Endangered and Threatened Species; Recovery Plans, 28855-28857 [2012-11872]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 95 / Wednesday, May 16, 2012 / Notices
Dated: May 10, 2012.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2012–11777 Filed 5–15–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–08–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XC008
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Recovery Plans
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of Availability; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
We, NMFS, announce that the
Proposed Endangered Species Act (ESA)
Recovery Plan for Lower Columbia River
Chinook Salmon, Lower Columbia River
Coho Salmon, Columbia River Chum
Salmon, and Lower Columbia River
Steelhead (Proposed Plan) is available
for public review and comment. The
Proposed Plan addresses the Lower
Columbia River Chinook salmon
(Oncoryhnchus tschawytscha), Lower
Columbia coho salmon (O. kisutch), and
Columbia River chum salmon (O. keta)
evolutionarily significant units (ESUs)
and the Lower Columbia River steelhead
(O. mykiss) distinct population segment
(DPS), all of which are listed as
threatened under the ESA. The
geographic area covered by the
Proposed Plan is the Lower Columbia
River mainstem and tributaries
downstream of (and including) the
White Salmon River in Washington and
the Hood River in Oregon. As required
by the ESA, the Proposed Plan contains
objective, measurable delisting criteria,
site-specific management actions
necessary to achieve the Proposed
Plan’s goals, and estimates of the time
and costs required to implement
recovery actions. We are soliciting
review and comment from the public
and all interested parties on the
Proposed Plan.
DATES: We will consider and address, as
appropriate, all substantive comments
received during the comment period.
Comments must be received no later
than 5 p.m. Pacific daylight time on
July 16, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Please send written
comments and materials to Patty
Dornbusch, National Marine Fisheries
Service, 1201 NE. Lloyd Boulevard,
Suite 1100, Portland, OR 97232.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:41 May 15, 2012
Jkt 226001
Comments may also be submitted by
email to:
nmfs.nwr.lowercolumbiaplan@noaa.gov.
Please include ‘‘Comments on Lower
Columbia Recovery Plan’’ in the subject
line of the email. Comments may be
submitted via facsimile (fax) to (503)
230–5441. Electronic copies of the
Proposed Plan are available on the
NMFS Web site at https://
www.nwr.noaa.gov/Salmon-RecoveryPlanning/Recovery-Domains/
Willamette-Lower-Columbia/LC/
Plan.cfm. Persons wishing to obtain an
electronic copy on CD ROM of the
Proposed Plan may do so by calling
Kelly Gallivan at (503) 736–4721 or by
emailing a request to
kelly.gallivan@noaa.gov with the subject
line ‘‘CD ROM Request for Lower
Columbia Recovery Plan.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Patty Dornbusch, NMFS Lower
Columbia Recovery Coordinator, at
(503) 230–5430, or
patty.dornbusch@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
We are responsible for developing and
implementing recovery plans for Pacific
salmon and steelhead listed under the
ESA of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.). Recovery means that the
listed species and their ecosystems are
sufficiently restored, and their future
secured, to a point that the protections
of the ESA are no longer necessary.
Section 4(f)(1) of the ESA requires that
recovery plans include, to the extent
practicable: (1) Objective, measurable
criteria which, when met, would result
in a determination that the species is no
longer threatened or endangered;
(2) site-specific management actions
necessary to achieve the plan’s goals;
and (3) estimates of the time required
and costs to implement recovery
actions.
We believe it is essential to have local
support of recovery plans by those
whose activities directly affect the listed
species and whose continued
commitment and leadership will be
needed to implement the necessary
recovery actions. We therefore support
and participate in locally led,
collaborative efforts to develop salmon
and steelhead recovery plans that
involve state, tribal, and Federal
entities, local communities, and other
stakeholders. We review locally
developed recovery plans to ensure that
they satisfy the ESA requirements. We
make the recovery plans, along with any
additional plan elements needed to
satisfy the ESA requirements, available
for public review and comment before
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
28855
finalizing and formally adopting them
as ESA recovery plans.
