Endangered and Threatened Species; Take of Anadromous Fish, 31590-31592 [2011-13550]
Download as PDF
31590
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 105 / Wednesday, June 1, 2011 / Notices
Dated: May 23, 2011.
Christian Marsh,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Antidumping
and Countervailing Duty Operations.
[FR Doc. 2011–13556 Filed 5–31–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RIN 0648–XA464]
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Take of Anadromous Fish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; research permit
applications.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
NMFS has received four scientific
research and enhancement permit
application requests relating to
salmonids listed under the Endangered
Species Act (ESA). The proposed
research programs are intended to
increase knowledge of the species and
to help guide management and
conservation efforts.
DATES: Written comments on the permit
applications must be received at the
appropriate address or fax number (see
ADDRESSES) no later than 5 p.m. Pacific
standard time on July 1, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on either
application should be submitted to the
Protected Resources Division, NMFS,
777 Sonoma Avenue, Room 325, Santa
Rosa, CA 95404. Comments may also be
submitted via fax to (707) 578–3435 or
by email to FRNpermits.SR@noaa.gov.
The applications and related documents
may be viewed online at: https://
apps.nmfs.noaa.gov/preview/
preview_open_for_comment.cfm. These
documents are also available upon
written request or by appointment by
contacting NMFS by phone (707) 575–
6097 or fax (707) 578–3435.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeffrey Jahn, Santa Rosa, CA (ph.: 707–
575–6097, e-mail:
Jeffrey.Jahn@noaa.gov).
SUMMARY:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Species Covered in This Notice
This notice is relevant to federally
threatened Central California Coast
steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss),
threatened Southern-Central California
Coast steelhead (O. mykiss), endangered
Central California Coast coho salmon
(O. kisutch), and threatened California
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:48 May 31, 2011
Jkt 223001
Coastal Chinook salmon (O.
tshawytscha).
Authority
Scientific research permits are issued
in accordance with section 10(a)(1)(A)
of the ESA of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531–
1543) and regulations governing listed
fish and wildlife permits (50 CFR parts
222–226). NMFS issues permits based
on findings that such permits: (1) Are
applied for in good faith; (2) if granted
and exercised, would not operate to the
disadvantage of the listed species which
are the subject of the permits; and (3)
are consistent with the purposes and
policies set forth in section 2 of the
ESA. The authority to take listed species
is subject to conditions set forth in the
permits.
Anyone requesting a hearing on the
applications listed in this notice should
set out the specific reasons why a
hearing on the application(s) would be
appropriate (see ADDRESSES). Such
hearings are held at the discretion of the
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
NMFS.
Applications Received
Permit 15730
Salmon Protection and Watershed
Network (SPAWN) is requesting a 5-year
scientific research and enhancement
permit to take juvenile Central
California Coast (CCC) steelhead,
juvenile CCC coho salmon, and juvenile
California Coastal (CC) Chinook salmon
(ESA-listed salmonids) and adult
carcasses of each species associated
with a research project in the Lagunitas
Creek and San Geronimo Creek
watersheds in Marin County, California.
In the study described below,
researchers do not expect to kill any
listed fish but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the research
activities.
This project is part of an ongoing
effort to monitor population status and
trends of juvenile and adult ESA-listed
salmonids and to document baseline
habitat conditions. This data will aid
future research, restoration, and
conservation efforts for ESA-listed
salmonids. The objectives are to: (1)
Continue ongoing juvenile rescue and
relocation efforts, (2) survey adult
salmonid spawning activities and
juvenile smolt outmigration, and (3)
determine salmonid habitat utilization.
In these projects, ESA-listed salmonids
will be captured (by dip-net, pipe-trap,
funnel trap, fyke-net trap, or seine),
anesthetized, handled (identified,
measured, weighed), sampled (fin clips
or scales), marked [fin clips or Passive
Integrated Transponder (PIT) tags], and
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
released. All data and information will
be shared with county, state, and federal
entities for use in conservation and
restoration planning efforts related to
ESA-listed salmonids.
Study 1 is a salmonid spawner
abundance monitoring study in the San
Geronimo Creek watershed. Surveys
will be conducted on ten or fewer sites
in tributaries to San Geronimo Creek.
