered Proposed
Listing Threatened
75 FR 35721-35746
6/24/2010
Listing the Flying Earwig Hawaiian Damselfly and Pacific Hawaiian
Damselfly As Endangered Throughout Their Ranges
Final Listing Endangered
75 FR 35990-36012
6/24/2010
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Publication Date
Listing the Cumberland Darter, Rush Darter, Yellowcheek Darter,
Chucky Madtom, and Laurel Dace as Endangered Throughout
Their Ranges
Proposed Listing Endangered
75 FR 36035-36057
6/29/2010
Listing the Mountain Plover as Threatened
Reinstatement of Proposed Listing
Threatened
75 FR 37353-37358
7/20/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List Pinus albicaulis (Whitebark
Pine) as Endangered or Threatened with Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 42033-42040
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
FR Pages
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
54749
TABLE 6. FY2010 COMPLETED LISTING ACTIONS—Continued
Publication Date
Title
Actions
7/20/2010
12-Month Finding on a Petition to List the Amargosa Toad as
Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 12–month
petition finding, Not
warranted
75 FR 42040-42054
7/20/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Giant Palouse Earthworm
(Driloleirus americanus) as Threatened or Endangered
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 42059-42066
7/27/2010
Determination on Listing the Black-Breasted Puffleg as Endangered
Throughout its Range; Final Rule
Final Listing Endangered
75 FR 43844-43853
7/27/2010
Final Rule to List the Medium Tree-Finch (Camarhynchus pauper)
as Endangered Throughout Its Range
Final Listing Endangered
75 FR 43853-43864
8/3/2010
Determination of Threatened Status for Five Penguin Species
Final Listing Threatened
75 FR 45497- 45527
8/4/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition To List the Mexican Gray Wolf as an
Endangered Subspecies With Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 46894- 46898
8/10/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List Arctostaphylos franciscana as
Endangered with Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 48294-48298
8/17/2010
Listing Three Foreign Bird Species from Latin America and the
Caribbean as Endangered Throughout Their Range
Final Listing Endangered
75 FR 50813-50842
8/17/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List Brian Head Mountainsnail as
Endangered or Threatened with Critical Habitat
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Not
substantial
75 FR 50739-50742
8/24/2010
90-Day Finding on a Petition to List the Oklahoma Grass Pink Orchid as Endangered or Threatened
Notice of 90–day Petition Finding, Substantial
75 FR 51969-51974
Our expeditious progress also
includes work on listing actions that we
funded in FY 2010 but have not yet
been completed to date (Table 7). These
actions are listed below. Actions in the
top section of the table are being
conducted under a deadline set by a
court. Actions in the middle section of
the table are being conducted to meet
statutory timelines, that is, timelines
required under the ESA. Actions in the
bottom section of the table are highpriority listing actions. These actions
include work primarily on species with
an LPN of 2, and selection of these
species is partially based on available
staff resources, and when appropriate,
include species with a lower priority if
they overlap geographically or have the
same threats as the species with the
high priority. Including these species
together in the same proposed rule
results in considerable savings in time
and funding, as compared to preparing
separate proposed rules for each of them
in the future.
TABLE 7. ACTIONS FUNDED IN FY 2010 BUT NOT YET COMPLETED
Species
Action
Actions Subject to Court Order/Settlement Agreement
6 Birds from Eurasia
Final listing determination
African penguin
Final listing determination
Flat-tailed horned lizard
Final listing determination
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Mountain
plover4
Final listing determination
6 Birds from Peru
Proposed listing determination
Sacramento splittail
12–month petition finding
Pacific walrus
12–month petition finding
Gunnison sage-grouse
12–month petition finding
Wolverine
12–month petition finding
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
FR Pages
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54750
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 7. ACTIONS FUNDED IN FY 2010 BUT NOT YET COMPLETED—Continued
Species
Action
Arctic grayling
12–month petition finding
Agave eggergsiana
12–month petition finding
Solanum conocarpum
12–month petition finding
Jemez Mountains salamander
12–month petition finding
Sprague’s pipit
12–month petition finding
Desert tortoise – Sonoran population
12–month petition finding
Pygmy rabbit
(rangewide)1
12–month petition finding
Thorne’s Hairstreak butterfly4
12–month petition finding
Hermes copper butterfly4
12–month petition finding
Actions with Statutory Deadlines
Casey’s june beetle
Final listing determination
Georgia pigtoe, interrupted rocksnail, and rough hornsnail
Final listing determination
7 Bird species from Brazil
Final listing determination
Southern rockhopper penguin – Campbell Plateau population
Final listing determination
5 Bird species from Colombia and Ecuador
Final listing determination
Queen Charlotte goshawk
Final listing determination
5
species southeast fish (Cumberland Darter, Rush
Yellowcheek Darter, Chucky Madtom, and Laurel Dace)
Darter,
Final listing determination
Proposed listing determination
CA golden trout
12–month petition finding
Black-footed albatross
12–month petition finding
Mount Charleston blue butterfly
12–month petition finding
Mojave fringe-toed lizard1
12–month petition finding
Kokanee – Lake Sammamish population1
12–month petition finding
Cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl1
12–month petition finding
Northern leopard frog
12–month petition finding
Tehachapi slender salamander
12–month petition finding
Coqui Llanero
12–month petition finding
Dusky tree vole
12–month petition finding
3 MT invertebrates (mist forestfly(Lednia tumana), Oreohelix sp.3,
Oreohelix sp. 31) from 206 species petition
12–month petition finding
5 UT plants (Astragalus hamiltonii, Eriogonum soredium, Lepidium
ostleri, Penstemon flowersii, Trifolium friscanum) from 206 species
petition
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Salmon crested cockatoo
12–month petition finding
2 CO plants (Astragalus microcymbus, Astragalus schmolliae) from
206 species petition
12–month petition finding
5 WY plants (Abronia ammophila, Agrostis rossiae, Astragalus
proimanthus, Boechere (Arabis) pusilla, Penstemon gibbensii) from
206 species petition
12–month petition finding
Leatherside chub (from 206 species petition)
12–month petition finding
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 7. ACTIONS FUNDED IN FY 2010 BUT NOT YET COMPLETED—Continued
Species
Action
Frigid ambersnail (from 206 species petition)
12–month petition finding
Gopher tortoise – eastern population
12–month petition finding
Wrights marsh thistle
12–month petition finding
67 of 475 southwest species
12–month petition finding
Grand Canyon scorpion (from 475 species petition)
12–month petition finding
Anacroneuria wipukupa (a stonefly from 475 species petition)
12–month petition finding
Rattlesnake-master borer moth (from 475 species petition)
12–month petition finding
3 Texas moths (Ursia furtiva, Sphingicampa blanchardi, Agapema
galbina) (from 475 species petition)
12–month petition finding
2 Texas shiners (Cyprinella sp., Cyprinella lepida) (from 475 species
petition)
12–month petition finding
3 South Arizona plants (Erigeron piscaticus, Astragalus hypoxylus,
Amoreuxia gonzalezii) (from 475 species petition)
12–month petition finding
5 Central Texas mussel species (3 from 474 species petition)
12–month petition finding
14 parrots (foreign species)
12–month petition finding
Berry Cave
salamander1
12–month petition finding
12–month petition finding
Fisher – Northern Rocky Mountain Range1
12–month petition finding
Mohave Ground Squirrel1
12–month petition finding
Puerto Rico Harlequin Butterfly
12–month petition finding
Western gull-billed tern
12–month petition finding
Ozark chinquapin (Castanea pumila var. ozarkensis)
12–month petition finding
HI yellow-faced bees
12–month petition finding
Giant Palouse earthworm
12–month petition finding
Whitebark pine
12–month petition finding
OK grass pink (Calopogon oklahomensis)1
12–month petition finding
Southeastern pop snowy plover & wintering pop. of piping plover1
90–day petition finding
Eagle Lake trout1
90–day petition finding
Smooth-billed ani1
90–day petition finding
Bay Springs salamander1
90–day petition finding
32 species of snails and slugs1
90–day petition finding
42 snail species (Nevada & Utah)
90–day petition finding
Red knot roselaari subspecies
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Striped Newt1
90–day petition finding
Peary caribou
90–day petition finding
Plains bison
90–day petition finding
Spring Mountains checkerspot butterfly
90–day petition finding
Spring pygmy sunfish
90–day petition finding
Bay skipper
90–day petition finding
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
54751
54752
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 7. ACTIONS FUNDED IN FY 2010 BUT NOT YET COMPLETED—Continued
Species
Action
Unsilvered fritillary
90–day petition finding
Texas kangaroo rat
90–day petition finding
Spot-tailed earless lizard
90–day petition finding
Eastern small-footed bat
90–day petition finding
Northern long-eared bat
90–day petition finding
Prairie chub
90–day petition finding
10 species of Great Basin butterfly
90–day petition finding
6 sand dune (scarab) beetles
90–day petition finding
Golden-winged warbler
90–day petition finding
Sand-verbena moth
90–day petition finding
404 Southeast species
90–day petition finding
High Priority Listing Actions3
19 Oahu candidate species3 (16 plants, 3 damselflies) (15 with LPN =
2, 3 with LPN = 3, 1 with LPN =9)
Proposed listing
19 Maui-Nui candidate species3 (16 plants, 3 tree snails) (14 with
LPN = 2, 2 with LPN = 3, 3 with LPN = 8)
Proposed listing
Dune sagebrush lizard (formerly Sand dune lizard)3 (LPN = 2)
Proposed listing
springsnails3
2 Arizona
trivialis (LPN = 2))
(Pyrgulopsis bernadina (LPN = 2), Pyrgulopsis
New Mexico springsnail3 (Pyrgulopsis chupaderae (LPN = 2)
2
mussels3
Proposed listing
Proposed listing
(rayed bean (LPN = 2), snuffbox No LPN)
Proposed listing
2 mussels3 (sheepnose (LPN = 2), spectaclecase (LPN = 4),)
Proposed listing
Ozark hellbender2 (LPN = 3)
Proposed listing
Altamaha
spinymussel3
(LPN = 2)
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 = 5), and tapered pigtoe (LPN = 11))
Proposed listing
1
Funds for listing actions for these species were provided in previous FYs.