In the Lower Columbia River, four
salmon and steelhead species are listed
as threatened: Lower Columbia River
Chinook salmon, Lower Columbia River
coho salmon, Columbia River chum
salmon, and Lower Columbia River
steelhead.
Three geographically based, locally
developed plans each address a
different portion of these species’ range.
NMFS’ science center and regional
office staff were closely involved in the
development of these local plans. We
have reviewed the final versions of
these local plans and have developed an
ESU/DPS-level plan that synthesizes the
local plans, incorporates them as
appendices, and provides all additional
material needed to meet the ESA
requirements. We have determined that
this Proposed ESA Recovery Plan for
Lower Columbia River Chinook Salmon,
Lower Columbia River Coho Salmon,
Columbia River Chum Salmon, and
Lower Columbia River Steelhead meets
the statutory requirements for a recovery
plan and are proposing to adopt it as the
ESA recovery plan for these four
threatened species. Section 4(f) of the
ESA, as amended in 1988, requires that
public notice and an opportunity for
public review and comment be provided
prior to final approval of a recovery
plan. This notice solicits comments on
this Proposed Plan.
Development of the Proposed Plan
The initial technical foundation for
this Proposed Plan was developed by
the Willamette-Lower Columbia
Technical Recovery Team. NMFS
appointed Technical Recovery Teams to
provide a solid scientific foundation for
recovery plans. Scientists on these
teams were nominated because of their
geographic and species expertise. The
Willamette-Lower Columbia Technical
Recovery Team included biologists from
NMFS, other federal agencies, states,
tribes, academic institutions, and the
private sector.
A primary task for all the Technical
Recovery Teams was to recommend
criteria for determining when each
component population with an ESU or
DPS should be considered viable (i.e.,
when they have a low risk of extinction
over a 100-year period) and when ESUs
and DPSs have a risk of extinction
consistent with no longer needing the
protections of the ESA. All Technical
Recovery Teams used the same
biological principles for developing
these recommendations; these
principles are described in the NOAA
technical memorandum Viable
Salmonid Populations and the Recovery
E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM
16MYN1
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
28856
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 95 / Wednesday, May 16, 2012 / Notices
of Evolutionarily Significant Units
(McElhany et al., 2000).
We also worked with state, tribal,
local, and other federal entities to
develop planning forums that built on
ongoing locally led recovery efforts. We
defined ‘‘management units’’ for these
local efforts, based on jurisdictional
boundaries as well as areas where
discrete local planning efforts were
under way. A recovery plan was
developed for each management unit,
either led by local groups with strong
NMFS participation, or led by NMFS
with extensive local participation.
Management unit recovery planners
adopted and built upon the work of the
Technical Recovery Teams. The
management unit plans for the Lower
Columbia River Basin, which are
incorporated as Appendices A through
C of this Proposed Plan, are as follows:
(1) Oregon Management Unit: The
recovery plan for the Oregon
management unit covers the portions of
the Lower Columbia salmon ESUs and
steelhead DPS that occur within Oregon.
The Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife (ODFW) led development of
this plan in collaboration with NMFS
and numerous stakeholders. The Lower
Columbia River Conservation and
Recovery Plan for Oregon Populations of
Salmon and Steelhead (ODFW 2010) is
incorporated into this Proposed Plan as
Appendix A.
(2) Washington Management Unit:
The recovery plan for the Washington
management unit covers the portions of
the Lower Columbia salmon ESUs and
steelhead DPS that occur in Washington
within the planning area of the Lower
Columbia Fish Recovery Board (LCFRB).
The LCFRB was established by
Washington State statute in 1998 to
oversee and coordinate salmon and
steelhead recovery efforts in the Lower
Columbia region of Washington. The
LCFRB led a collaborative process to
develop the Washington Lower
Columbia Salmon Recovery and Fish &
Wildlife Subbasin Plan (LCFRB 2010).
In February 2006 we approved the
December 2004 version of the LCFRB
plan as an interim regional recovery
plan for the Washington management
unit of the listed Lower Columbia River
salmon ESUs and steelhead DPS. In May
2010, the LCFRB completed a revision
of its earlier plan. That revised version
is incorporated into this Proposed Plan
as Appendix B.