Researchers will survey stream reaches
from October through April and observe
the number, species, sex, size,
condition, location, and behavior of
spawning adult ESA-listed salmonids.
Redds will be located, marked, and
mapped.
Carcasses of ESA-listed salmonids
that are encountered during spawner
surveys will be identified, measured,
evaluated for spawning condition,
marked to avoid double counting, and
returned to the location where they
were found.
Study 2 is a juvenile salmonid
summer habitat and rescue/relocation
study in the San Geronimo Creek
watershed. Juvenile salmonid habitat
monitoring will be conducted annually
from June through October. San
Geronimo Creek and its tributaries will
be visually surveyed to determine
presence and absence of salmonids and
monitored to determine water flow, pool
depth, and temperature in pools. If
stream flow ceases and pools become
disconnected and begin to dry, juvenile
CCC coho salmon and CCC steelhead
will be removed and relocated. Fish will
be captured by dip-net and transported
to a perennial flow section downstream
on their natal tributary or to San
Geronimo Creek. Relocated fish will be
measured and identified and stream
conditions will be recorded. A subset of
relocated CCC steelhead will be
anesthetized and tagged with PIT tags to
quantify relocation success by
outmigration efficiency. A disjunct area
of San Geronimo Creek called Roy’s
Pools, will be drained and electrofished
to rescue stranded fish. Rescued fish
will be anesthetized, measured, then
released into a pool immediately
downstream of Roy’s Pools.
Study 3 is a juvenile salmonid
movement monitoring study in the San
Geronimo Creek watershed. Coho
salmon and steelhead smolt production
in Lagunitas and San Geronimo creeks
will be monitored annually from
March–June. Pipe-traps and funnel traps
will be used to capture juvenile ESAlisted salmonids. Juvenile CC Chinook
will be captured, handled, and released.
Smolts and young of the year (YOY)
CCC coho salmon and CCC steelhead
will be captured in the traps,
anesthetized, and analyzed to determine
E:\FR\FM\01JNN1.SGM
01JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 105 / Wednesday, June 1, 2011 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
species, length, weight, and the degree
of smoltification. Salmon fry observed
in the trap will be observed, counted
and estimated for length. Scale samples
will also be collected from up to ten
CCC coho and ten CCC steelhead smolts
each sampling day throughout the study
period. The mark-recapture monitoring
study used to generate population
estimates will consist of marking up to
ten CCC coho and ten CCC steelhead
smolts with a fin clip followed by
upstream relocation and release.
Permit 16110
Marin Municipal Water District
(MMWD) is requesting a 5-year
scientific research permit to take
juvenile and adult CCC steelhead,
juvenile and adult (spawned carcasses)
of CCC coho salmon, and juvenile and
adult (spawned carcasses) of Chinook
salmon associated with a research
project in the Lagunitas Creek
watershed in Marin County, California.
In the studies described below,
researchers do not expect to kill any
listed fish but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the research
activities.
MMWD is currently monitoring coho
salmon and steelhead populations in
Lagunitas Creek (including two
tributaries, San Geronimo Creek and
Devil’s Gulch) and Walker Creek.
Current monitoring consists of juvenile
salmonid surveys in fall, spawner
surveys in winter and smolt
outmigration monitoring in spring. The
purpose of the proposed scientific
research is to determine the trends in
ESA-listed salmonid abundance at
multiple life stages, to determine
whether there is a relationship between
population trends and MMWD
management efforts, and to determine
what salmonid life stages suffer the
lowest survival and should be a focus of
future management practices.
Study 1 is a summer/fall juvenile
salmonid population abundance and
salmonid habitat monitoring study in
Lagunitas Creek. Sampling will occur at
13 established reaches from August
through October. Backpack
electrofishing will be used to capture
juvenile CCC coho salmon and CCC
steelhead. Captured fish will be
anesthetized, handled (identified to
species, measured and weighed), scale
sampled, implanted with PIT tags and
released back into the habitat from
which they were taken. Habitat type and
quality will be assessed at each survey
site.
Study 2 is a juvenile salmonid
presence/absence and population
genetics study in Walker Creek.