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 Although funds for these high-priority listing actions were provided in FY 2008 or 2009, due to the complexity of these actions and competing
priorities, these actions are still being developed.
4Partially funded with FY 2010 funds; also will be funded with FY 2011 funds.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
2
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
processes or achieve economies of scale,
such as by batching related actions
together. Given our limited budget for
implementing section 4 of the ESA,
these actions described above
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
collectively constitute expeditious
progress.
The upper Missouri River DPS of
Arctic grayling 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.
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
We intend that any proposed listing
action for the upper Missouri River DPS
of Arctic grayling 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.
References Cited
A complete list of references cited is
available on the Internet at https://
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
www.regulations.gov and upon request
from the Montana Field Office (see
ADDRESSES section).
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Authors
The primary authors of this notice are
the staff members of the Montana Field
Office.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:32 Sep 07, 2010
Jkt 220001
Authority
The authority for this action is section
4 of the Endangered Species Act of
1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.).
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
54753
Dated: August 30, 2010
Daniel M. Ashe,
Acting Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–22038 Filed 9–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–S
E:\FR\FM\08SEP2.SGM
08SEP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 173 (Wednesday, September 8, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 54708-54753]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-22038]
[[Page 54707]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part II
Department of the Interior
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Fish and Wildlife Service
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
50 CFR Part 17
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revised 12-Month Finding
to List the Upper Missouri River Distinct Population Segment of Arctic
Grayling as Endangered or Threatened; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 8, 2010 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 54708]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R6-ES-2009-0065]
[MO 92210-0-0008-B2]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revised 12-Month
Finding to List the Upper Missouri River Distinct Population Segment of
Arctic Grayling as Endangered or Threatened
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of revised 12-month finding.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service/USFWS),
announce a revised 12-month finding on a petition to list the upper
Missouri River Distinct Population Segment (Missouri River DPS) of
Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) as endangered or threatened under
the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended. After review of all
available scientific and commercial information, we find that listing
the upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic grayling as endangered or
threatened is warranted. However, listing the upper Missouri River DPS
of Arctic grayling is currently precluded by higher priority actions to
amend the Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Upon
publication of this 12-month finding, we will add the upper Missouri
River DPS of Arctic grayling to our candidate species list. We will
develop a proposed rule to list this DPS as our priorities allow. We
will make any determination on critical habitat during development of
the proposed listing rule. In the interim, we will address the status
of this DPS through our annual Candidate Notice of Review (CNOR).
DATES: The finding announced in this document was made on September 8,
2010.
ADDRESSES: This finding is available on the Internet at https://www.regulations.gov at Docket Number FWS-R6-ES-2009-0065. Supporting
documentation we used in preparing this finding is available for public
inspection, by appointment, during normal business hours at the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Montana Field Office, 585 Shepard Way,
Helena, MT 59601. Please submit any new information, materials,
comments, or questions concerning this finding to the above street
address (Attention: Arctic grayling).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark Wilson, Field Supervisor, Montana
Field Office (see ADDRESSES); by telephone at 406-449-5225; or by
facsimile at 406-449-5339. Persons who use a telecommunications device
for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Information Relay Service
(FIRS) at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (ESA) (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), requires that, for any petition
containing substantial scientific or commercial information indicating
that listing the species may be warranted, we make a finding within 12
months of the date of receipt of the petition. In this finding, we
determine that the petitioned action is: (a) Not warranted, (b)
warranted, or (c) warranted, but immediate proposal of a regulation
implementing the petitioned action is precluded by other pending
proposals to determine whether species are endangered or threatened,
and expeditious progress is being made to add or remove qualified
species from the Federal Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants. Section 4(b)(3)(C) of the ESA requires that we treat a
petition for which the requested action is found to be warranted but
precluded as though resubmitted on the date of such finding, that is,
requiring a subsequent finding to be made within 12 months. We must
publish these 12-month findings in the Federal Register.
Previous Federal Actions
We have published a number of documents on Arctic grayling and have
been involved in litigation over previous findings. We describe our
actions relevant to this notice below.
We initiated a status review for the Montana Arctic grayling
(Thymallus arcticus montanus) in a Federal Register notice on December
30, 1982 (47 FR 58454). In that notice, we designated the purported
subspecies, Montana Arctic grayling, as a Category 2 species. At that
time, we designated a species as Category 2 if a listing as endangered
or threatened was possibly appropriate, but we did not have sufficient
data to support a proposed rule to list the species.
On October 9, 1991, the Biodiversity Legal Foundation and George
Wuerthner petitioned us to list the fluvial (riverine populations) of
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River basin as an endangered
species throughout its historical range in the coterminous United
States. We published a notice of a 90-day finding in the January 19,
1993, Federal Register (58 FR 4975), concluding the petitioners
presented substantial information indicating that listing the fluvial
Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri River in Montana and northwestern
Wyoming may be warranted. This finding noted that taxonomic recognition
of the Montana Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus montanus) as a
subspecies (previously designated as a category 2 species) was not
widely accepted, and that the scientific community generally considered
this population a geographically isolated member of the wider species
(T. arcticus).
On July 25, 1994, we published a notice of a 12-month finding in
the Federal Register (59 FR 37738), concluding that listing the DPS of
fluvial Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River was warranted but
precluded by other higher priority listing actions. This DPS
determination predated our DPS policy (61 FR 4722, February 7, 1996),
so the entity did not undergo a DPS analysis as described in the
policy. The 1994 finding placed fluvial Arctic grayling of the upper
Missouri River on the candidate list and assigned it a listing priority
of 9. On May 4, 2004, we elevated the listing priority number of the
fluvial Arctic grayling to 3 (69 FR 24881).