(3) White Salmon Management Unit:
In the absence of an existing local
planning forum for salmon recovery, we
led the development of the White
Salmon management unit plan in
cooperation with local stakeholders.
The plan covers the portions of the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:41 May 15, 2012
Jkt 226001
Lower Columbia Chinook, coho, and
chum salmon ESUs that occur in the
White Salmon River subbasin
(Washington). The Lower Columbia
steelhead DPS does not occur in the
White Salmon River subbasin.
(However, the White Salmon
management unit plan does cover a
steelhead population that is part of the
Middle Columbia River Steelhead DPS,
which is addressed in NMFS’ Middle
Columbia River Steelhead Distinct
Population Segment ESA Recovery Plan
[2009]). The ESA Salmon Recovery Plan
for the White Salmon River Subbasin
(NMFS 2011a) is incorporated into this
Proposed Plan as Appendix C.
After the management unit plans were
completed, we developed an ESU/DPSlevel document that synthesizes
material from the management unit
plans to demonstrate that recovery
needs are being addressed at the ESU
and DPS levels. We also incorporated
delisting criteria into the Proposed Plan.
In addition, to address recovery needs
in the Lower Columbia River mainstem
and estuary, we developed and
incorporated the Columbia River
Estuary ESA Recovery Plan Module for
Salmon and Steelhead (NMFS 2011b) as
Appendix D of this Proposed Plan. To
address recovery needs related to the
Columbia River Hydropower System,
we incorporated the Recovery Plan
Module: Mainstem Columbia River
Hydropower Projects (NMFS 2008) as
Appendix E of this Proposed Plan.
The Proposed Plan, including the
component management unit plans and
recovery plan modules, is now available
for public review and comment.
Contents of Proposed Plan
The ESU/DPS-level portion of the
Proposed Plan contains background and
contextual information that includes
descriptions of the ESUs and DPS
addressed, the planning area, and the
context of the plan’s development. It
presents relevant information on ESU
and DPS structure, guidelines for
assessing salmonid population and
ESU/DPS-level status, and brief
summaries of the Willamette-Lower
Columbia Technical Recovery Team’s
products. It also contains summaries of
the management unit plans’ recovery
goals, presents NMFS’ proposed
delisting criteria for the ESUs and DPS,
and describes the methods used in the
management unit plans to develop the
principal plan components.
For each species addressed, the
Proposed Plan also summarizes the
results of the management unit plan
analyses and presents specific
information on the following:
Population status; limiting factors and
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
threats that have contributed to
population declines; estimates of the
impacts of six main categories of threats
on population productivity; and a
scenario of reductions in each of those
threats that, if achieved, would likely
improve the persistence probability of
each population to a level consistent
with recovery goals for the ESU or DPS.
In addition, the Proposed Plan
describes recovery strategies and actions
for each ESU/DPS, critical uncertainties,
and research, monitoring, and
evaluation needs. It explains how
management unit planners developed
site-specific management actions and
summarizes the time and costs required
to implement those actions. It also
describes how implementation,
prioritization of actions, and adaptive
management will proceed at both the
ESU/DPS and management-unit scales.
In addition to summary information
presented in the Proposed Plan, readers
are referred to specific sections of the
management unit plans (Appendices A
through C) and recovery plan modules
(Appendices D and E) for more
information on all these topics.
How NMFS and Others Expect To Use
the Plan
With approval of the final Plan, we
will commit to implement the actions in
the Plan for which we have authority
and funding; encourage other federal
and state agencies and tribal
governments to implement plan actions
for which they have responsibility,
authority, and funding; and work
cooperatively with the public and local
stakeholders on implementation of other
actions. We expect the plan to guide us
and other federal agencies in evaluating
federal actions under ESA section 7, as
well as in implementing other
provisions of the ESA and other
statutes. For example, the plan will
provide greater biological context for
evaluating the effects that a proposed
action may have on a species by
providing delisting criteria, information
on priority areas for addressing specific
limiting factors, and information on
how populations within the ESUs and
DPS can tolerate varying levels of risk.