Sampling will occur from August
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:48 May 31, 2011
Jkt 223001
through October. Backpack
electrofishing will be used to capture
juvenile CCC coho salmon and CCC
steelhead juveniles. Captured fish will
be anesthetized, handled (identified to
species, measured and weighed),
sampled (by collection of fin clips,
scales or opercle), and released back
into the habitat unit from which they
were taken.
Study 3 is a salmonid spawner
abundance and population genetics
study in the Lagunitas Creek watershed
(including tributaries Devil’s Gulch, San
Geronimo Creek, and Woodacre Creek)
and Walker Creek. Teams will survey
stream reaches from October through
March and observe the number, species,
location, and behavior of spawning
adult ESA-listed salmonids. Redds will
be located and measured. Carcasses of
ESA-listed salmonids that are
encountered during spawner surveys
will be identified, measured, evaluated
for spawning condition, tissue sampled,
marked to avoid double counting, and
returned to the location where they
were found.
Study 4 is a salmonid smolt
outmigration monitoring study in
Lagunitas Creek. One or two rotary
screw traps will be operated annually
from March into June. Smolts and YOY
of CCC coho, CC Chinook salmon, and
CCC steelhead will be captured in the
rotary screw trap, anesthetized and
handled to determine species, length
and weight. The majority of captured
juvenile salmonids will be released
downstream of the trap. A small number
of captured juvenile ESA-listed
salmonids, will be marked using fin
clips or PIT tags, released upstream of
the rotary screw trap, and may be
subsequently recaptured. A second trap
may be employed at an upstream
location to quantify the proportion of
smolts originating between the two
traps.
Study 5 will determine juvenile CCC
coho use of off-channel habitat
enhancement areas on Lagunitas Creek.
Fish will be captured using a
combination of backpack electrofishing
and seining. Sampling will occur from
January and February, prior to the smolt
outmigration period. Fish will be PIT
tagged to compare growth rates of fish
in off-channel versus in-stream areas.
The movement of PIT tagged fish will be
monitored from January through June by
hand-held and stationary PIT tag
readers.
Study 6 will estimate winter survival
of juvenile salmonids by marking fish in
the fall and recapturing them during
smolt monitoring in the spring. The
proportion of recaptured fish, combined
with a smolt emigration estimate, will
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31591
provide a back-calculated estimate of
fall juvenile salmonid abundance that
will help validate the estimate
developed in Study 1. Fish will be
captured by electrofisher and a limited
amount of CCC coho salmon and CCC
steelhead will be PIT tagged and
released back into the habitat from
which they were collected.
Permit 15824
The County of Santa Cruz,
Environmental Health Services is
requesting a 5-year scientific research
permit to take juvenile CCC steelhead,
juvenile South-Central California Coast
(S–CCC) steelhead, and juvenile CCC
coho salmon associated with a research
project in four watersheds in Santa Cruz
County, California. This is an ongoing
fish monitoring program that has been
included in the annual California
Department of Fish and Game research
program under the ESA 4(d) rule for
threatened salmonids. The 4(d) rule
exempts qualifying research programs
from the prohibitions of section 9(a)(1)
of the ESA. Because the County of Santa
Cruz has expanded monitoring to
include endangered CCC coho salmon, a
section 10(a)(1)(A) permit is required. In
the study described below, researchers
do not expect to kill any listed fish but
a small number may die as an
unintended result of the research
activities.
The purpose of the project is to
document habitat conditions and site
densities of juvenile salmonids in the
San Lorenzo River, Soquel Creek, Aptos
Creek, and Corralitos Creek in Santa
Cruz County. The information will be
used to track salmonid spawning and
rearing conditions, prioritize restoration
and conservation efforts, and inform
land and water use decisions.
Sampling will occur annually, for 5 to
6 days per week within a 5-week period
between September and October. Fish
will be collected by backpack
electrofisher. Captured fish will be
placed in a live car and kept in flowing
water. All juvenile ESA-listed
salmonids will be measured, checked
for PIT tags and then released into the
habitat where they were collected. Deep
pools within the mainstem San Lorenzo
River will be snorkeled by two divers
following electrofishing. Researchers
will use a beach seine to capture a
limited amount of CCC steelhead in the
Aptos Creek lagoon for a total of two
sampling days per year. A subset of
seine captured fish will have scales
removed for analysis and will be
marked by fin-clipping.