On May 31, 2003, the Center for Biological Diversity and Western
Watersheds Project (Plaintiffs) filed a complaint in U.S. District
Court in Washington, D.C., challenging our ``warranted but precluded''
determination for Montana fluvial Arctic grayling. On July 22, 2004,
the Plaintiffs amended their complaint to challenge our failure to
emergency list this population. We settled with the Plaintiffs in
August 2005, and we agreed to submit a final determination on whether
this population warranted listing as endangered or threatened to the
Federal Register on or before April 16, 2007.
On April 24, 2007, we published a revised 12-month finding on the
petition to list the upper Missouri River DPS of fluvial Arctic
grayling (72 FR 20305) (``2007 finding''). In this finding, we
determined that fluvial Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri River did
not constitute a species, subspecies, or DPS under the ESA. Therefore,
we found that the upper Missouri River population of fluvial Arctic
grayling was not a listable entity under the ESA, and as a result,
listing was not warranted. With that notice, we withdrew the fluvial
Arctic grayling from the candidate list.
[[Page 54709]]
On November 15, 2007, the Center for Biological Diversity,
Federation of Fly Fishers, Western Watersheds Project, George
Wuerthner, and Pat Munday filed a complaint (CV-07-152, in the District
Court of Montana) to challenge our 2007 finding. We settled this
litigation on October 5, 2009. In the stipulated settlement, we agreed
to: (a) Publish, on or before December 31, 2009, a notice in the
Federal Register soliciting information on the status of the upper
Missouri River Arctic grayling; and (b) submit, on or before August 30,
2010, a new 12-month finding for the upper Missouri River Arctic
grayling to the Federal Register.
On October 28, 2009, we published a notice of intent to conduct a
status review of Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) in the upper
Missouri River system (74 FR 55524). To ensure the status review was
based on the best available scientific and commercial data, we
requested information on the taxonomy, biology, ecology, genetics, and
population status of the Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri River
system; information relevant to consideration of the potential DPS
status of Arctic grayling of the upper Missouri River system; threats
to the species; and conservation actions being implemented to reduce
those threats in the upper Missouri River system. The notice further
specified that the status review may consider various DPS designations
that include different life histories of Arctic grayling in the upper
Missouri River system. Specifically, we may consider DPS configurations
that include: Fluvial, adfluvial (lake populations), or all life
histories of Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River system.
This notice constitutes the revised 12-month finding (``2010
finding'') on whether to list the upper Missouri River DPS of Arctic
grayling (Thymallus arcticus) as endangered or threatened.
Taxonomy and Species Description
The Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) belongs to the family
Salmonidae (salmon, trout, charr, whitefishes), subfamily Thymallinae
(graylings), and it is represented by a single genus, Thymallus. Scott
and Crossman (1998, p. 301) recognize four species within the genus: T.
articus (Arctic grayling), T. thymallus (European grayling), T.
brevirostris (Mongolian grayling), and T. nigrescens (Lake Kosgol,
Mongolia). Recent research focusing on Eurasian Thymallus (Koskinen et
al. 2002, entire; Froufe et al. 2003, entire; Froufe et al. 2005,
entire; Weiss et al. 2006, entire) indicates that the systematic
diversity of the genus is greater than previously thought, or at least
needs better description (Knizhin et al. 2008, pp. 725-726, 729;
Knizhin and Weiss 2009, pp. 1, 7-8; Weiss et al. 2007, p. 384).
Arctic grayling have elongate, laterally compressed, trout-like
bodies with deeply forked tails, and adults typically average 300-380
millimeters (mm) (12-15 inches (in.)) in length. Coloration can be
striking, and varies from silvery or iridescent blue and lavender, to
dark blue (Behnke 2002, pp. 327-328). The sides are marked with a
varying number of V-shaped or diamond-shaped spots (Scott and Crossman
1998, p. 301). During the spawning period, the colors darken and the
males become more brilliantly colored than the females. A prominent
morphological feature of Arctic grayling is the sail-like dorsal fin,
which is large and vividly colored with rows of orange to bright green
spots, and often has an orange border (Behnke 2002, pp. 327-328).
Distribution
Arctic grayling are native to Arctic Ocean drainages of Alaska and
northwestern Canada, as far east as Hudson's Bay, and westward across
northern Eurasia to the Ural Mountains (Scott and Crossman 1998, pp.
301-302; Froufe et al. 2005, pp. 106-107; Weiss et al. 2006, pp. 511-
512; see Figure 1 below). In North America, they are native to northern
Pacific Ocean drainages as far south as the Stikine River in British
Columbia (Nelson and Paetz 1991, pp. 253-256; Behnke 2002, pp. 327-
331).
BILLING CODE 4310-55-S
[[Page 54710]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP08SE10.000
FIGURE 1. Approximate world-wide distribution of Arctic grayling
(Thymallus arcticus) at the end of the most recent glacial cycle. The
Missouri River distribution is based on Kaya (1992, pp. 47-51). The
distribution of the extinct Michigan population is based on Vincent
(1962, p. 12) and the University of Michigan (2010). The North American
distribution in Canada and Alaska is based on Behnke (2002, p. 330) and
Scott and Crossman (1998, pp. 301-302). The Eurasian distribution is
based on Knizhin (2009, p. 32) and Knizhin (2010, pers. comm.).
Arctic grayling remains widely distributed across its native range,
but within North America, the species has experienced range decline or
contraction at the southern limits of its distribution. In British
Columbia, Canada, populations in the Williston River watershed are
designated as a provincial ``red list'' species, meaning the population
is a candidate for further evaluation to determine if it should be
granted endangered (facing imminent extirpation or extinction) or
threatened status (likely to become endangered) (British Columbia
Conservation Data Centre 2010). In Alberta, Canada, Arctic grayling are
native to the Athabasca, Peace, and Hay River drainages. In Alberta,
the species has undergone a range contraction of about 40 percent, and
half of the province's subpopulations have declined in abundance by
more than 90 percent (Alberta Sustainable Resource Development (ASRD)
2005, p. iv).
Distribution in the Conterminous United States
Two disjunct groups of Arctic grayling were native to the
conterminous United States: One in the upper Missouri River basin in
Montana and Wyoming (extant in Montana, see Figure 2), and another in
Michigan that was extirpated in the late 1930s (Hubbs and Lagler 1949,
p. 44). Michigan grayling formerly occurred in the Otter River of the
Lake Superior drainage in northern Michigan and in streams of the lower
peninsula of Michigan in both the Lake Michigan and Lake Huron
drainages including the Au Sable, Cheboygan, Jordan, Pigeon, and Rifle
Rivers (Vincent 1962, p. 12).
Introduced Lake Dwelling Arctic Grayling in the Upper Missouri
River
[[Page 54711]]
System and western U.S. populations of Arctic grayling have been
established in lakes outside their native range in Arizona, Colorado,
Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming (Vincent
1962, p. 15; Montana Fisheries Information System (MFISH) 2009;
NatureServe 2010). Stocking of hatchery grayling in Montana has been
particularly extensive, and there are thought to be up to 78 introduced
lacustrine (lake-dwelling) populations resulting from these
introductions (see Table 1 below). Over three-quarters of these
introductions (79.5 percent) were established outside the native
geographic range of upper Missouri River grayling, while only 16 (20.5
percent) were established within the watershed boundary of the upper
Missouri River system.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP08SE10.001
BILLING CODE 4310-55-C
[[Page 54712]]
FIGURE 2. Historical (dark grey lines) and current distribution
(stars and circled portion of Big Hole River) of native Arctic grayling
in the upper Missouri River basin. White bars denote mainstem river
dams that are total barriers to upstream passage by fish.
TABLE 1. Introduced Lake-dwelling Populations of Arctic Grayling in
Montana. The primary data source for these designations is MFISH (2009).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Introduced
River Basin (Exotic) Populations\a\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outside Native Geographic Range In Montana
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Columbia River 23
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Middle Missouri River 2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Saskatchewan River 1
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yellowstone River 36\b\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Within Watershed Boundary Of Native Geographic Range In Montana
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Upper Missouri River 16
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Exotic Populations 78
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\List of populations does not include lake populations derived from
attempts to re-establish fluvial populations in Montana, native
adfluvial populations, or genetic reserves of Big Hole River grayling.