When we are considering a species for
delisting, the agency will examine
whether the section 4(a)(1) listing
factors have been addressed. To assist in
this examination, we will use the
delisting criteria described in Section
3.2 of the Proposed Plan, which include
both biological criteria and criteria
addressing each of the ESA section
4(a)(1) listing factors, as well as any
other relevant data and policy
considerations.
E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM
16MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 95 / Wednesday, May 16, 2012 / Notices
At the management unit level, the
LCFRB, ODFW, and the Washington
Gorge Implementation Team, working
with us, will develop implementation
schedules that provide greater
specificity for recovery actions to be
implemented over three- to five-year
periods. These entities also will
coordinate the implementation of the
recovery actions identified in the
management unit plans and subsequent
implementation schedules, and will
track and report on implementation
progress. Management unit planners
and NMFS staff will work together to
coordinate the implementation of
recovery actions among federal, state,
local, and tribal entities and
stakeholders.
Conclusion
Section 4(f)(1)(B) of the ESA requires
that recovery plans incorporate, to the
extent practicable, (1) objective,
measurable criteria which, when met,
would result in a determination that the
species is no longer threatened or
endangered; (2) site-specific
management actions necessary to
achieve the plan’s goals; and (3)
estimates of the time required and costs
to implement recovery actions. We
conclude that the Proposed Plan meets
the requirements of ESA section 4(f) and
is proposing to adopt it as the ESA
Recovery Plan for Lower Columbia River
Chinook Salmon, Lower Columbia River
Coho Salmon, Columbia River Chum
Salmon, and Lower Columbia River
Steelhead.
Public Comments Solicited
We are soliciting written comments
on the Proposed Plan. All substantive
comments received by the date specified
above will be considered and
incorporated, as appropriate, prior to
our decision whether to approve the
plan. We will issue a news release
announcing the adoption and
availability of a final plan. We will post
on the Northwest Region Web site
(www.nwr.noaa.gov) a summary of, and
responses to, the comments received,
along with electronic copies of the final
plan and its appendices.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Literature Cited
Lower Columbia Fish Recovery Board
(LCFRB). 2010. Washington Lower
Columbia Salmon Recovery and Fish &
Wildlife Subbasin Plan. Lower Columbia
Fish Recovery Board, Washington. May
28, 2010.
McElhany, P., M.H. Ruckelshaus, M.J. Ford,
T.C. Wainwright, and E.P. Bjorkstedt.
2000. Viable salmon populations and the
recovery of evolutionarily significant
units. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, NOAA
Tech. Memo., NMFS NWFSC 42, 156 p.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:41 May 15, 2012
Jkt 226001
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS).
2009. Middle Columbia River Steelhead
Distinct Population Segment ESA
Recovery Plan. Northwest Region.
November 30, 2009.
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS).
2011a. Draft ESA Recovery Plan for the
White Salmon River Subbasin.
Northwest Region. December 2011.
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS).
2011b. Columbia River Estuary ESA
Recovery Plan Module for Salmon and
Steelhead. Northwest Region. Prepared
for NMFS by the Lower Columbia River
Estuary Partnership (contractor) and PC
Trask & Associates, Inc. (subcontractor).
January 2011.
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
2010. Lower Columbia River
Conservation and Recovery Plan for
Oregon Populations of Salmon and
Steelhead. August 6, 2010.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.
Dated: May 10, 2012.
Dwayne Meadows,
Acting Chief, Endangered Species Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2012–11872 Filed 5–15–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Telecommunications and
Information Administration
[Docket No: 120509050–1050–01]
RIN 0660–XC001
Development of the State and Local
Implementation Grant Program for the
Nationwide Public Safety Broadband
Network
National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Request for Information.
AGENCY:
The National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) is issuing a
Request for Information (RFI) seeking
public comment on various issues
relating to the development of the State
and Local Implementation grant
program, which NTIA must establish
pursuant to the Middle Class Tax Relief
and Job Creation Act of 2012 to assist
state and local governments in planning
for a single, nationwide interoperable
public safety broadband network. NTIA
intends to use the input from this
process to inform the development of
programmatic requirements to govern
the state and local planning grants
program.