E:\FR\FM\01JNN1.SGM
01JNN1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
31592
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 105 / Wednesday, June 1, 2011 / Notices
Permit 16318
Hagar Environmental Science is
requesting a 5-year scientific research
permit to take juvenile CCC steelhead,
juvenile S–CCC steelhead, and juvenile
CCC coho salmon associated with a
research project in selected watersheds
in Santa Cruz, Monterey, and San Luis
Obispo counties, California. In the study
described below, researchers do not
expect to kill any listed fish but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of the research activities.
The proposed research includes three
studies consisting of lagoon surveys and
stream surveys in Santa Cruz, Monterey,
and San Luis Obispo counties. The
purpose of the lagoon surveys is to
provide estimates of abundance of
juvenile steelhead rearing in the lagoons
during the summer rearing period
through mark-recapture protocol using
PIT tag technology. A secondary goal of
the lagoon research is to investigate the
relationship between population
abundance estimates and catch per unit
effort that has been used in past surveys.
The purpose of the stream surveys is to
enumerate rearing juvenile steelhead
and other fish species. The data from
lagoon and stream surveys will be used
to track salmonid spawning and rearing
conditions, prioritize restoration and
conservation efforts, and inform land
and water use decisions.
In study 1, juvenile salmonid
distribution and population abundance
and habitat assessment will be
determined in the San Lorenzo River,
Liddell Creek, Laguna Creek, and Majors
Creek. Sampling will occur at multiple
survey sites twice annually in lagoons
from April through November and once
annually in streams from August
through November. Juvenile CCC coho
salmon and juvenile CCC steelhead may
be captured by backpack electrofishing
or seine. Captured fish will be
anesthetized, handled (identified,
measured and weighed), and released.
Juveniles captured in lagoons will be
PIT tagged and some will have scales
removed for analysis.
Study 2 will take place in the Salinas
River, Arroyo Seco, Nacimento River,
San Antonio River in Monterey and San
Luis Obispo counties, California.
Sampling will occur at multiple survey
sites three times annually in lagoons
from April through November and once
annually in streams from August
through November. Juvenile S–CCC
steelhead will be captured (by backpack
electrofishing or seine), anesthetized
(optional), handled (identified,
measured, weighed), and released. A
subsample of captured S–CCC steelhead
will be sampled for scales.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:48 May 31, 2011
Jkt 223001
Study 3 is a juvenile salmonid
distribution, population abundance, and
habitat assessment study in the lower
watershed and lagoon of Arroyo Grande
including Tar Spring Creek and Los
Berros Creek in San Luis Obispo
County, California. Sampling will occur
at multiple survey sites twice annually
in lagoons from April through
November and once annually in streams
from August through November.
Juvenile S–CCC steelhead will be
captured (by backpack electrofishing or
seine), anesthetized, handled
(identified, measured, weighed) and
released. A subset of captured fish will
be sampled for scales.
This notice is provided pursuant to
section 10(c) of the ESA. NMFS will
evaluate the applications, associated
documents, and comments submitted to
determine whether the applications
meet the requirements of section 10(a)
of the ESA and Federal regulations. The
final permit decisions will not be made
until after the end of the 30-day
comment period. NMFS will publish
notice of its final actions in the Federal
Register.
Dated: May 25, 2011.
Therese Conant,
Acting Division Chief, Endangered Species
Division, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–13550 Filed 5–31–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[Docket No. 110516284–1286–01]
RIN 0648–XA097
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife;
Notice of 90-Day Finding on a Petition
To List Goliath Grouper as Threatened
or Endangered Under the Endangered
Species Act
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of 90-day petition
finding.