\b\Many of these populations may not reproduce naturally and are only
sustained through repeated stocking (Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks
2009, entire).
For the purposes of this finding, we are analyzing a petitioned
entity that includes, at its maximum extent, populations of Arctic
grayling considered native to the upper Missouri River. Introduced
populations present in Montana (e.g., Table 1) or elsewhere are not
considered as part of the listable entity because we do not consider
them to be native populations. Neither the Act nor our implementing
regulations expressly address whether introduced populations should be
considered part of an entity being evaluated for listing, and no
Service policy addresses the issue. Consequently, in our evaluation of
whether or not to include introduced populations in the potential
listable entity we considered the following: (1) Our interpretation of
the intent of the Act with respect to the disposition of native
populations, (2) a policy used by the National Marine Fishery Service
(NMFS) to evaluate whether hatchery-origin populations warrant
inclusion in the listable entity, and (3) a set of guidelines from
another organization (International Union for Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources (IUCN)) with specific criteria for evaluating the
conservation contribution of introduced populations.
Intent of the Endangered Species Act
The primary purpose of the Act is to provide a means whereby the
ecosystems upon which endangered species and threatened species depend
may be conserved. The Service has interpreted the Act to provide a
statutory directive to conserve species in their native ecosystems (49
FR 33890, August 27, 1984) and to conserve genetic resources and
biodiversity over a representative portion of a taxon's historical
occurrence (61 FR 4723, February 7, 1996). This priority on natural
populations is evident in the Service's DPS policy within the third
significance criteria. In that, a discrete population segment may be
significant if it represents the only surviving natural occurrence of
the taxon that may be more abundant elsewhere as an introduced
population outside of its historical range.
National Marine Fishery Service Hatchery Policy
In 2005, the NMFS published a final policy on the consideration of
hatchery-origin fish in Endangered Species Act listing determinations
for Pacific salmon and steelhead (anadromous Oncorhynchus spp.) (NMFS
2005, entire). A central tenet of this policy is the primacy of the
conservation of naturally spawning salmon populations and the
ecosystems on which they depend, consistent with the intent of the Act
(NMFS 2005, pp. 37211, 37214). The policy recognizes that properly
managed hatchery programs may provide some conservation benefit to the
evolutionary significant unit (ESU, which is analogous to a DPS but
applied to Pacific salmon) (NMFS 2005, p. 37211), and that hatchery
stocks that contribute to survival and recovery of an ESU are
considered during a listing decision (NMFS 2005, p. 37209). The policy
states that since hatchery stocks are established and maintained with
the intent of furthering the viability of wild populations in the ESU,
that those hatchery populations have an explicit conservation value.
Genetic divergence is the preferred metric to determine if hatchery
fish should be included in the ESU, but NMFS recognizes that these data
may be lacking in most cases (NMFS 2005, p. 37209). Thus, proxies for
genetic divergence can be used, such as the length of time a stock has
been isolated from its source population, the degree to which natural
broodstock has been regularly incorporated into the hatchery
population, the history of non-ESU fish or eggs in the hatchery
population, and the attention given to genetic considerations in
selecting and mating broodstocks (NMFS 2005, p. 37209).
The NMFS policy applies to artificially propagated (hatchery)
populations. In this finding, however, the Service is deciding whether
self-sustaining populations introduced outside its natural range should
be included in the listable entity. Thus, the NMFS policy is not
directly applicable. Nonetheless, if the NFMS policy's criteria are
applied to the introduced lake-dwelling populations of Arctic grayling
in Montana and elsewhere, these populations do not appear to warrant
inclusion in the entity being evaluated for listing. First, there does
not appear to be any formally recognized conservation value for the
[[Page 54713]]
introduced populations of Arctic grayling, and they are not being used
in restoration programs. Recent genetic analysis indicates that many of
the introduced Arctic grayling populations in Montana are derived, in
part, from stocks in the Red Rock Lakes system (Peterson and Ardren
2009, p. 1767). Nonetheless, there have been concerns that introduced,
lake-dwelling populations could pose genetic risks to the native
fluvial population (Arctic Grayling Workgroup (AGW) 1995, p. 15), and
in practice, these introduced populations have not been used for any
conservation purpose. In fact, efforts are currently underway to
establish a genetically pure brood reserve population of Red Rock Lakes
grayling to be used for conservation purposes (Jordan 2010, pers.
comm.), analogous to the brood reserves maintained for Arctic grayling
from the Big Hole River (Rens and Magee 2007, pp. 22-24).
Second, introduced populations in lakes have apparently been
isolated from their original source stock for decades without any
supplementation from the wild. These populations were apparently
established without any formal genetic consideration to selecting and
mating broodstock, the source populations were not well documented
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1767), and the primary intent of
culturing and introducing these grayling appears to have been to
provide recreational fishing opportunities in high mountain lakes.
Guidelines Used in Other Evaluation Systems
The IUCN uses its Red List system to evaluate the conservation
status and relative risk of extinction for species, and to catalogue
and highlight plant and animal species that are facing a higher risk of
global extinction (https://www.iucnredlist.org). IUCN does not use the
term ``listable entity'' as the Service does; however, IUCN does
clarify that their conservation ranking criteria apply to any taxonomic
group at the species level or below (IUCN 2001, p.4). Further, the IUCN
guidelines for species status and scope of the categorization process
focus on wild populations inside their natural range (IUCN 2001, p. 4;
2003, p. 10) or so-called ``benign'' or ``conservation introductions,''
which are defined as attempts to establish a species, for the purpose
of conservation, outside its recorded distribution, when suitable
habitat is lacking within the historical range (IUCN 1998, p. 6; 2003,
pp. 6, 10). Guidelines for evaluating conservation status under the
IUCN exclude introduced populations located outside the recorded
distribution of the species if such populations were established for
commercial or sporting purposes (IUCN 1998, p. 5; 2003, p. 24). In
effect, the IUCN delineates between introduced and native populations
in that non-benign introductions do not qualify for evaluation under
the IUCN Red List system. Naturalized populations of Arctic grayling in
lakes thus do not meet the IUCN criterion for a wild population that
should be considered when evaluating the species status for two
reasons. First, there remains `suitable habitat' for Arctic grayling in
its native range, as evidenced by extant native populations in the Big
Hole River, Madison River, Miner Lake, Mussigbrod Lake, and Red Rock
Lakes. Second, the naturalized populations derived from widespread
stocking were apparently aimed at establishing recreational fisheries.
Our interpretation is that the ESA is intended to preserve native
populations in their ecosystems. While hatchery or introduced
populations of fishes may have some conservation value, this does not
appear to be the case with introduced populations of Arctic grayling in
the conterminous United States. These populations were apparently
established to support recreational fisheries, and without any formal
genetic consideration to selecting and mating broodstock, and are not
part of any conservation program to benefit the native populations.
Consequently, we do not consider the introduced populations of Arctic
grayling in Montana and elsewhere in the conterminous United States,
including those in lakes and in an irrigation canal (Sun River Slope
Canal), to be part of the listable entity.
Native Distribution in the Upper Missouri River System
The first Euro-American ``discovery'' of Arctic grayling in North
America is attributed to members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, who
encountered the species in the Beaverhead River in August 1805 (Nell
and Taylor 1996, p. 133). Vincent (1962, p. 11) and Kaya (1992, pp. 47-
51) synthesized accounts of Arctic grayling occurrence and abundance
from historical surveys and contemporary monitoring to determine the
historical distribution of the species in the upper Missouri River
system (Figure 2). We base our conclusions on the historical
distribution of Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River basin on
these two reviews. Arctic grayling were widely but irregularly
distributed in the upper Missouri River system above the Great Falls in
Montana and in northwest Wyoming within the present-day location of
Yellowstone National Park (Vincent 1962, p. 11). They were estimated to
inhabit up to 2,000 kilometers (km) (1,250 miles (mi)) of stream
habitat until the early 20th century (Kaya 1992, pp. 47-51). Arctic
grayling were reported in the mainstem Missouri River, as well as in
the Smith, Sun, Jefferson, Madison, Gallatin, Big Hole, Beaverhead, and
Red Rock Rivers (Vincent 1962, p. 11; Kaya 1992, pp. 47-51; USFWS 2007;
72 FR 20307, April 24, 2007). ``Old-timer'' accounts report that the
species may have been present in the Ruby River, at least seasonally
(Magee 2005, pers. comm.), and were observed as recently as the early
1970s (Holton, undated).