DATES: Comments must be received by
June 15, 2012 at 5:00 p.m. Eastern
Daylight Time.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
28857
Comments may be
submitted by email to
SLIGP@ntia.doc.gov. Comments
submitted by email should be machinesearchable and should not be copyprotected. Written comments also may
be submitted by mail to: National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, HCHB Room 4812, 1401
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20230. Please note that all material
sent via the U.S. Postal Service
(including Overnight or Express Mail) is
subject to delivery delays of up to two
weeks due to mail security procedures.
Responders should include the name of
the person or organization filing the
comment, as well as a page number, on
each page of their submissions. Paper
submissions should also include an
electronic version on CD or DVD in .txt,
.pdf, or Word format (please specify
version), which should be labeled with
the name and organizational affiliation
of the filer and the name of the word
processing program used to create the
document. All emails and comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted to the
NTIA Web site (https://
www.ntia.doc.gov) without change. All
personally identifying information (for
example, name, address, etc.)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit Confidential Business
Information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura M. Pettus, Communications
Program Specialist, Office of
Telecommunications and Information
Applications, National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW., Room 4878, Washington, DC
20230; telephone: (202) 482–4509;
email: lpettus@ntia.doc.gov. Please
direct media inquiries to NTIA’s Office
of Public Affairs, (202) 482–7002.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Background
On February 22, 2012, President
Obama signed the Middle Class Tax
Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012
(Act).1 The Act meets a long-standing
priority of the Obama Administration to
create a single, nationwide interoperable
public safety broadband network that
will, for the first time, allow police
officers, fire fighters, emergency medical
service professionals, and other public
1 Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of
2012, Public Law 112–96, 126 Stat. 156 (2012)
(Act).
E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM
16MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 95 (Wednesday, May 16, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28855-28857]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-11872]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XC008
Endangered and Threatened Species; Recovery Plans
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of Availability; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, NMFS, announce that the Proposed Endangered Species Act
(ESA) Recovery Plan for Lower Columbia River Chinook Salmon, Lower
Columbia River Coho Salmon, Columbia River Chum Salmon, and Lower
Columbia River Steelhead (Proposed Plan) is available for public review
and comment. The Proposed Plan addresses the Lower Columbia River
Chinook salmon (Oncoryhnchus tschawytscha), Lower Columbia coho salmon
(O. kisutch), and Columbia River chum salmon (O. keta) evolutionarily
significant units (ESUs) and the Lower Columbia River steelhead (O.
mykiss) distinct population segment (DPS), all of which are listed as
threatened under the ESA. The geographic area covered by the Proposed
Plan is the Lower Columbia River mainstem and tributaries downstream of
(and including) the White Salmon River in Washington and the Hood River
in Oregon. As required by the ESA, the Proposed Plan contains
objective, measurable delisting criteria, site-specific management
actions necessary to achieve the Proposed Plan's goals, and estimates
of the time and costs required to implement recovery actions. We are
soliciting review and comment from the public and all interested
parties on the Proposed Plan.
DATES: We will consider and address, as appropriate, all substantive
comments received during the comment period. Comments must be received
no later than 5 p.m. Pacific daylight time on July 16, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Please send written comments and materials to Patty
Dornbusch, National Marine Fisheries Service, 1201 NE. Lloyd Boulevard,
Suite 1100, Portland, OR 97232. Comments may also be submitted by email
to: nmfs.nwr.lowercolumbiaplan@noaa.gov. Please include ``Comments on
Lower Columbia Recovery Plan'' in the subject line of the email.
Comments may be submitted via facsimile (fax) to (503) 230-5441.