AGENCY:
We (NMFS) announce a 90day finding on a petition to list goliath
grouper (Epinephelus itajara) as
threatened or endangered under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA). We find
that the petition does not present
substantial scientific or commercial
information indicating that the
petitioned action may be warranted.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Accordingly, we will not initiate a
status review of the species at this time.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the petition and
related materials are available upon
request from the Chief, Protected
Resources Division, Southeast Regional
Office, NMFS, 263 13th Avenue South,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Barnette, NMFS Southeast
Region, 727–551–5794, or Lisa
Manning, NMFS Office of Protected
Resources, 301–713–1401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On September 3, 2010, we received a
petition from the WildEarth Guardians
to list goliath grouper (Epinephelus
itajara), Nassau grouper (Epinephelus
striatus), and speckled hind
(Epinephelus drummondhayi) as
threatened or endangered under the
ESA and to designate critical habitat for
these species. Copies of this petition are
available from us (see ADDRESSES,
above). Due to the scope of the
WildEarth Guardians’ petition, as well
as the breadth and extent of the required
evaluation and response, we are
providing species-specific findings on
this petition. This finding addresses
WildEarth Guardians’ petition to list
goliath grouper.
On June 11, 1991, we identified
goliath grouper (previously known as
jewfish) as a candidate species under
the ESA (56 FR 26797). On April 15,
2004, we announced the establishment
of a species of concern list, a description
of the factors that it will consider when
identifying species of concern, and
revision of the ESA candidate species
list (69 FR 19976). We transferred 25
candidate species, including goliath
grouper, to this species of concern list.
In January 2006, we completed a
status report for goliath grouper in the
continental U.S. (North Carolina to the
Gulf of Mexico), which we determined
met the criteria for designation as a
distinct population segment (DPS)
under the ESA (NOAA, 2006). The
purpose of the 2006 status report was to
investigate the status of goliath grouper
in the United States relative to the
criteria for including a species on the
species of concern list and in light of
updated information about the status of
and threats to the continental U.S. DPS
of the goliath grouper. After evaluating
the most current data, we concluded
that the continental U.S. DPS of goliath
grouper had undergone significant
increases in abundance since its
identification in 1991 as a candidate
species under the ESA and had become
re-established throughout its historical
E:\FR\FM\01JNN1.SGM
01JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 105 (Wednesday, June 1, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31590-31592]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-13550]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[RIN 0648-XA464]
Endangered and Threatened Species; Take of Anadromous Fish
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; research permit applications.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that NMFS has received four scientific
research and enhancement permit application requests relating to
salmonids listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The proposed
research programs are intended to increase knowledge of the species and
to help guide management and conservation efforts.
DATES: Written comments on the permit applications must be received at
the appropriate address or fax number (see ADDRESSES) no later than 5
p.m. Pacific standard time on July 1, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on either application should be submitted
to the Protected Resources Division, NMFS, 777 Sonoma Avenue, Room 325,
Santa Rosa, CA 95404. Comments may also be submitted via fax to (707)
578-3435 or by email to FRNpermits.SR@noaa.gov. The applications and
related documents may be viewed online at: https://apps.nmfs.noaa.gov/preview/preview_open_for_comment.cfm. These documents are also
available upon written request or by appointment by contacting NMFS by
phone (707) 575-6097 or fax (707) 578-3435.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeffrey Jahn, Santa Rosa, CA (ph.:
707-575-6097, e-mail: Jeffrey.Jahn@noaa.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Species Covered in This Notice
This notice is relevant to federally threatened Central California
Coast steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss), threatened Southern-Central
California Coast steelhead (O. mykiss), endangered Central California
Coast coho salmon (O. kisutch), and threatened California Coastal
Chinook salmon (O. tshawytscha).
Authority
Scientific research permits are issued in accordance with section
10(a)(1)(A) of the ESA of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531-1543) and regulations
governing listed fish and wildlife permits (50 CFR parts 222-226). NMFS
issues permits based on findings that such permits: (1) Are applied for
in good faith; (2) if granted and exercised, would not operate to the
disadvantage of the listed species which are the subject of the
permits; and (3) are consistent with the purposes and policies set
forth in section 2 of the ESA. The authority to take listed species is
subject to conditions set forth in the permits.
Anyone requesting a hearing on the applications listed in this
notice should set out the specific reasons why a hearing on the
application(s) would be appropriate (see ADDRESSES). Such hearings are
held at the discretion of the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
NMFS.