Fluvial Arctic grayling were historically widely distributed in the
upper Missouri River basin, but a few adfluvial populations also were
native to the basin. For example, Arctic grayling are native to Red
Rock Lakes, in the headwaters of the Beaverhead River (Vincent 1962,
pp. 112-121; Kaya 1992, p. 47). Vincent (1962, p. 120) stated that Red
Rock Lakes were the only natural lakes in the upper Missouri River
basin accessible to colonization by Arctic grayling, and concluded that
grayling there were the only native adfluvial population in the basin.
However, it appears that Arctic grayling also were native to Elk Lake
(in the Red Rocks drainage; Kaya 1990, p. 44) and a few small lakes in
the upper Big Hole River drainage (Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1768).
The distribution of native Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri
River went through a dramatic reduction in the first 50 years of the
20th century, especially in riverine habitats (Vincent 1962, pp. 86-90,
97-122, 127-129; Kaya 1992, pp. 47-53). The native populations that
formerly resided in the Smith, Sun, Jefferson, Beaverhead, Gallatin,
and mainstem Missouri Rivers are considered extirpated, and the only
remaining indigenous fluvial population is found in the Big Hole River
and some if its tributaries (Kaya 1992, pp. 51-53). The fluvial form
currently occupies only 4 to 5 percent of its historic range in the
Missouri River system (Kaya 1992, p. 51). Other remaining native
populations in the upper Missouri River occur in two small, headwater
lakes in the upper Big Hole River system (Miner and Mussigbrod Lakes);
the Madison River upstream from Ennis Reservoir; and the Red Rock Lakes
in the headwaters of the Beaverhead River system (Everett 1986, p. 7;
Kaya 1992, p. 53; Peterson and Ardren 2009, pp. 1762, 1768; Figure 1
above, and Table 2 below).
[[Page 54714]]
TABLE 2. Extant Native Arctic Grayling Populations in the Upper Missouri
River Basin.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Big Hole River Drainage\a\
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Big Hole River
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Miner Lake
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Mussigbrod Lake
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Madison River Drainage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Madison River-Ennis Reservoir
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaverhead River Drainage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Red Rock Lakes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\Arctic grayling also occur in Pintler Lake in the Big Hole River
drainage, but this population has not been evaluated with genetic
markers to determine whether it constitutes a native remnant
population.
Origins, Biogeography, and Genetics of Arctic Grayling in North America
North American Arctic grayling are most likely descended from
Eurasian Thymallus that crossed the Bering land bridge during or before
the Pleistocene glacial period (Stamford and Taylor 2004, pp. 1533,
1546). A Eurasian origin is suggested by the substantial taxonomic
diversity found in the genus in that region. There were multiple
opportunities for freshwater faunal exchange between North America and
Asia during the Pleistocene, but genetic divergence between North
American and Eurasian Arctic grayling suggests that the species could
have colonized North America as early as the mid-late Pliocene (more
than 3 million years ago) (Stamford and Taylor 2004, p. 1546).
The North American distribution of Arctic grayling was strongly
influenced by patterns of glaciation. Genetic studies of grayling using
mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA, maternally-inherited DNA located in cellular
organelles called mitochondria) and microsatellite DNA (repeating
sequences of nuclear DNA) have shown that North American Arctic
grayling consist of at least three major lineages that originated in
distinct Pleistocene glacial refugia (Stamford and Taylor 2004, p.
1533). These three groups include a South Beringia lineage found in
western Alaska to northern British Columbia, Canada; a North Beringia
lineage found on the North Slope of Alaska, the lower Mackenzie River,
and to eastern Saskatchewan; and a Nahanni lineage found in the lower
Liard River and the upper Mackenzie River drainage (Stamford and Taylor
2004, pp. 1533, 1540). The Nahanni lineage is the most genetically
distinct group (Stamford and Taylor 2004, pp. 1541-1543). Arctic
grayling from the upper Missouri River basin were tentatively placed in
the North Beringia lineage because a small sample (three individuals)
of Montana grayling shared a mtDNA haplotype (form of the mtDNA) with
populations in Saskatchewan and the lower Peace River, British Columbia
(Stamford and Taylor 2004, p. 1538).
The existing mtDNA data suggest that Missouri River Arctic grayling
share a common ancestry with the North Beringia lineage, but other
genetic markers and biogeographic history indicate that Missouri River
grayling have been physically and reproductively isolated from northern
populations for millennia. The most recent ancestors of Missouri River
Arctic grayling likely spent the last glacial cycle in an ice-free
refuge south of the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets. Pre-glacial
colonization of the Missouri River basin by Arctic grayling was
possible because the river flowed to the north and drained into the
Arctic-Hudson Bay prior to the last glacial cycle (Cross et al. 1986,
pp. 374-375; Pielou 1991, pp. 194-195). Low mtDNA diversity observed in
a small number of Montana grayling samples and a shared ancestry with
Arctic grayling from the north Beringia lineage suggest a more recent,
post-glacial colonization of the upper Missouri River basin. In
contrast, microsatellite DNA show substantial divergence between
Montana and Saskatchewan (i.e., same putative mtDNA lineage) (Peterson
and Ardren 2009, entire). Differences in the frequency and size
distribution of microsatellite alleles between Montana populations and
two Saskatchewan populations indicate that Montana grayling have been
isolated long enough for mutations (i.e., evolution) to be responsible
for the observed genetic differences.
Additional comparison of 21 Arctic grayling populations from
Alaska, Canada, and the Missouri River basin using 9 of the same
microsatellite loci as Peterson and Ardren (2009, entire) further
supports the distinction of Missouri River Arctic grayling relative to
populations elsewhere in North America (USFWS, unpublished data).
Analyses of these data using two different methods clearly separates
sample fish from 21 populations into two clusters: one cluster
representing populations from the upper Missouri River basin, and
another cluster representing populations from Canada and Alaska (USFWS,
unpublished data). These new data, although not yet peer reviewed,
support the interpretation that the previous analyses of Stamford and
Taylor (2004, entire) underestimated the distinctiveness of Missouri
River Arctic grayling relative to other sample populations, likely
because of the combined effect of small sample sizes and the lack of
variation observed in the Missouri River for the markers used in that
study (Stamford and Taylor 2004, pp. 1537-1538). Thus, these recent
microsatellite DNA data suggest that Arctic grayling may have colonized
the Missouri River before the onset of Wisconsin glaciation (more than
80,000 years ago).
Genetic relationships among native and introduced populations of
Arctic grayling in Montana have recently been investigated (Peterson
and Ardren 2009, entire). Introduced, lake-dwelling populations of
Arctic grayling trace much of their original ancestry to Red Rock Lakes
(Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1767), and stocking of hatchery grayling
did not appear to have a large effect on the genetic composition of the
extant native populations (Peterson and Ardren 2009, p. 1768).
Differences between native populations of the two grayling ecotypes
(adfluvial, fluvial) do not appear to be as large as differences
resulting from geography (i.e., drainage of origin).
[[Page 54715]]
Habitat
Arctic grayling generally require clear, cold water. Selong et al.
(2001, p. 1032) characterized Arctic grayling as belonging to a
``coldwater'' group of salmonids, which also includes bull trout
(Salvelinus confluentus) and Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus). Hubert
et al. (1985, p. 24) developed a habitat suitability index study for
Arctic grayling and concluded that thermal habitat was optimal between
7 to 17 [deg]C (45 to 63 [deg]F), but became unsuitable above 20[deg]C
(68[deg]F). Arctic grayling fry may be more tolerant of high water
temperature than adults (LaPerriere and Carlson 1973, p. 30; Feldmeth
and Eriksen 1978, p. 2041).