Electronic copies of the Proposed Plan are available on the NMFS Web
site at https://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Salmon-Recovery-Planning/Recovery-Domains/Willamette-Lower-Columbia/LC/Plan.cfm. Persons wishing to
obtain an electronic copy on CD ROM of the Proposed Plan may do so by
calling Kelly Gallivan at (503) 736-4721 or by emailing a request to
kelly.gallivan@noaa.gov with the subject line ``CD ROM Request for
Lower Columbia Recovery Plan.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Patty Dornbusch, NMFS Lower Columbia
Recovery Coordinator, at (503) 230-5430, or patty.dornbusch@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
We are responsible for developing and implementing recovery plans
for Pacific salmon and steelhead listed under the ESA of 1973, as
amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). Recovery means that the listed
species and their ecosystems are sufficiently restored, and their
future secured, to a point that the protections of the ESA are no
longer necessary. Section 4(f)(1) of the ESA requires that recovery
plans include, to the extent practicable: (1) Objective, measurable
criteria which, when met, would result in a determination that the
species is no longer threatened or endangered; (2) site-specific
management actions necessary to achieve the plan's goals; and (3)
estimates of the time required and costs to implement recovery actions.
We believe it is essential to have local support of recovery plans
by those whose activities directly affect the listed species and whose
continued commitment and leadership will be needed to implement the
necessary recovery actions. We therefore support and participate in
locally led, collaborative efforts to develop salmon and steelhead
recovery plans that involve state, tribal, and Federal entities, local
communities, and other stakeholders. We review locally developed
recovery plans to ensure that they satisfy the ESA requirements. We
make the recovery plans, along with any additional plan elements needed
to satisfy the ESA requirements, available for public review and
comment before finalizing and formally adopting them as ESA recovery
plans.
In the Lower Columbia River, four salmon and steelhead species are
listed as threatened: Lower Columbia River Chinook salmon, Lower
Columbia River coho salmon, Columbia River chum salmon, and Lower
Columbia River steelhead.
Three geographically based, locally developed plans each address a
different portion of these species' range. NMFS' science center and
regional office staff were closely involved in the development of these
local plans. We have reviewed the final versions of these local plans
and have developed an ESU/DPS-level plan that synthesizes the local
plans, incorporates them as appendices, and provides all additional
material needed to meet the ESA requirements. We have determined that
this Proposed ESA Recovery Plan for Lower Columbia River Chinook
Salmon, Lower Columbia River Coho Salmon, Columbia River Chum Salmon,
and Lower Columbia River Steelhead meets the statutory requirements for
a recovery plan and are proposing to adopt it as the ESA recovery plan
for these four threatened species. Section 4(f) of the ESA, as amended
in 1988, requires that public notice and an opportunity for public
review and comment be provided prior to final approval of a recovery
plan. This notice solicits comments on this Proposed Plan.
Development of the Proposed Plan
The initial technical foundation for this Proposed Plan was
developed by the Willamette-Lower Columbia Technical Recovery Team.
NMFS appointed Technical Recovery Teams to provide a solid scientific
foundation for recovery plans. Scientists on these teams were nominated
because of their geographic and species expertise. The Willamette-Lower
Columbia Technical Recovery Team included biologists from NMFS, other
federal agencies, states, tribes, academic institutions, and the
private sector.
A primary task for all the Technical Recovery Teams was to
recommend criteria for determining when each component population with
an ESU or DPS should be considered viable (i.e., when they have a low
risk of extinction over a 100-year period) and when ESUs and DPSs have
a risk of extinction consistent with no longer needing the protections
of the ESA. All Technical Recovery Teams used the same biological
principles for developing these recommendations; these principles are
described in the NOAA technical memorandum Viable Salmonid Populations
and the Recovery
[[Page 28856]]
of Evolutionarily Significant Units (McElhany et al., 2000).
We also worked with state, tribal, local, and other federal
entities to develop planning forums that built on ongoing locally led
recovery efforts. We defined ``management units'' for these local
efforts, based on jurisdictional boundaries as well as areas where
discrete local planning efforts were under way. A recovery plan was
developed for each management unit, either led by local groups with
strong NMFS participation, or led by NMFS with extensive local
participation. Management unit recovery planners adopted and built upon
the work of the Technical Recovery Teams. The management unit plans for
the Lower Columbia River Basin, which are incorporated as Appendices A
through C of this Proposed Plan, are as follows:
(1) Oregon Management Unit: The recovery plan for the Oregon
management unit covers the portions of the Lower Columbia salmon ESUs
and steelhead DPS that occur within Oregon. The Oregon Department of
Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) led development of this plan in collaboration
with NMFS and numerous stakeholders. The Lower Columbia River
Conservation and Recovery Plan for Oregon Populations of Salmon and
Steelhead (ODFW 2010) is incorporated into this Proposed Plan as
Appendix A.