Applications Received
Permit 15730
Salmon Protection and Watershed Network (SPAWN) is requesting a 5-
year scientific research and enhancement permit to take juvenile
Central California Coast (CCC) steelhead, juvenile CCC coho salmon, and
juvenile California Coastal (CC) Chinook salmon (ESA-listed salmonids)
and adult carcasses of each species associated with a research project
in the Lagunitas Creek and San Geronimo Creek watersheds in Marin
County, California. In the study described below, researchers do not
expect to kill any listed fish but a small number may die as an
unintended result of the research activities.
This project is part of an ongoing effort to monitor population
status and trends of juvenile and adult ESA-listed salmonids and to
document baseline habitat conditions. This data will aid future
research, restoration, and conservation efforts for ESA-listed
salmonids. The objectives are to: (1) Continue ongoing juvenile rescue
and relocation efforts, (2) survey adult salmonid spawning activities
and juvenile smolt outmigration, and (3) determine salmonid habitat
utilization. In these projects, ESA-listed salmonids will be captured
(by dip-net, pipe-trap, funnel trap, fyke-net trap, or seine),
anesthetized, handled (identified, measured, weighed), sampled (fin
clips or scales), marked [fin clips or Passive Integrated Transponder
(PIT) tags], and released. All data and information will be shared with
county, state, and federal entities for use in conservation and
restoration planning efforts related to ESA-listed salmonids.
Study 1 is a salmonid spawner abundance monitoring study in the San
Geronimo Creek watershed. Surveys will be conducted on ten or fewer
sites in tributaries to San Geronimo Creek. Researchers will survey
stream reaches from October through April and observe the number,
species, sex, size, condition, location, and behavior of spawning adult
ESA-listed salmonids. Redds will be located, marked, and mapped.
Carcasses of ESA-listed salmonids that are encountered during
spawner surveys will be identified, measured, evaluated for spawning
condition, marked to avoid double counting, and returned to the
location where they were found.
Study 2 is a juvenile salmonid summer habitat and rescue/relocation
study in the San Geronimo Creek watershed. Juvenile salmonid habitat
monitoring will be conducted annually from June through October. San
Geronimo Creek and its tributaries will be visually surveyed to
determine presence and absence of salmonids and monitored to determine
water flow, pool depth, and temperature in pools. If stream flow ceases
and pools become disconnected and begin to dry, juvenile CCC coho
salmon and CCC steelhead will be removed and relocated. Fish will be
captured by dip-net and transported to a perennial flow section
downstream on their natal tributary or to San Geronimo Creek. Relocated
fish will be measured and identified and stream conditions will be
recorded. A subset of relocated CCC steelhead will be anesthetized and
tagged with PIT tags to quantify relocation success by outmigration
efficiency. A disjunct area of San Geronimo Creek called Roy's Pools,
will be drained and electrofished to rescue stranded fish. Rescued fish
will be anesthetized, measured, then released into a pool immediately
downstream of Roy's Pools.
Study 3 is a juvenile salmonid movement monitoring study in the San
Geronimo Creek watershed. Coho salmon and steelhead smolt production in
Lagunitas and San Geronimo creeks will be monitored annually from
March-June. Pipe-traps and funnel traps will be used to capture
juvenile ESA-listed salmonids. Juvenile CC Chinook will be captured,
handled, and released. Smolts and young of the year (YOY) CCC coho
salmon and CCC steelhead will be captured in the traps, anesthetized,
and analyzed to determine
[[Page 31591]]
species, length, weight, and the degree of smoltification. Salmon fry
observed in the trap will be observed, counted and estimated for
length. Scale samples will also be collected from up to ten CCC coho
and ten CCC steelhead smolts each sampling day throughout the study
period. The mark-recapture monitoring study used to generate population
estimates will consist of marking up to ten CCC coho and ten CCC
steelhead smolts with a fin clip followed by upstream relocation and
release.
Permit 16110
Marin Municipal Water District (MMWD) is requesting a 5-year
scientific research permit to take juvenile and adult CCC steelhead,
juvenile and adult (spawned carcasses) of CCC coho salmon, and juvenile
and adult (spawned carcasses) of Chinook salmon associated with a
research project in the Lagunitas Creek watershed in Marin County,
California. In the studies described below, researchers do not expect
to kill any listed fish but a small number may die as an unintended
result of the research activities.