Having a broad, nearly-circumpolar distribution, Arctic grayling
occupy a variety of habitats including small streams, large rivers,
lakes, and even bogs (Northcote 1995, pp. 152-153; Scott and Crossman
1998, p. 303). They may even enter brackish water (less than or equal
to 4 parts per thousand) when migrating between adjacent river systems
(West et al. 1992, pp. 713-714). Native populations are found at
elevations ranging from near sea level, such as in Bristol Bay, Alaska,
to high-elevation montane valleys (more than 1,830 meters (m) or 6,000
feet (ft)), such as the Big Hole River and Centennial Valley in
southwestern Montana. Despite this broad distribution, Arctic grayling
have specific habitat requirements that can constrain their local
distributions, especially water temperature and channel gradient. At
the local scale, Arctic grayling prefer cold water and are often
associated with spring-fed habitats in regions with warmer climates
(Vincent 1962, p. 33). Arctic grayling are generally not found in
swift, high-gradient streams, and Vincent (1962, p. 36-37, 41-43)
characterized typical Arctic grayling habitat in Montana (and Michigan)
as low-to-moderate gradient (less than 4 percent) streams and rivers
with low-to-moderate water velocities (less than 60 centimeters/sec).
Juvenile and adult Arctic grayling in streams and rivers spend much of
their time in pool habitat (Kaya 1990 and references therein, p. 20;
Lamothe and Magee 2003, pp. 13-14).
Breeding
Arctic grayling typically spawn in the spring or early summer,
depending on latitude and elevation (Northcote 1995, p. 149). In
Montana, Arctic grayling generally spawn from late April to mid-May by
depositing adhesive eggs over gravel substrate without excavating a
nest (Kaya 1990, p. 13; Northcote 1995, p. 151). In general, the
reproductive ecology of Arctic grayling differs from other salmonid
species (trout and salmon) in that Arctic grayling eggs tend to be
comparatively small; thus, they have higher relative fecundity (females
have more eggs per unit body size). Males establish and defend spawning
territories rather than defending access to females (Northcote 1995,
pp. 146, 150-151). The time required for development of eggs from
embryo until they emerge from stream gravel and become swim-up fry
depends on water temperature (Northcote 1995, p. 151). In the upper
Missouri River basin, development from embryo to fry averages about 3
weeks (Kaya 1990, pp. 16-17). Small, weakly swimming fry (typically 1-
1.5 centimeters (cm) (0.4-0.6 in.) at emergence) prefer low-velocity
stream habitats (Armstrong 1986, p. 6; Kaya 1990, pp. 23-24; Northcote
1995, p. 151).
Arctic grayling of all ages feed primarily on aquatic and
terrestrial invertebrates captured on or near the water surface, but
also will feed opportunistically on fish and fish eggs (Northcote 1995,
pp. 153-154; Behnke 2002, p. 328). Feeding locations for individual
fish are typically established and maintained through size-mediated
dominance hierarchies where larger individuals defend favorable feeding
positions (Hughes 1992, p. 1996).
Life History Diversity
Migratory behavior is a common life-history trait in salmonid
fishes such as Arctic grayling (Armstrong 1986, pp. 7-8; Northcote
1995, pp. 156-158; 1997, pp. 1029, 1031-1032, 1034). In general,
migratory behavior in Arctic grayling and other salmonids results in
cyclic patterns of movement between refuge, rearing-feeding, and
spawning habitats (Northcote 1997, p. 1029).
Arctic grayling may move to refuge habitat as part of a regular
seasonal migration (e.g., in winter), or in response to episodic
environmental stressors (e.g., high summer water temperatures). In
Alaska, Arctic grayling in rivers typically migrate downstream in the
fall, moving into larger streams or mainstem rivers that do not
completely freeze (Armstrong 1986, p. 7). In Arctic rivers, fish often
seek overwintering habitat influenced by groundwater (Armstrong 1986,
p. 7). In some drainages, individual fish may migrate considerable
distances (greater than 150 km or 90 mi) to overwintering habitats
(Armstrong 1986, p. 7). In the Big Hole River, Montana, similar
downstream and long-distance movement to overwintering habitat has been
observed in Arctic grayling (Shepard and Oswald 1989, pp. 18-21, 27).
In addition, Arctic grayling in the Big Hole River may move downstream
in proximity to colder tributary streams in summer when thermal
conditions in the mainstem river become stressful (Lamothe and Magee
2003, p. 17).
In spring, mature Arctic grayling leave overwintering areas and
migrate to suitable spawning sites. In river systems, this typically
involves an upstream migration to tributary streams or shallow riffles
within the mainstem (Armstrong 1986, p. 8). Arctic grayling in lakes
typically migrate to either the inlet or outlet to spawn (Armstrong
1986, p. 8; Northcote 1997, p. 148). In either situation, Arctic
grayling typically exhibit natal homing, whereby individuals spawn in
or near the location where they were born (Northcote 1997, pp. 157-
160).
Fry from river populations typically seek feeding and rearing
habitats in the vicinity where they were spawned (Armstrong 1986, pp.
6-7; Northcote 1995, p. 156), while those from lake populations migrate
downstream (inlet spawners) or upstream (outlet spawners) to the
adjacent lake. Following spawning, adults move to appropriate feeding
areas if they are not adjacent to spawning habitat (Armstrong 1986, pp.
7-8). Juvenile Arctic grayling may undertake seasonal migrations
between feeding and overwintering habitats until they reach maturity
and add the spawning migration to this cycle (Northcote 1995, pp. 156-
157).
Life History Diversity in Arctic Grayling in the Upper Missouri River
Two general life-history forms or ecotypes of native Arctic
grayling occur in the upper Missouri River Arctic: Fluvial and
adfluvial. Fluvial fish use river or stream (lotic) habitat for all of
their life cycles and may undergo extensive migrations within river
habitat. Adfluvial fish live in lakes and migrate to tributary streams
to spawn. These same life-history forms also are expressed by Arctic
grayling elsewhere in North America (Northcote 1997, p. 1030).
Historically, the fluvial life-history form predominated in the
Missouri River basin above the Great Falls, perhaps because there were
only a few lakes accessible to natural colonization of Arctic grayling
that would permit expression of the adfluvial ecotype (Kaya 1992, p.
47). The fluvial and adfluvial life-history forms of Arctic grayling in
the upper Missouri River do not appear to represent distinct
evolutionary lineages. Instead, they appear to represent an example of
adaptive radiation (Schluter 2000, p. 1), whereby the forms
[[Page 54716]]
differentiated from a common ancestor developed traits that allowed
them to exploit different habitats. The primary evidence for this
conclusion is genetic data that indicate that within the Missouri River
basin the two ecotypes are more closely related to each other than they
are to the same ecotype elsewhere in North America (Redenbach and
Taylor 1999, pp. 27-28; Stamford and Taylor 2004, p. 1538; Peterson and
Ardren 2009, p. 1766). Historically, there may have been some genetic
exchange between the two life-history forms as individuals strayed or
dispersed into different populations (Peterson and Ardren 2009, p.
1770), but the genetic structure of current populations in the upper
Missouri River basin is consistent with reproductive isolation.
The fluvial and adfluvial forms of Arctic grayling appear to differ
in their genetic characteristics, but there appears to be some
plasticity in behavior where individuals from a population can exhibit
a range of behaviors. Arctic grayling fry in Montana can exhibit
heritable, genetically-based differences in swimming behavior between
fluvial and adfluvial ecotypes (Kaya 1991, pp. 53, 56-58; Kaya and
Jeanes 1995, pp. 454, 456). Progeny of Arctic grayling from the fluvial
ecotype exhibited a greater tendency to hold their position in flowing
water relative to progeny from adfluvial ecotypes (Kaya 1991, pp. 53,
56-58; Kaya and Jeanes 1995, pp. 454, 456). Similarly, young grayling
from inlet and outlet spawning adfluvial ecotypes exhibited an innate
tendency to move downstream and upstream, respectively (Kaya 1989, pp.