(2) Washington Management Unit: The recovery plan for the
Washington management unit covers the portions of the Lower Columbia
salmon ESUs and steelhead DPS that occur in Washington within the
planning area of the Lower Columbia Fish Recovery Board (LCFRB). The
LCFRB was established by Washington State statute in 1998 to oversee
and coordinate salmon and steelhead recovery efforts in the Lower
Columbia region of Washington. The LCFRB led a collaborative process to
develop the Washington Lower Columbia Salmon Recovery and Fish &
Wildlife Subbasin Plan (LCFRB 2010). In February 2006 we approved the
December 2004 version of the LCFRB plan as an interim regional recovery
plan for the Washington management unit of the listed Lower Columbia
River salmon ESUs and steelhead DPS. In May 2010, the LCFRB completed a
revision of its earlier plan. That revised version is incorporated into
this Proposed Plan as Appendix B.
(3) White Salmon Management Unit: In the absence of an existing
local planning forum for salmon recovery, we led the development of the
White Salmon management unit plan in cooperation with local
stakeholders. The plan covers the portions of the Lower Columbia
Chinook, coho, and chum salmon ESUs that occur in the White Salmon
River subbasin (Washington). The Lower Columbia steelhead DPS does not
occur in the White Salmon River subbasin. (However, the White Salmon
management unit plan does cover a steelhead population that is part of
the Middle Columbia River Steelhead DPS, which is addressed in NMFS'
Middle Columbia River Steelhead Distinct Population Segment ESA
Recovery Plan [2009]). The ESA Salmon Recovery Plan for the White
Salmon River Subbasin (NMFS 2011a) is incorporated into this Proposed
Plan as Appendix C.
After the management unit plans were completed, we developed an
ESU/DPS-level document that synthesizes material from the management
unit plans to demonstrate that recovery needs are being addressed at
the ESU and DPS levels. We also incorporated delisting criteria into
the Proposed Plan. In addition, to address recovery needs in the Lower
Columbia River mainstem and estuary, we developed and incorporated the
Columbia River Estuary ESA Recovery Plan Module for Salmon and
Steelhead (NMFS 2011b) as Appendix D of this Proposed Plan. To address
recovery needs related to the Columbia River Hydropower System, we
incorporated the Recovery Plan Module: Mainstem Columbia River
Hydropower Projects (NMFS 2008) as Appendix E of this Proposed Plan.
The Proposed Plan, including the component management unit plans
and recovery plan modules, is now available for public review and
comment.
Contents of Proposed Plan
The ESU/DPS-level portion of the Proposed Plan contains background
and contextual information that includes descriptions of the ESUs and
DPS addressed, the planning area, and the context of the plan's
development. It presents relevant information on ESU and DPS structure,
guidelines for assessing salmonid population and ESU/DPS-level status,
and brief summaries of the Willamette-Lower Columbia Technical Recovery
Team's products. It also contains summaries of the management unit
plans' recovery goals, presents NMFS' proposed delisting criteria for
the ESUs and DPS, and describes the methods used in the management unit
plans to develop the principal plan components.
For each species addressed, the Proposed Plan also summarizes the
results of the management unit plan analyses and presents specific
information on the following: Population status; limiting factors and
threats that have contributed to population declines; estimates of the
impacts of six main categories of threats on population productivity;
and a scenario of reductions in each of those threats that, if
achieved, would likely improve the persistence probability of each
population to a level consistent with recovery goals for the ESU or
DPS.
In addition, the Proposed Plan describes recovery strategies and
actions for each ESU/DPS, critical uncertainties, and research,
monitoring, and evaluation needs. It explains how management unit
planners developed site-specific management actions and summarizes the
time and costs required to implement those actions. It also describes
how implementation, prioritization of actions, and adaptive management
will proceed at both the ESU/DPS and management-unit scales. In
addition to summary information presented in the Proposed Plan, readers
are referred to specific sections of the management unit plans
(Appendices A through C) and recovery plan modules (Appendices D and E)
for more information on all these topics.