MMWD is currently monitoring coho salmon and steelhead populations
in Lagunitas Creek (including two tributaries, San Geronimo Creek and
Devil's Gulch) and Walker Creek. Current monitoring consists of
juvenile salmonid surveys in fall, spawner surveys in winter and smolt
outmigration monitoring in spring. The purpose of the proposed
scientific research is to determine the trends in ESA-listed salmonid
abundance at multiple life stages, to determine whether there is a
relationship between population trends and MMWD management efforts, and
to determine what salmonid life stages suffer the lowest survival and
should be a focus of future management practices.
Study 1 is a summer/fall juvenile salmonid population abundance and
salmonid habitat monitoring study in Lagunitas Creek. Sampling will
occur at 13 established reaches from August through October. Backpack
electrofishing will be used to capture juvenile CCC coho salmon and CCC
steelhead. Captured fish will be anesthetized, handled (identified to
species, measured and weighed), scale sampled, implanted with PIT tags
and released back into the habitat from which they were taken. Habitat
type and quality will be assessed at each survey site.
Study 2 is a juvenile salmonid presence/absence and population
genetics study in Walker Creek. Sampling will occur from August through
October. Backpack electrofishing will be used to capture juvenile CCC
coho salmon and CCC steelhead juveniles. Captured fish will be
anesthetized, handled (identified to species, measured and weighed),
sampled (by collection of fin clips, scales or opercle), and released
back into the habitat unit from which they were taken.
Study 3 is a salmonid spawner abundance and population genetics
study in the Lagunitas Creek watershed (including tributaries Devil's
Gulch, San Geronimo Creek, and Woodacre Creek) and Walker Creek. Teams
will survey stream reaches from October through March and observe the
number, species, location, and behavior of spawning adult ESA-listed
salmonids. Redds will be located and measured. Carcasses of ESA-listed
salmonids that are encountered during spawner surveys will be
identified, measured, evaluated for spawning condition, tissue sampled,
marked to avoid double counting, and returned to the location where
they were found.
Study 4 is a salmonid smolt outmigration monitoring study in
Lagunitas Creek. One or two rotary screw traps will be operated
annually from March into June. Smolts and YOY of CCC coho, CC Chinook
salmon, and CCC steelhead will be captured in the rotary screw trap,
anesthetized and handled to determine species, length and weight. The
majority of captured juvenile salmonids will be released downstream of
the trap. A small number of captured juvenile ESA-listed salmonids,
will be marked using fin clips or PIT tags, released upstream of the
rotary screw trap, and may be subsequently recaptured. A second trap
may be employed at an upstream location to quantify the proportion of
smolts originating between the two traps.
Study 5 will determine juvenile CCC coho use of off-channel habitat
enhancement areas on Lagunitas Creek. Fish will be captured using a
combination of backpack electrofishing and seining. Sampling will occur
from January and February, prior to the smolt outmigration period. Fish
will be PIT tagged to compare growth rates of fish in off-channel
versus in-stream areas. The movement of PIT tagged fish will be
monitored from January through June by hand-held and stationary PIT tag
readers.
Study 6 will estimate winter survival of juvenile salmonids by
marking fish in the fall and recapturing them during smolt monitoring
in the spring. The proportion of recaptured fish, combined with a smolt
emigration estimate, will provide a back-calculated estimate of fall
juvenile salmonid abundance that will help validate the estimate
developed in Study 1. Fish will be captured by electrofisher and a
limited amount of CCC coho salmon and CCC steelhead will be PIT tagged
and released back into the habitat from which they were collected.
Permit 15824
The County of Santa Cruz, Environmental Health Services is
requesting a 5-year scientific research permit to take juvenile CCC
steelhead, juvenile South-Central California Coast (S-CCC) steelhead,
and juvenile CCC coho salmon associated with a research project in four
watersheds in Santa Cruz County, California. This is an ongoing fish
monitoring program that has been included in the annual California
Department of Fish and Game research program under the ESA 4(d) rule
for threatened salmonids. The 4(d) rule exempts qualifying research
programs from the prohibitions of section 9(a)(1) of the ESA. Because
the County of Santa Cruz has expanded monitoring to include endangered
CCC coho salmon, a section 10(a)(1)(A) permit is required. In the study
described below, researchers do not expect to kill any listed fish but
a small number may die as an unintended result of the research
activities.