478-480). All three studies (Kaya 1989, entire; 1991, entire; Kaya and
Jeanes 1995, entire) demonstrate that the response of fry to flowing
water depended strongly on the life-history form (ecotype) of the
source population, and that this behavior has a genetic basis. However,
behavioral responses also were mediated by environmental conditions
(light--Kaya 1991, pp. 56-57; light and water temperature--Kaya 1989,
pp. 477-479), and some progeny of each ecotype exhibited behavior
characteristic of the other; for example some individuals from the
fluvial ecotype moved downstream rather than holding position, and some
individuals from an inlet-spawning adfluvial ecotype held position or
moved upstream (Kaya 1991, p. 58). These observations indicate that
some plasticity for behavior exists, at least for very young Arctic
grayling.
However, the ability of one ecotype of Arctic grayling to give rise
to a functional population of the other ecotype within a few decades is
much less certain, and may parallel the differences in plasticity that
have evolved between river- and lake-type European grayling (Salonen
2005, entire). Circumstantial support for reduced plasticity in
adfluvial Arctic grayling comes from observations that adfluvial fish
stocked in river habitats almost never establish populations (Kaya
1990, pp. 31-34). In contrast, a population of Arctic grayling in the
Madison River that would have presumably expressed a fluvial ecotype
under historical conditions has apparently adapted to an adfluvial
life-history after construction of an impassible dam, which impounded
Ennis Reservoir (Kaya 1992, p. 53; Jeanes 1996, pp. 54). We note that
adfluvial Arctic grayling retain some life-history flexibility--at
least in lake environments--as naturalized populations derived from
inlet-spawning stocks have established outlet-spawning demes (a deme is
a local populations that shares a distinct gene pool) in Montana and in
Yellowstone National Park (Kruse 1959, p. 318; Kaya 1989, p. 480).
While in some cases Arctic grayling may be able to adapt or adjust
rapidly to a new environment, the frequent failure of introductions of
Arctic grayling suggest a cautionary approach to the loss of particular
life-history forms is warranted. Healey and Prince (1995, entire)
reviewed patterns of genotypic and phenotypic variation in Pacific
salmon and warn that recovery of lost life-history forms may not follow
directly from conservation of the genotype (p. 181), and reason that
the critical conservation unit is the population within its habitat (p.
181).
Age and Growth
Age at maturity and longevity in Arctic grayling varies regionally
and is probably related to growth rate, with populations in colder,
northern latitudes maturing at later ages and having a greater lifespan
(Kruse 1959, pp. 340-341; Northcote 1995 and references therein, pp.
155-157). Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River typically mature
at age 2 (males) or age 3 (females), and individuals greater than age 6
are rare (Kaya 1990, p. 18; Magee and Lamothe 2003, pp. 16-17).
Similarly, Nelson (1954, pp. 333-334) observed that the majority of the
Arctic grayling spawning in two tributaries in the Red Rock Lakes
system, Montana, were age 3, and the oldest individuals aged from a
larger sample were age 6. Mogen (1996, pp. 32-34) found that Arctic
grayling spawning in Red Rock Creek were mostly ages 2 to 5, but he did
encounter some individuals age 7.
Generally, growth rates of Arctic grayling are greatest during the
first years of life then slow dramatically after maturity. Within that
general pattern, there is substantial variation among populations from
different regions. Arctic grayling populations in Montana (Big Hole
River and Red Rock Lakes) appear to have very high growth rates
relative to those from British Columbia, Asia, and the interior and
North Slope of Alaska (Carl et al. 1992, p. 240; Northcote 1995, pp.
155-157; Neyme 2005, p. 28). Growth rates of Arctic grayling from
different management areas in Alberta are nearly as high as those
observed in Montana grayling (ASRD 2005, p. 4).
Distinct Population Segment
In its stipulated settlement with Plaintiffs, the Service agreed to
consider the appropriateness of DPS designations for Arctic grayling
populations in the upper Missouri River basin that included: (a) All
life ecotypes or histories, (b) the fluvial ecotype, and (c) the
adfluvial ecotype. The fluvial ecotype has been the primary focus of
past Service action and litigation, but the Service also has alluded to
the possibility of alternative DPS designations in previous candidate
species assessments (USFWS 2005, p. 11). Since the 2007 finding (72 FR
20305), additional research has been conducted and new information on
the genetics of Arctic grayling is available. This finding contains a
more comprehensive and robust distinct population segment analysis than
the 2007 finding.
Distinct Population Segment Analysis for Native Arctic Graying in the
Upper Missouri River
Discreteness
The discreteness standard under the Service's and National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) joint Policy Regarding the
Recognition of Distinct Vertebrate Population Segments Under the
Endangered Species Act (61 FR 4722) requires an entity to be adequately
defined and described in some way that distinguishes it from other
representatives of its species. A segment is discrete if it is: (1)
Markedly separated from other populations of the same taxon as
consequence of physical, physiological, ecological, or behavioral
factors (quantitative measures of genetic or morphological
discontinuity may provide evidence of this separation); or (2)
delimited by international
[[Page 54717]]
governmental boundaries within which differences in control of
exploitation, management of habitat, conservation status, or regulatory
mechanisms exist that are significant in light of section 4(a)(1)(D) of
the ESA.
Arctic grayling native to the upper Missouri River are isolated
from populations of the species inhabiting the Arctic Ocean, Hudson
Bay, and north Pacific Ocean drainages in Asia and North America (see
Figure 1). Arctic grayling native to the upper Missouri River occur as
a disjunct group of populations approximately 800 km (500 mi) to the
south of the next-nearest Arctic grayling population in central
Alberta, Canada. Missouri River Arctic grayling have been isolated from
other populations for at least 10,000 years based on historical
reconstruction of river flows at or near the end of the Pleistocene
(Cross et al. 1986, p. 375; Pileou 1991, pp. 10-11;). Genetic data
confirm Arctic grayling in the Missouri River basin have been
reproductively isolated from populations to the north for millennia
(Everett 1986, pp. 79-80; Redenbach and Taylor 1999, p. 23; Stamford
and Taylor 2004, p. 1538; Peterson and Ardren 2009, pp. 1764-1766;
USFWS, unpublished data). Consequently, we conclude that Arctic
grayling native to the upper Missouri River are markedly separated from
other native populations of the taxon as a result of physical factors
(isolation), and therefore meet the first criterion of discreteness
under the DPS policy. As a result, Arctic grayling native to the upper
Missouri River are considered a discrete population according to the
DPS policy. Because the entity meets the first criterion (markedly
separated), an evaluation with respect to the second criterion
(international boundaries) is not needed.
Significance
If we determine that a population meets the DPS discreteness
element, we then consider whether it also meets the DPS significance
element. The DPS policy states that, if a population segment is
considered discrete under one or more of the discreteness criteria, its
biological and ecological significance will be considered in light of
congressional guidance that the authority to list DPSs be used
``sparingly'' while encouraging the conservation of genetic diversity
(see U.S. Congress 1979, Senate Report 151, 96\th\ Congress, 1st
Session). In making this determination, we consider available
scientific evidence of the discrete population's importance to the
taxon to which it belongs. Since precise circumstances are likely to
vary considerably from case to case, the DPS policy does not describe
all the classes of information that might be used in determining the
biological and ecological importance of a discrete population. However,
the DPS policy does provide four possible reasons why a discrete
population may be significant. As specified in the DPS policy, this
consideration of significance may include, but is not limited to, the
following: (1) Persistence of the discrete population segment in a
unique or unusual ecological setting; (2) evidence that loss of the
discrete segment would result in a significant gap in the range of the
taxon; (3) evidence that the discrete population segment represents the
only surviving natural occurrence of the taxon that may be more
abundant elsewhere as an introduced population outside of its historic
range; or (4) evidence that the discrete population segment differs
markedly from other populations of the species in its genetic
characteristics.
Unique Ecological Setting
Water temperature is a key factor influencing the ecology and
physiology of ectothermic (body temperature regulated by ambient
environmental conditions) salmonid fishes, and can dictate reproductive
timing, growth and development, and life-history strategies.