How NMFS and Others Expect To Use the Plan
With approval of the final Plan, we will commit to implement the
actions in the Plan for which we have authority and funding; encourage
other federal and state agencies and tribal governments to implement
plan actions for which they have responsibility, authority, and
funding; and work cooperatively with the public and local stakeholders
on implementation of other actions. We expect the plan to guide us and
other federal agencies in evaluating federal actions under ESA section
7, as well as in implementing other provisions of the ESA and other
statutes. For example, the plan will provide greater biological context
for evaluating the effects that a proposed action may have on a species
by providing delisting criteria, information on priority areas for
addressing specific limiting factors, and information on how
populations within the ESUs and DPS can tolerate varying levels of
risk.
When we are considering a species for delisting, the agency will
examine whether the section 4(a)(1) listing factors have been
addressed. To assist in this examination, we will use the delisting
criteria described in Section 3.2 of the Proposed Plan, which include
both biological criteria and criteria addressing each of the ESA
section 4(a)(1) listing factors, as well as any other relevant data and
policy considerations.
[[Page 28857]]
At the management unit level, the LCFRB, ODFW, and the Washington
Gorge Implementation Team, working with us, will develop implementation
schedules that provide greater specificity for recovery actions to be
implemented over three- to five-year periods. These entities also will
coordinate the implementation of the recovery actions identified in the
management unit plans and subsequent implementation schedules, and will
track and report on implementation progress. Management unit planners
and NMFS staff will work together to coordinate the implementation of
recovery actions among federal, state, local, and tribal entities and
stakeholders.
Conclusion
Section 4(f)(1)(B) of the ESA requires that recovery plans
incorporate, to the extent practicable, (1) objective, measurable
criteria which, when met, would result in a determination that the
species is no longer threatened or endangered; (2) site-specific
management actions necessary to achieve the plan's goals; and (3)
estimates of the time required and costs to implement recovery actions.
We conclude that the Proposed Plan meets the requirements of ESA
section 4(f) and is proposing to adopt it as the ESA Recovery Plan for
Lower Columbia River Chinook Salmon, Lower Columbia River Coho Salmon,
Columbia River Chum Salmon, and Lower Columbia River Steelhead.
Public Comments Solicited
We are soliciting written comments on the Proposed Plan. All
substantive comments received by the date specified above will be
considered and incorporated, as appropriate, prior to our decision
whether to approve the plan. We will issue a news release announcing
the adoption and availability of a final plan. We will post on the
Northwest Region Web site (www.nwr.noaa.gov) a summary of, and
responses to, the comments received, along with electronic copies of
the final plan and its appendices.
Literature Cited
Lower Columbia Fish Recovery Board (LCFRB). 2010. Washington Lower
Columbia Salmon Recovery and Fish & Wildlife Subbasin Plan. Lower
Columbia Fish Recovery Board, Washington. May 28, 2010.
McElhany, P., M.H. Ruckelshaus, M.J. Ford, T.C. Wainwright, and E.P.
Bjorkstedt. 2000. Viable salmon populations and the recovery of
evolutionarily significant units. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, NOAA Tech.
Memo., NMFS NWFSC 42, 156 p.
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). 2009. Middle Columbia
River Steelhead Distinct Population Segment ESA Recovery Plan.
Northwest Region. November 30, 2009.
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). 2011a. Draft ESA Recovery
Plan for the White Salmon River Subbasin. Northwest Region. December
2011.
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). 2011b. Columbia River
Estuary ESA Recovery Plan Module for Salmon and Steelhead. Northwest
Region. Prepared for NMFS by the Lower Columbia River Estuary
Partnership (contractor) and PC Trask & Associates, Inc.
(subcontractor). January 2011.
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2010. Lower Columbia River
Conservation and Recovery Plan for Oregon Populations of Salmon and
Steelhead. August 6, 2010.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.
Dated: May 10, 2012.
Dwayne Meadows,
Acting Chief, Endangered Species Division, Office of Protected
Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2012-11872 Filed 5-15-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P