The purpose of the project is to document habitat conditions and
site densities of juvenile salmonids in the San Lorenzo River, Soquel
Creek, Aptos Creek, and Corralitos Creek in Santa Cruz County. The
information will be used to track salmonid spawning and rearing
conditions, prioritize restoration and conservation efforts, and inform
land and water use decisions.
Sampling will occur annually, for 5 to 6 days per week within a 5-
week period between September and October. Fish will be collected by
backpack electrofisher. Captured fish will be placed in a live car and
kept in flowing water. All juvenile ESA-listed salmonids will be
measured, checked for PIT tags and then released into the habitat where
they were collected. Deep pools within the mainstem San Lorenzo River
will be snorkeled by two divers following electrofishing. Researchers
will use a beach seine to capture a limited amount of CCC steelhead in
the Aptos Creek lagoon for a total of two sampling days per year. A
subset of seine captured fish will have scales removed for analysis and
will be marked by fin-clipping.
[[Page 31592]]
Permit 16318
Hagar Environmental Science is requesting a 5-year scientific
research permit to take juvenile CCC steelhead, juvenile S-CCC
steelhead, and juvenile CCC coho salmon associated with a research
project in selected watersheds in Santa Cruz, Monterey, and San Luis
Obispo counties, California. In the study described below, researchers
do not expect to kill any listed fish but a small number may die as an
unintended result of the research activities.
The proposed research includes three studies consisting of lagoon
surveys and stream surveys in Santa Cruz, Monterey, and San Luis Obispo
counties. The purpose of the lagoon surveys is to provide estimates of
abundance of juvenile steelhead rearing in the lagoons during the
summer rearing period through mark-recapture protocol using PIT tag
technology. A secondary goal of the lagoon research is to investigate
the relationship between population abundance estimates and catch per
unit effort that has been used in past surveys. The purpose of the
stream surveys is to enumerate rearing juvenile steelhead and other
fish species. The data from lagoon and stream surveys will be used to
track salmonid spawning and rearing conditions, prioritize restoration
and conservation efforts, and inform land and water use decisions.
In study 1, juvenile salmonid distribution and population abundance
and habitat assessment will be determined in the San Lorenzo River,
Liddell Creek, Laguna Creek, and Majors Creek. Sampling will occur at
multiple survey sites twice annually in lagoons from April through
November and once annually in streams from August through November.
Juvenile CCC coho salmon and juvenile CCC steelhead may be captured by
backpack electrofishing or seine. Captured fish will be anesthetized,
handled (identified, measured and weighed), and released. Juveniles
captured in lagoons will be PIT tagged and some will have scales
removed for analysis.
Study 2 will take place in the Salinas River, Arroyo Seco,
Nacimento River, San Antonio River in Monterey and San Luis Obispo
counties, California. Sampling will occur at multiple survey sites
three times annually in lagoons from April through November and once
annually in streams from August through November. Juvenile S-CCC
steelhead will be captured (by backpack electrofishing or seine),
anesthetized (optional), handled (identified, measured, weighed), and
released. A subsample of captured S-CCC steelhead will be sampled for
scales.
Study 3 is a juvenile salmonid distribution, population abundance,
and habitat assessment study in the lower watershed and lagoon of
Arroyo Grande including Tar Spring Creek and Los Berros Creek in San
Luis Obispo County, California. Sampling will occur at multiple survey
sites twice annually in lagoons from April through November and once
annually in streams from August through November. Juvenile S-CCC
steelhead will be captured (by backpack electrofishing or seine),
anesthetized, handled (identified, measured, weighed) and released. A
subset of captured fish will be sampled for scales.
This notice is provided pursuant to section 10(c) of the ESA. NMFS
will evaluate the applications, associated documents, and comments
submitted to determine whether the applications meet the requirements
of section 10(a) of the ESA and Federal regulations. The final permit
decisions will not be made until after the end of the 30-day comment
period. NMFS will publish notice of its final actions in the Federal
Register.
Dated: May 25, 2011.
Therese Conant,
Acting Division Chief, Endangered Species Division, Office of Protected
Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2011-13550 Filed 5-31-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P