Groundwater temperatures can be related to air temperatures (Meisner
1990, p. 282), and thus reflect the regional climatic conditions.
Warmer groundwater influences ecological factors such as food
availability, the efficiency with which food is converted into energy
for growth and reproduction, and ultimately growth rates of aquatic
organisms (Allan 1995, pp. 73-79). Aquifer structure and groundwater
temperature is important to salmonid fishes because groundwater can
strongly influence stream temperature, and consequently egg incubation
and fry growth rates, which are strongly temperature-dependent (Coutant
1999, pp. 32-52; Quinn 2005, pp. 143-150).
Missouri River Arctic grayling occur within the 4 to 7 [deg]C (39
to 45 [deg]F) ground water isotherm (see Heath 1983, p. 71; an isotherm
is a line connecting bands of similar temperatures on the earth's
surface), whereas most other North American grayling are found in
isotherms less than 4 [deg]C, and much of the species' range is found
in areas with discontinuous or continuous permafrost (Meisner et al.
1988, p. 5). Much of the historical range of Arctic grayling in the
upper Missouri River is encompassed by mean annual air temperature
isotherms of 5 to 10 [deg]C (41 to 50 [deg]F) (USGS 2009), with the
colder areas being in the headwaters of the Madison River in
Yellowstone National Park. In contrast, Arctic grayling in Canada,
Alaska, and Asia are located in regions encompassed by air temperature
isotherms 5 [deg]C and colder (41 [deg]F and colder), with much of the
species distributed within the 0 to -10 [deg]C isolines (32 to 14
[deg]F). This difference is significant because Arctic grayling in the
Missouri River basin have evolved in isolation for millennia in a
generally warmer climate than other populations. The potential for
thermal adaptations makes Missouri River Arctic grayling a significant
biological resource for the species under expected climate change
scenarios.
TABLE 3. Differences Between the Ecological Setting of the Upper
Missouri River and Elsewhere in the Species' Range of Arctic Grayling.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ecological Setting Variable Missouri River Rest of Taxon
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ocean watershed Gulf of Mexico- Hudson Bay, Arctic
Atlantic Ocean Ocean, or north
Pacific
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bailey's Ecoregion Dry Domain: Polar Domain:
Temperate Steppe Tundra &
Subarctic Humid
Temperate:
Marine,
Prairie, Warm
Continental
Mountains
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air temperature (isotherm) 5 to 10 [deg]C -15 to 5 [deg]C
(41 to 50 [deg]F). (5 to 41 [deg]F)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 54718]]
Groundwater temperature 4 to 7[deg]C Less than 4 [deg]C
(isotherm) (39 to 45 [deg]F). (less than 39
[deg]F)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Native occurrence of large- None, in most of Bull trout, lake
bodied fish predators on the range\a\ trout, northern
salmonids pike, taimen
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\Lake trout are native to two small lakes in the upper Missouri River
basin (Twin Lakes and Elk Lake), where their distributions presumably
overlapped with the native range of Arctic grayling, so they would not
have interacted with most Arctic grayling populations in the basin
that were found in rivers.
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River basin occur in a
temperate ecoregion distinct from all other Arctic grayling populations
worldwide, which occur in Arctic or sub-Arctic ecoregions dominated by
Arctic flora and fauna. An ecoregion is a continuous geographic area
within which there are associations of interacting biotic and abiotic
features (Bailey 2005, pp. S14, S23). These ecoregions delimit large
areas within which local ecosystems recur more or less in a predictable
fashion on similar sites (Bailey 2005, p. S14). Ecoregional
classification is hierarchical, and based on the study of spatial
coincidences, patterning, and relationships of climate, vegetation,
soil, and landform (Bailey 2005, p. S23). The largest ecoregion
categories are domains, which represent subcontinental areas of similar
climate (e.g., polar, humid temperate, dry, and humid tropical) (Bailey
1994; 2005, p. S17). Domains are divided into divisions that contain
areas of similar vegetation and regional climates. Arctic grayling in
the upper Missouri River basin are the only example of the species
naturally occurring in a dry domain (temperate steppe division; see
Table 3 above). The vast majority of the species' range is found in the
polar domain (all of Asia, most of North America), with small portions
of the range occurring in the humid temperate domain (northern British
Columbia and southeast Alaska). Occupancy of Missouri River Arctic
grayling in a temperate ecoregion is significant for two primary
reasons. First, an ecoregion represents a suite of factors (climate,
vegetation, landform) influencing, or potentially influencing, the
evolution of species within that ecoregion. Since Missouri River Arctic
grayling have existed for thousands of years in an ecoregion quite
different from the majority of the taxon, they have likely developed
adaptations during these evolutionary timescales that distinguish them
from the rest of the taxon, even if we have yet to conduct the proper
studies to measure these adaptations. Second, the occurrence of
Missouri River Arctic grayling in a unique ecoregion helps reduce the
risk of species-level extinction, as the different regions may respond
differently to environmental change.
Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River basin have existed for
at least 10,000 years in an ecological setting quite different from
that experienced by Arctic grayling elsewhere in the species' range.
The most salient aspects of this different setting relate to
temperature and climate, which can strongly and directly influence the
biology of ectothermic species (like Arctic grayling). Arctic grayling
in the upper Missouri River have experienced warmer temperatures than
most other populations. Physiological and life-history adaptation to
local temperature regimes are regularly documented in salmonid fishes
(Taylor 1991, pp. 191-193), but experimental evidence for adaptations
to temperature, such as unusually high temperature tolerance or lower
tolerance to colder temperatures, is lacking for Missouri River Arctic
grayling because the appropriate studies have not been conducted. Lohr
et al. (1996, p. 934) studied the upper thermal tolerances of Arctic
grayling from the Big Hole River, but their research design did not
include other populations from different thermal regimes, so it was not
possible to make between-population contrasts under a common set of
conditions. Arctic grayling from the upper Missouri River demonstrate
very high growth rates relative to other populations (Northcote 1995,
p. 157). Experimental evidence obtained by growing fish from
populations under similar conditions would be needed to measure the
relative influence of genetics (local adaptation) versus environment.
An apex fish predator that preys successfully on salmonids has been
largely absent from most of the upper Missouri River basin over
evolutionary time scales (tens of thousands of years). This suggests
that Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River basin have faced a
different selective pressure than Arctic grayling in many other areas
of the species' range, at least with respect to predation by fishes.
Predators can exert a strong selective pressure on populations. One
noteworthy aspect of the aquatic biota experienced by Arctic grayling
in the upper Missouri River is the apparent absence of a large-bodied
fish that would be an effective predator on juvenile and adult
salmonids. In contrast, one or more species of large predatory fishes
like northern pike (Esox lucius), bull trout, taimen (Hucho taimen),
and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) are broadly distributed across
much of the range of Arctic grayling in Canada and Asia (Northern
pike--Scott and Crossman 1998, pp. 302, 358; taimen--VanderZanden et
al. 2007, pp. 2281-2282; Esteve et al. 2009, p. 185; bull trout--Behnke
2002, pp. 296, 330; lake trout --Behnke 2002, pp. 296, 330). The only
exceptions to this general pattern are where Arctic grayling formerly
coexisted with lake trout native to Twin Lakes and Elk Lake (Beaverhead
County) (Vincent 1963, pp. 188-189), but both of these Arctic grayling
populations are thought to be extirpated (Oswald 2000, pp. 10, 16;
Oswald 2006, pers. comm.). The burbot (Lota lota) is a freshwater fish
belonging to the cod family and is native to the Missouri, Big Hole,
Beaverhead, Ruby, and Madison Rivers in Montana (MFISH 2010); thus its
distribution significantly overlapped the historical and current ranges
of Arctic grayling in the upper Missouri River system. Burbot are
voracious predators, but tend to be benthic (bottom-oriented) and
apparently prefer the deeper portions of larger rivers and lakes. A few
studies have investigated the diet of burbot where they overlap with
native Arctic grayling in Montana, but did not detect any predation on
Arctic grayling (Streu 1990, pp. 16-20; Katzman 1998, pp. 98-100).
Burbot a